Bettmann/Getty Images (Gable, Temple); Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images (The Beatles)
Early Stars
In a world without social media, it was hard to feel close to your favorite celebrities. Clark Gable (top), Shirley Temple (middle) and The Beatles (bottom).
Sam Wells remembers the day David and Liza broke up. The news hit her incredibly hard. “It made me cry,” says Sam, a 17-year-old from Pennsylvania. “I was so sad.”
Thousands of people were probably crying with her. That’s because the ex-couple weren’t Sam’s friends. They were David Dobrik and Liza Koshy, two of the biggest YouTube stars ever. In June 2018, they posted a video about their breakup. Almost 58 million people have watched it since.
It may seem strange to cry over people we don’t know. But we care about famous people—beyond the videos they’re in or the music they make. We want to see inside Ariana Grande’s house. We want to know if Shawn Mendes is happy with his girlfriend. We get something out of our obsession with fame. The question is: what?
Sam Wells remembers when David and Liza broke up. “It made me cry,” says Sam. “I was so sad.” Sam is 17 years old. She lives in Pennsylvania.
Thousands of other people cried too. Why? David and Liza are not friends of Sam’s. They are David Dobrik and Liza Koshy. They are huge YouTube stars. In June 2018, they broke up. They posted a video about it. Almost 58 million people watched it.
Crying over people we don’t know may seem strange. But we care about famous people. We want to do more than watch their videos or listen to their music. We want to see inside Ariana Grande’s house. We want to know if Shawn Mendes is happy with his girlfriend.
We have an obsession with fame. And we get something out of it. But what?
The day David and Liza broke up is etched in Sam Wells’s memory. The news hit her incredibly hard. “It made me cry,” recalls Sam, a 17-year-old from Pennsylvania. “I was so sad.”
Thousands of others likely cried with her. The ex-couple weren’t Sam’s friends—they were David Dobrik and Liza Koshy, two of the biggest YouTube stars ever. In June 2018, they posted a video detailing their breakup. Since then, nearly 58 million people have watched it.
It may seem strange to be emotionally invested in people we don’t actually know. But we care about famous people—beyond just wanting to watch their videos or listen to their music. We want to tour Ariana Grande’s house. We want to know if Shawn Mendes is happy with his girlfriend.
We get something out of our obsession with fame—but what?