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Celebrity Private Life: Should it Exist?. Elizabeth Bernheisel Mrs. Whitney Pd . 5 College Composition II January 27, 2014.
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Celebrity Private Life: Should it Exist? Elizabeth Bernheisel Mrs. Whitney Pd. 5 College Composition II January 27, 2014
Celebrities in the United States lawfully and ethically have the right to privacy, but they are also in need of new solutions and new social standards to keep their privacy. • Thesis: NEW
Introduction • Definition of celebrity • Media plays a crucial role • Definition of privacy • Definition of paparazzi
Definition of celebrity • Past- well-known business leaders and those who were in the entertainment business (actors, singers, and athletes) • Present- stay in the mass media’s spotlight, which is achieved by being deemed “newsworthy”
Media plays a crucial role • They provide the visibility and the means for celebrities
Definition of privacy • Expectation that confidential, personal information disclosed in a private place will not be disclosed to third parties, when that disclosure would cause either embarrassment or emotional distress to a person of reasonable sensitivities
Definition of paparazzi • Afreelance photographer who takes candid pictures of celebrities for publication
Celebrities and the Law • Rights of the press • Rights of celebrities • Rights of children
Rights of the press • National Enquirer published an article on Clint Eastwood being romantically involved with Tanya Tucker. The First Amendment: “Freedom of the Press,” gives the paparazzi freedom to publish the news The court defended the press and told Eastwood that his romantic involvements were of public concern.
Rights of celebrities • Public Disclosure of Private and Embarrassing Facts(an unauthorized public dissemination of information) • False Light (untrue opinions or actions) • Intrusion (an act of prying or intruding in a manner that would be objectionable to a reasonable person) • Misappropriation (unauthorized use of the plaintiff’s picture or name for a commercial advantage) Four types of invasion of privacy laws:
Rights of children • Senate Bill 606 • Kids under the age of sixteen should not be tabloid fodder or the target of ongoing harassment September 24, 2013
Celebrities and ethics • Define ethics • Paparazzi • Price of fame • Media
Ethics The moral standards or rules that determine the way a person behaves They are important because they help people continue to live and interact in a civilized way with others
Paparazzi • Taking pictures of celebrities with high-powered lenses when they know that the celebrity has no clue that their picture is being taken up close without their permission • They are hurling insults at them in order to provoke them into violence by hunting them down like prey when they return home from work Or stalking them when they are on vacation • Also catching them in affairs and during substance abuse
Price of fame • After completing the first nonstop transatlantic flight from New York to France, Charles Lindbergh’s son was kidnapped and murdered in 1932. When the boy's body was found, photographers broke into the morgue and took pictures of the corpse.
Media Since they no longer use morals and their consequence to guide their social behavior, man has to pass new laws to make it illegal to violate a celebrity’s privacy.
Celebrities and new solutions • Suggestions • Statistics • Defusing • New enemy
Suggestions • Tougher laws • Restraining orders • Penalties against aggressive paparazzi • Paparazzi obtaining a license with an adoption of a code of conduct that when violated revokes their license
Statistics • 13% think celebrities should be entitled to absolute privacy in their private lives • 36 % say celebrities should be entitled to absolute privacy in their private lives unless they are breaking the law • 34 % say celebrities should be entitled to absolute privacy in their private lives unless they are breaking the law or doing something that might be considered morally wrong (having an affair) • 12 % completely disagree, and believe that celebrities should not be entitled to any privacy in their private lives
Defusing Some celebrities try to defuse the unwanted media interest and sell photos of their weddings and babies
New enemy • Cell phones have become the new enemy now Singer Beyonce’ Knowles said that when she is on the red carpet she is prepared for the attention, but when she is awakened by a flashing camera on an airplane it is too much.
Conclusion • Code of conduct • Average person adds to the hype • Break the cycle • Celebrities deserve to have protection, respect, and privacy
Code of conduct • Show respect for all people • Taught by parents • Taught by a church affiliation group
Average person adds to the hype We have become a celebrity-obsessed culture in which our interest in the on-goings of movie stars, athletes and café society figures has reaches deranged heights. (We are all paparazzi. (E News Fan Find))
Break the cycle • Not buying tabloids • Leave celebrities alone when they are in the private sector
Celebrities deserve to have protection, respect, and privacy • The constitution says that we are all created equal with the same unalienable rights…