Stars descend upon a range of subsidiary media - magazines, television, radio, and the internet - in order to construct an image for themselves which can be marketed to their target audiences. The star image is made up of a range of meanings which are attractive to the target audiences.
Fundamentally, the star image is incoherent, that is both incomplete and 'open'. Dyer says that this is because it is based upon two key paradoxes. These two paradoxes are as follows:-
- The star must be simultaneously ordinary and extraordinary for the consumer. The star has to be someone that people can aspire to be like
- The star must be simultaneously present and absent for the consumer
The
incoherence of the star image ensures that audiences continually strive to
'complete' or to 'make sense' of the image. This is achieved by
continuous consumption of the star through his/her products. In the music
industry, performance seems to promise the completion of the image, but it is
always ultimately unsatisfying. This means their fans will get away determined
to continue consuming the star in order to carry on attempting to complete their
image.
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