Entertainment Apocalypse Now: American Idol (loser) lands Rolling Stone cover
Published 11 June, 2009, 19:22
Edited 12 September, 2009, 23:02
Today, the American entertainment industry no longer sets the standards in cultural excellence; it mindlessly follows the stench of trash like desperate pack rats.
Adam Lambert has made the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. I repeat: Adam Lambert has made the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. Why should this be considered big news? Precisely because Adam Lambert is not big news.
For those who have been sleeping under a slab of marble in an abandoned cemetery for the past month, Adam Lambert came in second place in this year’s American Idol contest, which is basically the equivalent of the entertainment world’s Special Olympics for people who would really love to be a star, but, due to circumstances beyond their control, probably never will be. Yet we applaud these courageous contestants for attempting to do the tricky things (i.e. sing) that we pay big bucks to watch the professionals do.
As for Rolling Stone magazine, they have set the talent bar so low that even cockroaches can crawl safely over it now. The only explanation is that the financial crisis has hit the glossy magazine industry so hard below the belt that Rolling Stone must suck up to mass hysteria rather than providing a sober reality check on our frivolous passions.
In the past, having your precious face grace the cover of Rolling Stone was reserved for a handful of 100 percent time-tested stars, like Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Billy Joel, John Lennon, Bono, Christina Aguilera, Michael Jackson, Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, Mick Jagger, Sting, Annie Lennox, Freddy Mercury, Johnny Depp, Bob Marley, Eric Clapton, Madonna, Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix and (who could ever forget?) Britney Spears, to name just a few of the anointed superstars. Although a highly coveted solo cover photograph for Rolling Stone is (check that: was) the greatest tribute, many great performers had to share the hallowed space with a group photo of the entire band. But the only other living thing the American Idol runner-up had to share his Rolling Stone cover with was a green snake, coiling up his outstretched leg.
For a rock star to get his or her mug shot on the cover of America’s leading rock glossy is (usually) nothing short of a testimony to a lifetime of sweat, blood and tears. In the world of rock ‘n’ roll, it is considered the penultimate lifetime achievement award.
The band Dr. Hook and the Medicine Band summed up the honor best with these lyrics from the song, 'The Cover of the Rolling Stone' (1972):
Well we are big rock singers, we've got golden fingers, and we're loved everywhere we go. We sing about beauty and we sing about truth at $10,000 a show. We take all kinds of pills to give us all kind of thrills, but the thrill we've never know, is the thrill that'll get you, when you get your picture, on the cover of the Rolling Stone…
So what is so special about Adam Lambert? After all, as we said, he came in second place on American Idol, behind another incredible mediocrity, the show’s come-from-behind underdog, Kris Allen. Before that, Mr. Lambert’s claim to fame was stuck somewhere between a high school rendition of Star Wars and the Twilight Zone.
Did American Idol winner Kris Allen get a Rolling Stone cover? No, he didn’t. Why? Probably because the folksy Kris Allen is boring, heterosexual and predictable in a Presbyterian sort of way. He comes across as the type of regular guy who, in twenty years time, will have 3.2 kids, a wood-paneled station wagon in the driveway, an immaculately manicured lawn and a host of ugly relatives coming to his house for weekend barbeques.
Adam Lambert, on the other hand, is the perfect specimen for what constitutes star material today. A hybrid between female rocker Pink and Goth-rocker Marilyn Manson, Lambert is eccentric, photogenic and, as the Rolling Stone magazine revealed in the biggest non-shocker of the year, homosexual. Gasp! So behind all of the breathless hype and excitement, the real secret of Lambert’s success (to date) is his manly decision to come out of the closet.
In the Rolling Stone story (which carries the utterly ridiculous title, “Wild Idol: The Psychedelic Transformation and Sexual Liberation of Adam Lambert”) Lambert confesses, “Right after the finale, I almost started talking about it (his sexuality) to the reporters, but I thought, ‘I’m going to wait for Rolling Stone, that will be cooler.”
It was precisely this ‘mystery’ about Lambert’s sexuality that got everybody talking about the budding star in the first place. In other words, Lambert is proving himself to be the perfect businessman, or he already has a terrific agent.
On why he auditioned for American Idol, Lambert said: “I looked at the music business, and realized it is nearly impossible to make it with the way it is right now. No one is going to take a chance with an artist who is 'somewhat out there'… I realized that I wouldn’t be taken seriously as a recording artist unless I had a huge platform.”
Nobody is going to take their chances with an artist who is “somewhat out there”? Is Lambert kidding himself? The entire entertainment industry from New York to Los Angeles is built on exactly those people who are “somewhat out there.” And what better way to get that “huge platform” than to sell the pitiful story of a homosexual rocker who can’t get a fair break in the big, bad entertainment industry. Mr. Lambert acts like he is the first homosexual to come out of the closet in the world of entertainment. He certainly is not, but he might just be the first (alleged) homosexual who gets his big break by playing guessing games with his sexuality.
In the past, it was no secret that Hollywood was the home of alternative lifestyles, but no performer would use their ‘lifestyle’ in order to shamelessly promote their career. Today, it is almost as if entertainers feel that they must appeal both to the 'straight' crowd as well as the homosexuals in order to break out.
The British-American actor, Cary Grant, for example, whose all-male pool parties are now the subject of Hollywood legend, managed to keep rumors of his alleged homosexuality a secret until his death. He even sued actor Chevy Chase for slander for suggesting that he was a homosexual during an interview. Although there was numerous speculation about Grant’s true sexuality, the actor kept mum on the issue. The point is that entertainers did not rely on sensational and shocking tales about their bedroom antics to achieve their popularity. They got their fame the old fashioned way: raw talent.
On “experiencing discrimination,” the Rolling Stone star relayed this pathetic story: “One night, we hung out at his (Val Kilmer’s) house and Sean Lennon came over to jam with us. I was like, John Lennon’s son? This is the coolest thing I’ve ever done in my life. But I had a lot of problems with the people putting on the show. One day, the director pulled me aside and said, ‘Can you turn it down? The producers are a little uncomfortable. It’s a little too… gay.’ I was like, ‘Um, are we doing a musical here? I’m sorry, there are fags all over the place, dude. It was very upsetting.”
Um, let’s get that story straight: Lambert upset a group of producers in Los Angeles who were “a little uncomfortable” about a bunch of homosexuals jamming in the house? Sounds like some very inexperienced producers, especially considering that the incidence happened in ultra-liberal California. After all, it is no secret that Hollywood is a bastion of alternative lifestyles. Can it be that Adam Lambert is so “wild” that he actually provoked raised eyebrows in the very den of decadence?
Is this article meant to slam alternative lifestyles? Not at all. But Rolling Stone magazine, by showcasing a young man whose only real qualification to date is a confused sexuality (he admits in the story that he “likes girls”), has damaged its reputation as a publication dedicated to devotion – as opposed to base promotion – of reputable celebrities.
Adam Lambert may very well go on to be a superstar, but he should do it like every other superstar who has appeared on the cover of Rolling Stone: earn it.






