Class:
Friday 12:10pm - 2:40pm
Blended remote and in-person
Contact for Zoom links
:)
Office hours by apt.
T, W, Th
On Zoom
Write to sign up
fraade@gmail.com
In-Class Links
Get them >
Readings Links
URL in class
Week 1 | 01/29 | Why be famous?
Individual HW:
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Week 2 | 02/05 |
Archetype and Specialness Reading due next week:
Watch for next week: Individual HW due next week:
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Week 3 | 02/12 |
Content Strategy Listen/Read, due next week: Group HW due next week:
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Week 4 | 02/19 |
Getting Noticed: Media Spike #1 / Guest - Mayaan Readings due next week:
Group 2-week HW due week 6, 3/05:
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Week 5 | 02/26 |
Fan Motivations / Guest Reading due next week:
HW due next week :
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Week 6 | 03/05 |
Fan Behavior Fanlike Activities: Impersonations, Pilgrimages, Rituals and Traditions, Socialization, Evangelization, Performative Consumption, Content Creation. Watch, due next week: Group 2-week HW due week 8, 3/27:
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Week 7 | 03/12 | Fangroup Management Group HW:
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3-19 | No Class | |
Week 8 | 03/26 |
Influence and Commercialization Reading due next week:
Group HW:
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Week 9 | 04/02 |
Influence / Guest: Eduardo Reading due next week: Group HW:
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Week 10 | 04/09 |
Virality and Memetics
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Week 11 | 04/16 |
Celeb Conspiracy Theories Reading due next week:
Individual Homework
Group HW:
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Week 12 | 04/23 |
Exploitation Group HW:
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Week 13 | 04/30 |
Singularity / Guest Critics Group HW:
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Week 14 | 05/07 | Final presentations |
COURSE DESCRIPTION
"I want to be famous!" For a decade, this has been the most common response to the question "What do you want to be when you grow up?" The media has exploded with influencer, reality TV stars, and D-list Celebes's who could not have existed even 20 years ago. But who actually gets to be famous? It's certainly not always the most attractive, charismatic, or talented. Why shouldn't it be us?
This production-centric class will create real, human celebrities. We'll examine the social evolution, neuroscience, and historical significance of fame, and the wide variety of tactics and technologies that go into generating and sustaining it today. Then we will try them out on each other. And also maybe on some cats, puppies, and ferrets too. In teams, we'll experiment with growing our new celeb's renown and recognizability using a variety of strategies, philosophies, and platforms. The final goal will be the construction of a viable, self-sustaining celebrity with masses of adoring fans. Really. Fame isn't nearly as random as it appears!
COURSE OBJECTIVES
At the completion of this course, the student will be able to:
COURSE TEXTBOOK
No texts are required, but there will be a number of required readings from various sources. In addition, further readings and source material will be found in the following highly recommended books:
Senft, T. M. (2008). Camgirls: Celebrity and community in the age of social networks. New York: Lang.
Duffy, B. E. (2018). (Not) Getting Paid to Do What You Love: Gender, Social Media, and Aspirational Work. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Lifestyle Gurus: Constructing Authority and Influence Online by Stephanie A Baker (forthcoming)
Please Subscribe! Influencers, Social Media, and the Commodification of Everyday Life by Crystal Abidin (forthcoming)
Abidin, C, Internet Celebrity: Understanding Fame Online. 2018
Marwick AE. Status Update, Celebrity, Publicity, and Branding in the Social Media Age. Yale University Press; 2013.
Brodie R. Virus of the Mind, The New Science of the Meme. Hay House Incorporated; 2011.
Tashiro T. Awkward, The Science of Why We're Socially Awkward and Why That's Awesome. William Morrow; 2017.
Cavicchi D. Listening and Longing, Music Lovers in the Age of Barnum. Wesleyan University Press; 2011.
Blackmore S. The Meme Machine. Oxford Paperbacks; 2000.
Jenkins H, Ford S, Green J. Spreadable Media, Creating Value and Meaning in a Networked Culture. NYU Press; 2013.
Fussell P. Class, A Guide Through the American Status System. Simon and Schuster; 1992.
