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Superstar

A superstar is someone who has great popular appeal and is widely known, prominent, or successful in their field. Celebrities referred to as "superstars" may include individuals who work as actors, musicians, athletes, and other media-based professions.

History

 
In the 1960s and 1970s, Andy Warhol popularized the term "superstar" to describe people like actress Mary Woronov

The origin of the term in the context of celebrity is uncertain, but a similar expression is attested in John Nyren's 1832 cricket book The Cricketers of My Time. Nyren described the 18th-century cricketer John Small as "a star of the first magnitude".[1] The earliest use of the term "superstar" has been credited to Frank Patrick in reference to the ice hockey players on his Vancouver Millionaires teams of the 1910s and 1920s, specifically Cyclone Taylor.[2] In the June 1977 edition of Interview magazine, pop artist Andy Warhol was asked by editor Glenn O'Brien who invented the word "superstar". Warhol, known for popularizing the term, responded, "I think it was Jack Smith." O'Brien then asked, "And who were the first superstars?" Warhol responded, "They were all Jack Smith's stars."[3] The term received widespread and commonplace use from the title of the musical Jesus Christ Superstar, in particular the 1970 concept album of the musical and the eponymous hit song. "Super Star" is also the name of a hugely successful rose which Harry Wheatcroft introduced and named in 1960.[4]

By 1909, silent film companies began promoting "picture personalities" by releasing stories about actors to fan magazines and newspapers, as part of a strategy to build "brand loyalty" for their company's actors and films. By the 1920s, Hollywood film company promoters had developed a "massive industrial enterprise" that "peddled a new intangible—fame".[5] Hollywood "image makers" and promotional agents planted rumours, selectively released real or fictitious information to the press, and used other "gimmicks" to create public personas for actors. They then "worked [to] reinforce that persona [and] manage the publicity". Publicists thus "created" the "enduring images" and public perceptions of screen legends such as Rock Hudson, Marilyn Monroe, and Grace Kelly. The development of this "star system" made fame "something that could be fabricated purposely, by the masters of the new 'machinery of glory'".[5]

In 1976, Mattel produced a "Superstar" variation of its Barbie doll.[6] According to Sofia Johansson, the "canonical texts on stardom" include articles by Boorstin (1971), Alberoni (1972), and Dyer (1979) that examined the "representations of stars and on aspects of the Hollywood star system". Johansson notes that "more recent analyses within media and cultural studies (e.g. Gamson 1994; Marshall 1997; Giles 2000; Turner, Marshall and Bonner 2000; Rojek 2001; Turner 2004) have instead dealt with the idea of a pervasive, contemporary, 'celebrity culture'". In an analysis of "celebrity culture", Johansson states that "fame and its constituencies are conceived of as a broader social process, connected to widespread economic, political, technological, and cultural developments".[7]

In the 1980s and 1990s, entertainment publicity tactics became "more subtle and sophisticated", such as using press releases, movie junkets, and community activities. These promotional efforts are targeted and designed using market research "to increase the predictability of success of their media ventures". In some cases, publicity agents may create "provocative advertisements" or make an outrageous public statement to "trigger public controversy and thereby generate 'free' news coverage".[5]

Socio-psychological theories

 
South Korean musician Psy has been referred to as a "globalstar", with his 2012 "Gangnam Style" video becoming the first to reach 1 billion views on YouTube

According to Roger Caillois, superstars are created by the interplay between "mass media, free enterprise, and competition". Superstars are produced by a mixture of effort on the part of the superstar and mere chance (due to the many arbitrary factors influencing sports, film releases, etc.) and the superstar usually has "extraordinary natural talent augmented by an even more extraordinary perseverance and drive". However, small and relative differences are of decisive importance for "winning or losing by a hair's breadth". It is here that chance plays a role, with Caillois noting that "a sudden gust of wind at the end of a yachting race can mean the difference between stardom and defeat". He states that the role of chance in superstardom is paradoxical because the west is such a "predominantly meritocratic society" which champions the importance of hard work, competition, activity, and determination.[8]

Caillois states that "[since] only one may be first, [a person may] choose to win indirectly through identification with someone else" and that the triumph of the superstar as the most popular actor or musician is in part due to the actions of "those who worship the hero". He says the public believes that the concept of "the manicurist elected beauty queen, the sales girl entrusted with the heroine's role in a super production, the shopkeeper's daughter winning the Tour de France, and the gas station attendant who basks in the limelight as a champion toreador" represents the possibility from the public's perspective that they too may become wealthy and successful.[8] For example, Levine points out that Lars Ulrich, the drummer for Metallica, was a service station attendant before becoming a wealthy rock star and that Harrison Ford was a cabinet maker before becoming a rich and famous actor.[9]

