Stanley Doble
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,808
- Location
- Cobourg
Tim Cockey is a pinhead. Among all the idiocy I think the most jarring note is his reference to Bogart's "15 minutes of fame".
If you want to be technical, Bogart became a star in 1936 when The Petrified Forest debuted. If Pinhead Cockey says he is almost forgotten in 2015, that makes 79 years of fame.
He probably doesn't even know where the 15 minutes of fame meme comes from. If he did, he would know he got it exactly backwards.
Andy Warhol was talking about himself, when an interviewer asked him what it was like to be a celebrity. He answered that to him a celebrity was someone like Marilyn Monroe or Cary Grant. He did not think of himself as a star, but stardom had become a cheap and fleeting thing. Then he cracked that in the future, everyone would be famous - but for only 15 minutes.
Bogart was a real star, not a cheap flash in the pan.
It doesn't surprise me that a random group of teenagers never heard of Bogart. It would be surprising if they did. In fact these days fame lasts a lot longer than it used to, thanks to DVDs, Youtube, and the internet in general. But you need a certain level of maturity to appreciate Bogart's movies, which the present generation may reach about the age of 50.
This reminds me of an anecdote a Hollywood director set down in the early fifties. He asked a young actress to give him a Garbo look and she asked what's a Garbo look.
He was so shocked he had to sit down. But he reflected that the girl was in her early twenties, and Garbo's last movie was shown when she was about 2 years old. So it was not very surprising she never heard of Garbo.
At the time television was just coming in, and old movies were never seen after they were 2 or 3 years old.
Another example is Sunset Boulevard. The has been star has been out of the limelight for 20 years and is 52 years old. Nobody remembers her except a few old hands in the movie business, and a group of friends William Holden calls "the waxworks".
To put this in perspective, the modern equivalent would be an actress who was born in 1973, became a star in the 1980s, made her last movie 1995 and was now considered as ancient as the pyramids.
So Bogart at 116 is as out of date as, say, Madonna.
If you want to be technical, Bogart became a star in 1936 when The Petrified Forest debuted. If Pinhead Cockey says he is almost forgotten in 2015, that makes 79 years of fame.
He probably doesn't even know where the 15 minutes of fame meme comes from. If he did, he would know he got it exactly backwards.
Andy Warhol was talking about himself, when an interviewer asked him what it was like to be a celebrity. He answered that to him a celebrity was someone like Marilyn Monroe or Cary Grant. He did not think of himself as a star, but stardom had become a cheap and fleeting thing. Then he cracked that in the future, everyone would be famous - but for only 15 minutes.
Bogart was a real star, not a cheap flash in the pan.
It doesn't surprise me that a random group of teenagers never heard of Bogart. It would be surprising if they did. In fact these days fame lasts a lot longer than it used to, thanks to DVDs, Youtube, and the internet in general. But you need a certain level of maturity to appreciate Bogart's movies, which the present generation may reach about the age of 50.
This reminds me of an anecdote a Hollywood director set down in the early fifties. He asked a young actress to give him a Garbo look and she asked what's a Garbo look.
He was so shocked he had to sit down. But he reflected that the girl was in her early twenties, and Garbo's last movie was shown when she was about 2 years old. So it was not very surprising she never heard of Garbo.
At the time television was just coming in, and old movies were never seen after they were 2 or 3 years old.
Another example is Sunset Boulevard. The has been star has been out of the limelight for 20 years and is 52 years old. Nobody remembers her except a few old hands in the movie business, and a group of friends William Holden calls "the waxworks".
To put this in perspective, the modern equivalent would be an actress who was born in 1973, became a star in the 1980s, made her last movie 1995 and was now considered as ancient as the pyramids.
So Bogart at 116 is as out of date as, say, Madonna.
Last edited: