Besides making compelling music, one of the main characteristics of most rock and rap stars when they begin their careers has always been their rebellious persona. They are raging against something – the system, the man, the rich, the capitalists, the phonies, the government, the record companies, the police, the military.
With their youthful exuberance and anger, they implicitly portray themselves as heroes and champions of the persecuted, the downtrodden, the forgotten, the losers, the poor, the incarcerated. This is why teens and younger people idolize them. They are expressing the dismay and the resentment that we all feel when we realize how broken and unjust the world is and how our parents and society have gone along with the whole thing.
Then, before you know it, these erstwhile rebels that we have placed on the pedestal of our idealistic imagination have an entourage of bodyguards, managers, CPAs and lawyers who are investing their millions, finding ways to avoid taxes, shielding them from any negative publicity, jetting them from party to party and creating connections with all the other glitterati and power-brokers of the world.
So much for rebellion.
A similar path is followed by young movie and TV stars, whose indignation at social inequities, ocean pollution, climate change and wildlife extinction knows no bounds, but who after a few years of success find themselves flying their private jets into Venice to attend the Jeff Bezos wedding.
The path from rebel to hypocrite is well trod. We human beings are easily seduced by wealth, power and fame. Our principles and convictions are easy prey for the rapacious riches of this world. And our ability to rationalize and to self-delude is prodigious.
None of us wants to be a hypocrite, but quite frankly if someone has a modicum of success and/or luck in this world it is highly likely that some measure of hypocrisy will ensue. It is damned hard to stay true to one’s convictions when the world offers up its delights. We quickly succumb to the allure of fancy houses, cars, clothes and vacations, and being feted by important people who know even more important people.
The former rebels assuage their consciences by attending philanthropic galas and making donations. They speak out forcefully on issues. They become spokespeople for important causes and generously bring their fame to fundraisers or photo ops.
But it is all mostly a façade. The passion is performative. The fire is gone. The embers remaining provide just enough light to illuminate the hypocrisy of it all. It is the human condition writ large for all to see.