Caillois calls superstars' huge incomes and accolades "disguised lotteries" and a "special kind of game of chance". For example, the grand prizes for literary competitions "bring fortune and glory to a writer for several years". Caillois notes that a superstar cannot merely be successful at some activity—they must also be richly rewarded. He says that the "material reward of the superstar is a necessary ingredient (for the glory of the star) for the identification of the public with the star, or whether it is the excellence or the private life of the star which is of more importance". He states that superstars' extravagant incomes play an important psychological "compensating mechanism" role for the public.[8] According to Madow, "Fame is a 'relational' phenomenon, something that is conferred by others. A person can, within the limits of his natural talents, make himself strong or swift or learned. But he cannot, in this same sense, make himself famous, any more than he can make himself loved. [...] Fame is often conferred or withheld, just as love is, for reasons and on grounds other than 'merit'. This means that regardless of how strenuously the star may try to 'monitor' and 'shape' it, the media and the public always play a substantial part in the image-making process."[5]

Economics of "superstars"

 
Singer Michael Jackson was one of the most famous people in the world[10]

In 1981, Sherwin Rosen examined the economics of superstars to determine why "relatively small numbers of people earn enormous amounts of money and seem to dominate the fields in which they engage" Rosen argues that, in superstar markets, "small differences in talent at the top of the distribution will translate into large differences in revenue".[11] Rosen points out that "sellers of higher talent charge only slightly higher prices than those of lower talent, but sell much larger quantities; their greater earnings come overwhelmingly from selling larger quantities than from charging higher prices".[12]

Microeconomist Alfred Marshall explains that technology has greatly extended the power and reach of the planet's most gifted performers. He referenced classical opera singer Elizabeth Billington, a well-acclaimed soprano with a strong voice who could only reach a small audience and naturally did not have access to a microphone or amplifier in 1798, let alone "MTV, CDs, iTunes, and Pandora". This limited her ability to dominate the market in the way that artists to do today. Marshall wrote, "So long as the number of persons who can be reached by a human voice is strictly limited, it is not very likely that any singer will make an advance on the £10,000 said to have been earned in a season by Mrs. Billington at the beginning of the last century, nearly as great [an increase] as that which the business leaders of the present generation have made on those of the last." Furthermore, the trends in popular music indicate that the price of the average concert ticket increased by nearly 400% from 1981 to 2012, much faster than the 150% rise in overall consumer price inflation.[13]

Some scholars argue that superstardom plays a useful role in society. Caillois cites Rawls, who states that the "premiums earned by scarce natural talents serve to cover the costs of training and to encourage the efforts of learning, as well as to direct ability to where it best furthers the common interest".[8] Cowen cites Rosen to argue that "the superstar effect is welfare-improving (consumers get better performances) even if it leads to raising income inequality" and adds that the "superstar phenomenon should not be overstressed [...] indeed, fame is a positive-sum game, not a negative nor a zero-sum one". Cowen states that "countervailing forces operate, such as a convergence of quality that limits the ability of the very best stars to dominate the market for long, or more radically the elastic supply of fame". This means that "when demand for fame increases, the numbers of prizes, rewards and whatever fame generating distinctions is rising too".[14]

On the other hand, it has been argued that "compensation systems that resemble prizes [lotteries] can also create perverse incentives by discouraging cooperative behaviour and may encourage some contestants to disrupt the performance of competitors".[15] As well, Frank and Cook (1995) called into question "the way the winner-take-all markets operate, with their damaging features". They argue that the "winner-take-all payoff structure [of competition for superstardom] generates a spiral of individual and social occupational waste, since it leads both to increasing (monetary and non-monetary) reward inequalities and to overcrowding in the markets and occupations prone to an overestimation of one's chance to succeed". As a result, they argue that "when excess numbers of contestants are induced to invest in performance enhancement in order to raise their individual odds of winning, these investments will be mutually offsetting and socially inefficient; end consumers may get more valuable products but the social costs are excessive".

