Editors say stars do their own writing but are subject to editing like any freelancer.
Keys says she tends to “overwrite. I want to get every nuance in there.”
Stiles’ Guardian article needed “a couple of rewrites,” the actress says, “but they were good suggestions, and I didn’t mind doing them. … I have a newfound respect for journalists. It’s incredibly hard to make a living at it.”
—Both sides now: Stars take on new role as journalists (USA Today (will expire))
Rosemary adds, “Especially when celebrities are being given opportunities and space that had gone to journalists.”
That’s yet another drawback of the aggregation of media. Celebrities have a long history of hiring ghost-writers for their biographies.
Similar:
Umberto Eco and his legacy in open-world games
I read "The Name of the Rose" during the...
Books
Just wrote the first ending to my in-progress journalism game (created in Twine)
3,486 words, 120 links, 57 lexias, and c...
Design
NPR quits Twitter after being falsely labeled as 'state-affiliated media'
NPR will no longer post fresh content to...
Business
Hypertext as a Teaching Tool -- Brown University Poetry Classroom 1974
This short film documents an early attem...
Academia
Microsoft has no shame: Bing spit on my ‘Chrome’ search with a fake AI answer
It was time to download Google Chrom...
Business
Grandpa Joe's Candy Store.
Sugar rush at Grandpa Joe's Candy Store....
Aesthetics



Here is an interesting article about the increased use of computer generated movie scenes:
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/04/09/huang0904.asp
So, what will happen when more movies have computer generated scenes and actors? Will actors and stuntmen become obsolete? Will the public interest in actors wane? What will the tabloids write about? Can a computer generated actor run for office?
Soon, we might see actors will be running for governor and president! Can they possibly win? Nah, that sort of thing only happens in the movies.
And then there’s Pamela Anderson’s novel which just hit the shelves….