About this Blog

"In the future everybody will be world-famous for 15 minutes." So said the bleached-out, late lamented artist Andy Warhol. Having lived and worked in New York City, Warhol came to fully grasp the hold celebrity has on us. In this very famous sentence, he meant to point out that in a culture fixated on fame, many people will suddenly flash brightly onto the public screen, then--poof--will just as quickly disappear from public view--like shooting stars. Other individuals derive their celebrity from one stellar accomplishment (one hit song, one iconic role, etc.) that they never again match.

This blog is devoted to the one part of our celebrity culture that no one has written much about: temporary/one-shot celebrities.

The pace of modern life has quickened, and now we hear people speaking of someone's 15 seconds of fame. These "celebrities with a lower-case c" who will appear in this blog sometimes come to us from the world of entertainment, sometimes from the world of news. All are fascinating.

The need of our communications media for a continual stream of new material assures that we will have no end of colorful people who go quickly, where celebrity is concerned, from zero to hero (or villain) and back to zero. Now you see 'em, now you don't. What a crazy world, eh?

Temporary celebrities coming from the world of entertainment include one-hit recording artists; TV and movie icons who, although they might have had a great many accomplishments in their career, are remembered for one big role; standouts of reality TV; sports figures remembered for one remarkable accomplishment; and people whose celebrity came from one big role in a commercial or print ad.

News-based temporary celebrities come in many forms: mass/serial killers, other murderers of special note, sex-crime offenders, disgraced figures of government/military/business/media/religion, spies/traitors, hoaxers, femmes/hommes fatale, heroes, whistle blowers, inventors/innovators, and victims.

Celebrity Blogsburg will consider each category in turn.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Misc.: Rose Mary Woods

For a short time in 1974, the name Rose Mary Woods was on every lip. Woods was the loyal secretary to President Richard Nixon and gave the mea culpa for 5 minutes of an 18 1/2-minute gap in an Oval Office audio tape that very likely held incriminating statements made by Nixon and his advisers regarding the Watergate scandal.

Woods demonstrated for the cameras how she stretched back to answer a phone, thereby taking her foot off a pedal that controlled the tape with which she was working.

Most people admired her personal loyalty but doubted her veracity.

Woods was born in Ohio and moved to the nation's capital after the wartime death of her fiance. She began working for Nixon in 1950 and remained with him until his 1974 resignation from the presidency.

Woods died in 2005 at age 87.

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