Aunger R. The Electric Meme, A New Theory of How We Think. Free Press; 2010.
Carlin P. How to Make Your Cat an Internet Celebrity, A Guide to Financial Freedom. Quirk Books; 2014.
Sternheimer K. Celebrity Culture and the American Dream, Stardom and Social Mobility. Routledge; 2014.
Pringle H. Celebrity Sells. Wiley; 2004.
Cashmore E, Cashmore E. Celebrity Culture. 2014.
Rojek C. Fame Attack, The Inflation of Celebrity and Its Consequences. A&C Black; 2012.
Phillips W. This Is Why We Can't Have Nice Things, Mapping the Relationship Between Online Trolling and Mainstream Culture. Mit Press; 2016.
Solove DJ. The Future of Reputation, Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet. 2008.
Rojek C. Celebrity. Reaktion Books; 2001.
Piazza J. Celebrity, Inc., How Famous People Make Money. Open Road Media E-riginal; 2011.
Lynch A. Thought Contagion, How Belief Spreads Through Society. Basic Books (AZ); 1998.
Shifman L. Memes in Digital Culture. MIT Press; 2013.
Chess S, Newsom E. Folklore, Horror Stories, and the Slender Man, The Development of an Internet Mythology. Palgrave Pivot; 2014.
Halpern J. Fame Junkies, The Hidden Truths Behind America's Favorite Addiction. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; 2008.
Fraade-Blanar Z, Glazer AM. Superfandom, How Our Obsessions Are Changing How We Buy and Who We Are. 2017.
GRADING AND ATTENDANCE
Grades will be determined by the following breakdown:
30% Participation
20% Reading responses and one-off assignments, as recorded in a blog or emailed to the teacher.
50% Semester-long Final project
Any more than four (4) unexcused absences will result a lowering of your final grade
This class is a blended in-person/remote class. It can be experienced fully remote without difficulty.
PARTICIPATION:
This class will be highly participatory. You are expected to contribute to discussions, engage in group work, give feedback to your peers, and otherwise fully participate in class.
PHONE, TABLET, LAPTOP, AND OTHER ELECTRONICS USE
Recreational use of phones, music players, video game systems and other devices are forbidden. I know we're on Zoom, but still. Laptops and tablets are allowed for note taking, in class work, as well as relevant research only. Activities not related to the class, such as recreational use of the internet, including all social media websites, email and instant messaging, game playing, and work for other classes, will not be permitted.
TEACHING STYLE
Classes will be a mixture of lecture, reading discussion, group presentations, and critique.
COURSE SCHEDULE
The course will be one (1) time per week for two hours and thirty minutes (2:30) for a total of 14 weeks.
ASSIGNMENTS
As a class engaged in the exploration of an ongoing phenomenon and the theory underpinning it, there will be regular readings, podcasts, and videos. Students should arrive in class ready to discuss their reactions and criticism of each piece, and participation is mandatory.
Responses to reading and other written assignments are also due by email or in personal blogs within one day of the class discussion.
There will be regular assignments using class material to contribute to a semester-long project of building viable celebrity characters. These assignments must be documented (written description, photos, screenshots, or video all qualify based on the assignment) on at least one group member’s blog or emailed to the teacher. Each progress report is due by class time one week after they are assigned unless stated otherwise.
It is expected that you will spend at least 4 to 6 hours a week on the class outside of class itself. This will include reading, completing the assigned project progress, and so on.
STATEMENT OF ACADEMIC INTEGRITY
Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s work as though it were your own. More specifically, plagiarism is to present as your own: A sequence of words quoted without quotation marks from another writer or a paraphrased passage from another writer’s work or facts, ideas or images composed by someone else. More information can be found on Tisch’s page regarding Academic Integrity (http://tisch.nyu.edu/faculty/academic-integ).
ACCESSIBILITY
Academic accommodations are available for students with documented disabilities. Please contact the Moses Center for Students with Disabilities at 212 998-4980 for further information.
WELLNESS
Your health and safety are a priority at NYU. If you experience any health or mental health issues during this course, we encourage you to utilize the support services of the 24/7 NYU Wellness Exchange 212-443-9999, or access other materials on the Wellness Exchange website.