Other meanings

"Superstar" art museums

 
Rajesh Khanna, dubbed as the "First Superstar" of Bollywood

A small number of major art museums, including Frank Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum, the Centre Pompidou, and Frank Gehry's Guggenheim Museum, have become household names and major tourist destinations. With their striking, architecturally designed buildings and well-known masterpieces, they have been termed "superstar" art museums.[16] With their huge visitor traffic, superstar museums are often able to derive a significant income from museum bookshops and restaurants and have a "major impact on the local economy".[16] Superstar museums are able to use the popular appeal of their location and art holdings to produce their own books, videos, and television specials, which adds an additional revenue stream and further reinforces the public's awareness of the museum. Some superstar museums have also begun establishing museum networks. For example, London's Tate Gallery launched the additional art museums Tate Liverpool and Tate St. Ives.[16]

Cultural institutions such as art museums play a "gatekeeping" role for consumers, helping to screen and grade cultural artefacts and artworks, thus "reducing information and search costs" for consumers. Moreover, by channelling resources to a limited group of visual artists, cultural institutions also "enhance superstar phenomena within the visual arts".[citation needed]

Superstar CEOs

McGraw-Hill's economic website argues that the multimillion-dollar salaries of superstar CEOs in the corporate world can be viewed as a type of tournament prize. The huge salaries of these executives "often seem to resemble prizes for the winners of contests rather than compensation in return for the value of the marginal product of labour". As an example, a company may "have many vice-presidents of roughly comparable ability and the vice-president (who may only be slightly more talented than the others) that is promoted to president receives a huge salary increase, which resembles a prize for winning the contest as best VP".[15] The article goes on to argue, "Such a compensation system may be efficient if the organization is only able to rank its executives according to the relative value of their contribution to the organization (the organization cannot measure the productivity of each executive, only the productivity of the group of executives). [...] Even if executives are paid a wage equal to the average productivity of the group, there will still be an incentive to perform in order be promoted and win the prize."[15]

See also

References

  1. ^ John Nyren, The Cricketers of my Time, Robson, 1998, p.57.
  2. ^ Press, The Canadian. "Vancouver brothers sculpted game of hockey 100 years before Canucks vied for cup - The Hockey News". thehockeynews.com. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  3. ^ O’Brien, Glenn (June 1977). "Andy Warhol". 4 June 2010. Interview Magazine.
  4. ^ "Super Star (Hybrid Tea Rose)". www.countrygardenroses.co.uk. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on March 23, 2002.
  6. ^ BarbieCollectors (22 December 2008). "1976 Superstar Barbie Doll Commercial Full Length High Quality". Archived from the original on 2021-12-19. Retrieved 2 April 2018 – via YouTube.
  7. ^ Johansson, Sofia. "Editorial" (PDF). Communication and Media Research Institute of the University of Westminster.
  8. ^ a b c d Loek Groot (2000). (PDF). Diogenes. ICPHS /Blackwell Publishers. 48/2 (190): 33. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2010.
  9. ^ Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine. "Who wins and who loses?". dklevine.com.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  10. ^ "Michael Jackson – Most Famous Person of the 21st Century –". 29 September 2021.
  11. ^ super star: Rajabaskar is the real super star. The Market for Rock Concerts in the Material World. Alan B. Krueger, Princeton University and NBER April 12, 2004
  12. ^ Paul Seabright and Helen Weeds (2006). "Competition and Market Power in Broadcasting: Where Are The Rents?" (PDF). essex.ac.uk.[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ Alan Krueger (2013). "Land of Hope and Dreams: Rock and Roll, Economics, and Rebuilding the Middle Class". whitehouse.gov – via National Archives.
  14. ^ Pierre-Michel Menger. (PDF). Centre de Sociologie du Travail et des Arts Paris, France. gouv.qc.ca. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2010.
  15. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 2004-08-16.
  16. ^ a b c (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-05-19.

Further reading

  • Hamlen, William A. "Superstardom in Popular Music: Empirical Evidence." Review of Economics and Statistics 73 (1991): 729–33.
  • Koutsobinas, Theodore. The Political Economy of Status: Superstars, Markets, and Culture Change (Edward Elgar Publishing; 2015) 264 pages; on the societal impact of luxury consumption and status markets, and the media's fascination with superstars.
  • MacDonald, Glenn M. "The Economics of Rising Stars." American Economic Review 78 (1988): 155–67.
  • Rosen, Sherwin. The superstar effect – "The Economics of Superstars", American Economic Review, 71 (1981).
  • Salganik, Matthew J., Peter Sheridan Dodds, and Duncan J. Watts. "Experimental Study of Inequality and Unpredictability in an Artificial Cultural Market." Science 311 (2006): 854-56.
  • Pattni, Anandi. 'Superstars: People who are good to me' Vanity Fair 157 (2007): 185–89.
  • Grinin L., "People of Celebrity" as a New Social Stratum and Elite. In Hierarchy and Power in the History of Civilizations: Cultural Dimensions (pp. 183–206). / Ed. by Leonid E. Grinin and Andrey V. Korotayev. Moscow: KRASAND, 2009 Работы на иностранных языках 2009г (in Russian). Retrieved 7 December 2010.

