Princess Diana died at just the right time. I’m not talking about the
human tragedy of a young mother leaving her boys, obviously. For that
and a million other reasons, I dearly wish she’d been wearing her
seatbelt and taken a cab that night.
But Princess Diana died at just the right time to preserve her enduring
mystique. Just like James Dean, Marilyn Monroe and Kurt Cobain.
Even though she was the victim of more aggressive press intrusion than
any human before or since, Diana’s prime in the 80s and 90s were the
last gasp of celebrity mystery.
If she were alive today? She’d have her own reality show, for sure. A
fragrance. Botox and fillers. Collagen lips. Hair extensions. A range
of homewares. Possibly an album.
You see, Diana was a survivor and ahead of her time in the way she used
the media to maximise her fame and cast herself as The People’s
Princess. And to stay relevant, today’s celebrities have had to evolve
lately.
Back in the nineties when she died, the power of celebrities was peaking. So was the control they had over their image. Apart from an occasional no-makeup shot or a grainy paparazzi snap on a beach, the only time we saw celebrities was when they came out to play with the media on their terms. This meant glossed and glamorous on a red carpet or carefully packaged in interviews to flog their latest project.
Having successfully bumped models off magazine covers, it was impossible to escape this polished perfection. And it was getting bloody boring.
We’d gorged on glamour and we craved a palette cleanser. Enter the ‘real person’. Human sorbet.
Real people, we suddenly realised, could be far more interesting than celebrities. Who knew!
Top Comments
"Human Sorbet" LOL! Love it! Great piece Mia!
Nah, Princess Diana was a Lady...and I don't think she would have got that skanky. Sure - she put herself out there in a way to make it look like she didn't know she was being photographed - but she was kinda classy about it. Those reality tv show celebs aren't classy. It's a money and attention grab.