
Jacob Elordi sagt dem Fotografen während eines angespannten Austauschs in Paris: „Du machst es mir wirklich schwer zu leben.“
https://people.com/jacob-elordi-tells-photographer-you-make-it-really-hard-for-me-to-live-11868572?utm_campaign=peoplemagazine&utm_medium=social&utm_source=reddit.com&utm_content=post
12 Kommentare
It’s 2025, if you don’t understand the life of a movie star/celebrity, then don’t be one.
Hey I say those same words to the mirror every morning.
I met a very famous guitarist/singer in a music store once. We jammed and talked for 30 minutes about guitars, gear, food, other music, etc. Just two dudes shooting the shit. At the end, he said thank you for just letting him have a normal conversation. Always stuck with me. These guys value normalcy more than anything else.
“Photographer” is a generous term to say the least.
These paparazzi deliberately provoke famous people in order to get a rise out of them, hoping to get a photo or video of their target saying or doing something awful that will allow them to sell their photo or video for even more money.
Elordi hasn’t really been that famous until just a couple of years ago. Sooner or later, he’ll learn that the only way to deal with these parasites is to ignore them.
Definitely a rich person problem but he’s also not wrong either.
Press agent tells paps where the star will be, pap gets shot, star gets article complaining for even more publicity.
Rinse, repeat.
First off we have a lot of autograph sellers here in NYC and I do agree they’re a lot. You can pay top dollar for a broadway show. Or in my case wait in line for ever to see a celebrity talk in a free show because you really like them and then when you exit not only are these autograph sellers already there front and center they’re so aggressive to get multiple pictures of autographs. Like they didn’t even care enough about the person or the event to go to it but want first dibs on the person after.
I have seen fights break out and people pushing heavily.
I think actors and all creative people really, are driven from a very young age, and can’t really NOT pursue their passion. I believe no one can ever really be prepared for what becoming actually famous means and entails, especially since the internet. You can think you know what something feels like, and what it is, but you really don’t. So yes, I do have empathy for them and I don’t believe becoming famous in the arts means you have no rights.
It’s part of the trade off. It sucks but it comes with being rich and famous. If you want to follow your dream and live anonymously then do community theater
I know the paparazzi are bottom feeders. But try living in a tiny home with a bunch of roommates. At least these famous people only have to suffer when they leave their mansions.
I mean it sucks but welcome to capitalism
Its the same mechanism that let’s him make millions while teachers and paramedics make poverty wages