superstar, other, uses, disambiguation, superstar, someone, great, popular, appeal, widely, known, prominent, successful, their, field, celebrities, referred, superstars, include, individuals, work, actors, musicians, athletes, other, media, based, professions. For other uses see Superstar disambiguation A superstar is someone who has great popular appeal and is widely known prominent or successful in their field Celebrities referred to as superstars may include individuals who work as actors musicians athletes and other media based professions Contents 1 History 2 Socio psychological theories 3 Economics of superstars 4 Other meanings 4 1 Superstar art museums 4 2 Superstar CEOs 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingHistory Edit In the 1960s and 1970s Andy Warhol popularized the term superstar to describe people like actress Mary Woronov The origin of the term in the context of celebrity is uncertain but a similar expression is attested in John Nyren s 1832 cricket book The Cricketers of My Time Nyren described the 18th century cricketer John Small as a star of the first magnitude 1 The earliest use of the term superstar has been credited to Frank Patrick in reference to the ice hockey players on his Vancouver Millionaires teams of the 1910s and 1920s specifically Cyclone Taylor 2 In the June 1977 edition of Interview magazine pop artist Andy Warhol was asked by editor Glenn O Brien who invented the word superstar Warhol known for popularizing the term responded I think it was Jack Smith O Brien then asked And who were the first superstars Warhol responded They were all Jack Smith s stars 3 The term received widespread and commonplace use from the title of the musical Jesus Christ Superstar in particular the 1970 concept album of the musical and the eponymous hit song Super Star is also the name of a hugely successful rose which Harry Wheatcroft introduced and named in 1960 4 By 1909 silent film companies began promoting picture personalities by releasing stories about actors to fan magazines and newspapers as part of a strategy to build brand loyalty for their company s actors and films By the 1920s Hollywood film company promoters had developed a massive industrial enterprise that peddled a new intangible fame 5 Hollywood image makers and promotional agents planted rumours selectively released real or fictitious information to the press and used other gimmicks to create public personas for actors They then worked to reinforce that persona and manage the publicity Publicists thus created the enduring images and public perceptions of screen legends such as Rock Hudson Marilyn Monroe and Grace Kelly The development of this star system made fame something that could be fabricated purposely by the masters of the new machinery of glory 5 In 1976 Mattel produced a Superstar variation of its Barbie doll 6 According to Sofia Johansson the canonical texts on stardom include articles by Boorstin 1971 Alberoni 1972 and Dyer 1979 that examined the representations of stars and on aspects of the Hollywood star system Johansson notes that more recent analyses within media and cultural studies e g Gamson 1994 Marshall 1997 Giles 2000 Turner Marshall and Bonner 2000 Rojek 2001 Turner 2004 have instead dealt with the idea of a pervasive contemporary celebrity culture In an analysis of celebrity culture Johansson states that fame and its constituencies are conceived of as a broader social process connected to widespread economic political technological and cultural developments 7 In the 1980s and 1990s entertainment publicity tactics became more subtle and sophisticated such as using press releases movie junkets and community activities These promotional efforts are targeted and designed using market research to increase the predictability of success of their media ventures In some cases publicity agents may create provocative advertisements or make an outrageous public statement to trigger public controversy and thereby generate free news coverage 5 Socio psychological theories Edit South Korean musician Psy has been referred to as a globalstar with his 2012 Gangnam Style video becoming the first to reach 1 billion views on YouTube According to Roger Caillois superstars are created by the interplay between mass media free enterprise and competition Superstars are produced by a mixture of effort on the part of the superstar and mere chance due to the many arbitrary factors influencing sports film releases etc and the superstar usually has extraordinary natural talent augmented by an even more extraordinary perseverance and drive However small and relative differences are of decisive importance for winning or losing by a hair s breadth It is here that chance plays a role with Caillois noting that a sudden gust of wind at the end of a yachting race can mean the difference between stardom and defeat He states that the role of chance in superstardom is paradoxical because the west is such a predominantly meritocratic society which champions the importance of hard work competition activity and determination 8 Caillois states that since only one may be first a person may choose to win indirectly through identification with someone else and that the triumph of the superstar as the most popular actor or musician is in part due to the actions of those who worship the hero He says the public believes that the concept of the manicurist elected beauty queen the sales girl entrusted with the heroine s role in a super production the shopkeeper s daughter winning the Tour de France and