Tag: celebrity

  • From Experts to Icons

    From Experts to Icons

    Who Really Runs the Show?

    Let’s be honest, if Taylor Swift posts a voting link on her Instagram story and 23,000 people register to vote the same day, that’s not just influence. That is authority.

    These days, celebrities are not just making cameos in our playlists or movie nights; they have started showing up in our politics. Once upon a time, the people shaping public discourse were politicians, economists, and social scientists. Now? It’s musicians, actors, influencers. And they’re not just supporting causes, they’re shaping narratives, changing minds, and sometimes even laws.

    But here’s the thing. Just because someone can influence doesn’t mean they always should.


    When social media replaces the classroom

    Social media made this shift prominent. In the past celebrities would share their political views or beliefs in interviews or during their shows. But now celebrities are given the stage, the microphone, and an always-listening crowd from their homes. In the past, if you wanted to understand policy, you would have read an article or watched a debate. Now? You might just scroll TikTok.

    It’s not inherently bad. People are more engaged. But it raises questions.

    If the first political opinion you hear comes from someone whose music or movie you’ve loved since high school, does that sway you more than facts? If they say “vote,” do you vote? Or more importantly, do you ask why?

    This is not to shade on any celebrity using their platform. Honestly, some of them are trying to do good. However, as someone who has watched both politics and pop culture unfold, I’ve noticed something: we don’t always challenge celebrity opinions in the same way we challenge experts. There’s less pressure to provide evidence; its usually about the ‘vibes’.

    The Halo Effect is real

    There’s a psychological term for this: the Halo Effect. Basically, if we admire someone in one area, we assume they’re trustworthy in other areas as well. So if your favorite actor supports a policy, it suddenly feels… right. Convincing. Safe even.

    Credit: Icon made by Juicy_fish from Freepik.com

    Also it’s not new. The UN has used celebrity ambassadors for years to spread messages. But the difference? Back then, it was structured; experts in the background, message vetted, goal clear. Today? It’s a tweet. A story. A caption. No middleman, no filter.

    And the scary part? Is that this makes it stick even more


    But what about the experts?

    Meanwhile, the experts, those with years of study, data, and lived experience, are getting drowned out. Remember during COVID-19 when there was a mix of information from health organizations, politicians, and celebrities? Expertise didn’t matter as much as optics.

    Even within government systems, experts often hold less power than the politicians they serve. Imagine spending your life studying disease outbreaks, only to be overruled by someone more concerned about a headline than a health guideline.

    Celebrities, though? They bypass that whole structure. Kim Kardashian advocated for prison reform, and Congress listened. Not because she’s an expert but because she’s her. That level of access, that kind of power, is not purely influence. It’s currency.


    So what now?

    I’m not saying we should cancel celebrity voices in politics. They often bring attention to overlooked issues, and that matters. But we have to ask: are we holding them to the same standards we demand from experts? Are we checking the sources? Or are we letting popularity set the bar for truth?

    Because here’s the cost: when policy becomes a popularity contest, evidence takes a backseat. And that is dangerous.

    But not all is lost.

    There is a new kind of figure emerging, political commentators who blend expertise with accessibility. They understand the data but also know how to connect. They invite discussion. They challenge echo chambers and make space for complexity.

    They are not perfect, but maybe they’re a step toward balance.


    Final thoughts

    We live in a world where a tweet can start a movement and a livestream can shift national conversation. That power is incredible. But it also comes with responsibility ours, not just theirs.

    It’s easy to nod along with someone you admire, harder to stop and ask, “Do they really understand this issue?” And let’s be real: when you build your identity around a public figure, challenging them feels like challenging yourself.

    Before we share, repost, or rally behind someone’s opinion, maybe we pause and ask: Is this just loud, or is it true? Do I admire them? or do I actually agree?

  • Idle Idols

    Idle Idols

    The quiet ways we trade our identity away

    The Subtle Shape of Idolatry

    It’s interesting that the word idol sounds so much like idle which means to be useless, inactive, or without purpose. That similarity feels ironic, because many of the idols in our lives do just that, they pull us away from what truly matters and leave us emotionally or spiritually stagnant.

    In our modern world, we often make idols out of the things we love and care about. As a massive comic book fan and someone who enjoys reading, I get excited about adding to my collections be it figurines, statues, or memorabilia that reflect the stories and characters I admire. If I have a book collection, you can bet I’ve either bought or made something that resembles the story and proudly placed it alongside the books in my library.

    But when I talk about idols, I’m not just talking about stuff you collect or decorate your shelves with. I mean how we start embodying what we idolize. Take someone who’s super into politics or social justice, they might change their whole vibe, their tone, even how they dress to fit that narrative. And sometimes, when you talk to them, it’s hard to see who they are beyond that one issue or identity.

    Becoming the things we worship

    Currently, with all the interviews, podcasts, and social media content, there’s a big push to “humanize” public figures like celebrities, politicians, influencers. And honestly, I like the idea behind that. It takes them off the pedestal and reminds us that they are just people. It’s kind of funny when you hear, “Wait, they eat toast like us!” or “They can’t do their own chores!” That whole mystic aura starts to fade, and, in a way, it makes it seem weird to worship them.

    But sometimes, that humanizing effect backfires. Instead of pulling back, people lean in deeper. Because now their “hero” is relatable just a regular person like me and the worship becomes even more intense. The line between admiration and obsession gets blurry fast.

    And that’s what saddens me. You can admire someone, sure. But worshipping them? That says more about us than it does about them. A celebrity wears something—it sells out. They share a political view and suddenly, that’s the right opinion. It’s like we’re outsourcing our thoughts and identity.


    When good things become God things

    We do this with things real or imagined. We trade little parts of ourselves to feel like we belong to something. And to be clear—having interests doesn’t make something an idol. But if it starts dictating your decisions, your time, your emotions? Then yeah, it probably is one.

    For example: I like Batman. I’ve got comics, statues, cute little figurines my friends know it’s my thing. But it doesn’t define me. I don’t talk about it every day. In fact, there’ve been times when I’ve let go of things I loved because I realized they were taking up too much space mentally, emotionally, spiritually. And when something starts pulling me away from the one, I love, it must go.

    Idolatry doesn’t always show up in dramatic ways. One of the more subtle forms I’ve noticed—especially while studying politics—is how people turn ideologies into idols. It’s not about healthy conviction anymore. It becomes moral superiority. And in the process, empathy disappears. People stop listening. They just parrot the opinions that make them feel smart, or safe, or “right.”


    The reflections of Stanley cups

    In a perfect world, our interests would just be accessories, parts of us, but not us. But what I see more often is people “Frankensteining” themselves. Cutting off parts that were once full of life and replacing them with whatever they’re obsessed with.

    It’s not just you who loses something in that process-your family, your friends, your community, they lose you too. You slowly become a shell of who you used to be, shaped more by trends or tribes than truth. The way you think, speak, dress—it starts mirroring what you worship.

    (And if you want a weird but perfect example of how deep this run: look at the Stanley Cup water bottle craze. People camping out, fighting over colours, hoarding ten of them “just in case.” It’s not about hydration anymore. It’s identity. A $40 bottle became a lifestyle badge.)

    The truth is none of us are promised tomorrow. And when that moment comes—when you’re facing the end—your favourite influencer, fictional character, or political hero won’t be there to hold your hand. So, the question becomes: What have we done with the time we were given? Have we spent more of it scrolling and collecting and comparing than connecting with the people who love us?

    That’s the real tragedy of idolatry; it doesn’t just take your time. It takes you and if you are not careful, you won’t even notice you’re gone.