“…a breakthrough inquest into the rattletrap culture of fame. Elizabeth Currid-Halkett casts her line remarkably far upstream to hook her reader, reels in the true meaning of contemporary éclat, and guts the residual billions that back it.”

Graydon Carter, editor of Vanity Fair

How was Nike able to take a gamble on an unknown Michael Jordan and transform itself from a $900 million company to a $9.19 billion company in less than fifteen years? Why did the artist Jeff Koons’s Balloon Flower (Magenta) sell for a record $25.7 million in 2008? What does the high school football star have in common with the Hollywood headliner? And why should an actor never, ever go to Las Vegas?

In Starstruck, Elizabeth Currid-Halkett presents the first rigorous exploration of celebrity, bringing together extensive statistical research and analysis along with interviews with top agents and publicists, YouTube executives, major art dealers and gallery directors, Bollywood players, and sports experts. Laying out the enormous impact of the celebrity industry and identifying the patterns by which individuals become stars, Currid-Halkett successfully makes the argument that celebrity is an important social phenomenon and a driving force in the worldwide economy.

Praise for Starstruck

“In the age of Facebook and Twitter, Starstruck is a breakthrough inquest into the rattletrap culture of fame. Elizabeth Currid-Halkett casts her line remarkably far upstream to hook her reader, reels in the true meaning of contemporary éclat, and guts the residual billions that back it.”

— Graydon Carter, editor of Vanity Fair

“Starstruck makes me supremely glad of two things. First, that Elizabeth Currid-Halkett has produced this in-depth, intelligent, and passionate book on the shiny phenomenon of celebrity. Second, that I’m not famous.”

— Sloane Crosley, author of How Did You Get This Number

“Elizabeth Currid-Halkett is a keen observer of popular culture and the contemporary world around us. Through her in-depth research and accessible writing style she convincingly demonstrates celebrity’s social and economic importance. Currid-Halkett proves she is one of the brightest thinkers and scholars of her generation.”

— Richard Florida, author of The Rise of the Creative Class

“This splendid book is the best treatment of celebrity today. It shows how modern celebrity can be understood, how much the culture of celebrity is big business, and how much celebrity matters for understanding each and every one of our lives.”

— Tyler Cowen, author of Discover Your Inner Economist, and coauthor of the Marginal Revolution blog

“A brilliant, in-depth examination of that rather slippery condition we call celebrity. Starstruck weaves together an astounding mix of elements and shows us how we all actually contribute to and share in the making of celebrity. In a wonderful cultural turn, Elizabeth Currid-Halkett captures some of the reasons that people do the hard work of tracking and allocating celebrity.”

— Saskia Sassen, author of A Sociology of Globalization and The Global City

“With analytic gusto, Elizabeth Currid-Halkett takes on a force larger than the stars––the underlying system that demarcates a few specific others as worthy of special attention and as a basis for emulation, amusement, and investment. Celebrity is, Starstruck convincingly shows, an omnipresent basis of social organization. This book gives it, at long last, appropriate dignity as a topic for serious inquiry.”

— Harvey Molotch, author of Where Stuff Comes From

“By tackling America’s current condition of free-news oversaturation and ubiquitous fixation with celebrities, Currid-Halkett… asks how much celebrity-dominated airwaves, newspapers, magazines and conversations distract us from more meaningful issues… The author backs up her case by citing solid studies, interviews and statistics… all of which she weaves together with accessible language while maintaining narrative momentum… She looks at the economics, accounting for all the money made by photographing celebrities, and the roots and duration of stardom. The book raises surprisingly uncomfortable questions, including why society is so invested in people who, for all intents and purposes, could be fictional characters for how little impact they have on our reality. Approachable and thorough.”

— Kirkus Reviews

Books by Elizabeth Currid-Halkett

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