the gas station attendant who basks in the limelight as a champion toreador represents the possibility from the public s perspective that they too may become wealthy and successful 8 For example Levine points out that Lars Ulrich the drummer for Metallica was a service station attendant before becoming a wealthy rock star and that Harrison Ford was a cabinet maker before becoming a rich and famous actor 9 Caillois calls superstars huge incomes and accolades disguised lotteries and a special kind of game of chance For example the grand prizes for literary competitions bring fortune and glory to a writer for several years Caillois notes that a superstar cannot merely be successful at some activity they must also be richly rewarded He says that the material reward of the superstar is a necessary ingredient for the glory of the star for the identification of the public with the star or whether it is the excellence or the private life of the star which is of more importance He states that superstars extravagant incomes play an important psychological compensating mechanism role for the public 8 According to Madow Fame is a relational phenomenon something that is conferred by others A person can within the limits of his natural talents make himself strong or swift or learned But he cannot in this same sense make himself famous any more than he can make himself loved Fame is often conferred or withheld just as love is for reasons and on grounds other than merit This means that regardless of how strenuously the star may try to monitor and shape it the media and the public always play a substantial part in the image making process 5 Economics of superstars Edit Singer Michael Jackson was one of the most famous people in the world 10 In 1981 Sherwin Rosen examined the economics of superstars to determine why relatively small numbers of people earn enormous amounts of money and seem to dominate the fields in which they engage Rosen argues that in superstar markets small differences in talent at the top of the distribution will translate into large differences in revenue 11 Rosen points out that sellers of higher talent charge only slightly higher prices than those of lower talent but sell much larger quantities their greater earnings come overwhelmingly from selling larger quantities than from charging higher prices 12 Microeconomist Alfred Marshall explains that technology has greatly extended the power and reach of the planet s most gifted performers He referenced classical opera singer Elizabeth Billington a well acclaimed soprano with a strong voice who could only reach a small audience and naturally did not have access to a microphone or amplifier in 1798 let alone MTV CDs iTunes and Pandora This limited her ability to dominate the market in the way that artists to do today Marshall wrote So long as the number of persons who can be reached by a human voice is strictly limited it is not very likely that any singer will make an advance on the 10 000 said to have been earned in a season by Mrs Billington at the beginning of the last century nearly as great an increase as that which the business leaders of the present generation have made on those of the last Furthermore the trends in popular music indicate that the price of the average concert ticket increased by nearly 400 from 1981 to 2012 much faster than the 150 rise in overall consumer price inflation 13 Some scholars argue that superstardom plays a useful role in society Caillois cites Rawls who states that the premiums earned by scarce natural talents serve to cover the costs of training and to encourage the efforts of learning as well as to direct ability to where it best furthers the common interest 8 Cowen cites Rosen to argue that the superstar effect is welfare improving consumers get better performances even if it leads to raising income inequality and adds that the superstar phenomenon should not be overstressed indeed fame is a positive sum game not a negative nor a zero sum one Cowen states that countervailing forces operate such as a convergence of quality that limits the ability of the very best stars to dominate the market for long or more radically the elastic supply of fame This means that when demand for fame increases the numbers of prizes rewards and whatever fame generating distinctions is rising too 14 On the other hand it has been argued that compensation systems that resemble prizes lotteries can also create perverse incentives by discouraging cooperative behaviour and may encourage some contestants to disrupt the performance of competitors 15 As well Frank and Cook 1995 called into question the way the winner take all markets operate with their damaging features They argue that the winner take all payoff structure of competition for superstardom generates a spiral of individual and social occupational waste since it leads both to increasing monetary and non monetary reward inequalities and to overcrowding in the markets and occupations prone to an overestimation of one s chance to succeed As a result they argue that when excess numbers of contestants are induced to invest in performance enhancement in order to raise their individual odds of winning these investments will be mutually offsetting and socially inefficient end consumers may get more valuable products but the social costs are excessive Other meanings Edit Superstar art museums Edit Rajesh Khanna dubbed as the First Superstar of Bollywood A small number of major art museums including Frank Lloyd Wright s Guggenheim Museum the Centre Pompidou and Frank Gehry s Guggenheim Museum have become household names and major tourist destinations With their striking architecturally designed buildings and well known masterpieces they have been termed superstar art museums 16 With their huge visitor traffic superstar museums are often able to derive a significant income from museum bookshops and restaurants and have a major impact on the local economy 16 Superstar museums are able to use the popular appeal of their location and art holdings to produce their own books videos and television specials which adds an additional revenue stream and further reinforces the public s awareness of the museum Some superstar museums have also begun establishing museum networks For example London s Tate Gallery launched the additional art museums Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives 16 Cultural institutions such as art museums play a gatekeeping role for consumers helping to screen and grade cultural artefacts and artworks thus reducing information and search costs for consumers Moreover by channelling resources to a limited group of visual artists cultural institutions also enhance superstar phenomena within the visual arts citation needed Superstar CEOs Edit McGraw Hill s economic website argues that the multimillion dollar salaries of superstar CEOs in the corporate world can be viewed as a type of tournament prize The huge salaries of these executives often seem to resemble prizes for the winners of contests rather than compensation in return for the value of the marginal product of labour As an example a company may have many vice presidents of roughly comparable ability and the vice president who may only be slightly more talented than the others that is promoted to president receives a huge salary increase which resembles a prize for winning the contest as best VP 15 The article goes on to argue Such a compensation system may be efficient if the organization is only able to rank its executives according to the relative value of their contribution to the organization the organization cannot measure the productivity of each executive only the productivity of the group of executives Even if executives are paid a wage equal to the average productivity of the group there will still be an incentive to perform in order be promoted and win the prize 15 See also EditSupercoupleReferences Edit John Nyren The Cricketers of my Time Robson 1998 p 57 Press The Canadian Vancouver brothers sculpted game of hockey 100 years before Canucks vied for cup The Hockey News thehockeynews com Retrieved 2 April 2018 O Brien Glenn June 1977 Andy Warhol 4 June 2010 Interview Magazine Super Star Hybrid Tea Rose www countrygardenroses co uk Retrieved 2 April 2018 a b c d Archived from the original on March 23 2002 BarbieCollectors 22 December 2008 1976 Superstar Barbie Doll Commercial Full Length High Quality Archived from the original on 2021 12 19 Retrieved 2 April 2018 via YouTube Johansson Sofia Editorial PDF Communication and Media Research Institute of the University of Westminster a b c d Loek Groot 2000 Roger Caillois Games of Chance and the Superstar PDF Diogenes ICPHS Blackwell Publishers 48 2 190 33 Archived from the original PDF on 5 October 2011 Retrieved 7 December 2010 Michele Boldrin and David K Levine Who wins and who loses dklevine com a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Michael Jackson Most Famous Person of the 21st Century 29 September 2021 super star Rajabaskar is the real super star The Market for Rock Concerts in the Material World Alan B Krueger Princeton University and NBER April 12 2004 Paul Seabright and Helen Weeds 2006 Competition and Market Power in Broadcasting Where Are The Rents PDF essex ac uk permanent dead link Alan Krueger 2013 Land of Hope and Dreams Rock and Roll Economics and Rebuilding the Middle Class whitehouse gov via National Archives Pierre Michel Menger Statistics in the Wake of Challenges Posed by Cultural Diversity in a Globalization Context PDF Centre de Sociologie du Travail et des Arts Paris France gouv qc ca Archived from the original PDF on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 7 December 2010 a b c Archived from the original on 2004 08 16 a b c PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2006 05 19 Further reading EditHamlen William A Superstardom in Popular Music Empirical Evidence Review of Economics and Statistics 73 1991 729 33 Koutsobinas Theodore The Political Economy of Status Superstars Markets and Culture Change Edward Elgar Publishing 2015 264 pages on the societal impact of luxury consumption and status markets and the media s fascination with superstars MacDonald Glenn M The Economics of Rising Stars American Economic Review 78 1988 155 67 Rosen Sherwin The superstar effect The Economics of Superstars American Economic Review 71 1981 Salganik Matthew J Peter Sheridan Dodds and Duncan J Watts Experimental Study of Inequality and Unpredictability in an Artificial Cultural Market Science 311 2006 854 56 Pattni Anandi Superstars People who are good to me Vanity Fair 157 2007 185 89 Grinin L People of Celebrity as a New Social Stratum and Elite In Hierarchy and Power in the History of Civilizations Cultural Dimensions pp 183 206 Ed by Leonid E Grinin and Andrey V Korotayev Moscow KRASAND 2009 Raboty na inostrannyh yazykah 2009g in Russian Retrieved 7 December 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Superstar amp oldid 1149244458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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