San Antonio Express-News

Pop stars who struggle — and the young fans who get it

- Pamela Paul NEW YORK TIMES

By most measures, Selena Gomez and Taylor Swift are remarkable women. Intelligen­t and capable, they’ve succeeded through innate talent, hard and sustained work, ambition and vision. Both are the kind of mega pop stars who inspire convulsion­s of adulation and tears. Crowds surge and part in their presence. They’re graced with a radiance that seems almost exclusive to celebritie­s, with skin so incandesce­nt it needs no filter.

But they are not perfect. Nor, importantl­y, do they pretend to be. A recent Apple TV+ documentar­y, “Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me,” offers an unsparing portrait of Gomez, now 30, and her experience­s with bipolar disorder, lupus, anxiety and psychosis.

On her latest album, “Midnights,” Swift, 32, sings about her depression working the graveyard shift, about ending up in crisis. “It’s me, hi, I’m the problem, it’s me / It’s me, hi, everybody agrees, everybody agrees,” goes the song “Antihero.” “Sometimes I feel like everybody is a sexy baby / And I’m a monster.”

This combinatio­n of external flawlessne­ss and emotional vulnerabil­ity feels like a feature particular to contempora­ry female pop stardom. On one screen we see impeccable glam, expertly choreograp­hed and costumed performanc­es, and startling displays of luxury. On the other screen, admissions of anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, panic attacks and sleeplessn­ess.

What does it mean that many of today’s female pop stars, not only Gomez and Swift, but also Adele, Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande, openly express their struggles with anxiety, depression and panic attacks? Megan Thee Stallion has written a song called “Anxiety” and created a website dedicated to mental health. Even Rihanna, paragon of cool confidence, has admitted to the occasional bout of anxiety. Many stars admit in posts and interviews that the rapacious public scrutiny — the followers, the backlashes, the manufactur­ed outrage, the criticisms, the haters — gets to them.

Some may criticize celebritie­s for oversharin­g their woes, but the impulse is certainly in line with a noted increase in mental health issues — and a heightened awareness and openness about those challenges. Nor is this exclusive to pop music or to women; in competitiv­e sports, athletes such as Simone Biles and Naomi Osaka — and among men, Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps and the NBA’S Kevin Love — have been similarly candid about the pressures of performanc­e.

For Gomez, the effects have been brutal. The fragility on display in Alek Keshishian’s documentar­y is at times difficult to watch, despite — or perhaps because of — the tremendous appeal of the young woman at its center. With humility and self-deprecatio­n, Gomez describes physical and emotional pain that can overwhelm her. “I get the voice that comes in my head that says that you missed this. That sucked; that sucked,” Gomez tells her team after an onstage rehearsal. “The pressure is just overwhelmi­ng because I want to do the best I can, and I’m not.”

Imagine that same relentless scrutiny — if not in quite the same proportion­s — and selfdoubt without the benefits of fame, success, wealth and beauty to offset the burden. In the recent book “Behind Their Screens: What Teens Are Facing (And Adults are Missing),”

Emily Weinstein and Carrie James document what they call “Comparison Quicksand.” They quote girls saying things such as, “On social media everyone seems like they are far better and far ahead than me, which is stressful and makes me feel behind, unwanted and stupid.” And: “I scroll through my Instagram and see models with perfect bodies and I feel horrible about myself.” For teenagers who are susceptibl­e to insecurity (and one wonders which ones aren’t), Weinstein and James write, “going on social media can activate the ‘dark spiral.’ ”

“Somebody made a comment, and it involved me, and then for two days I felt bad about myself.” That sounds like any young woman talking about social media, but in this case, it’s Selena Gomez in a recent interview with Rolling Stone, evidently referring to a comment by the wife of former beau Justin Bieber. A similar random online post can have the same effect on anyone — just without the celebrity exboyfrien­d. The scale may be smaller, but it’s still the entire world to the average teenager. Weinstein and James point out that on social media, “hostility is also enacted in front of — even for — an audience.” “When you go home you can’t get a break from drama or bullying,” a 12-year-old told Weinstein and James.

One chapter in another recent book, “Girls on the Brink: Helping Our Daughters Thrive in an Era of Increased Anxiety, Depression, and Social Media” by Donna Jackson Nakazawa, asks, “Is This a Toxic Era for Girls?” and offers an immediate answer, “Yes, and it’s worse than you thought.”

It’s hard even on the toughest and most determined, and Gomez is both those things. Born to teenage parents, she started working at a young age and never stopped. In the film, Gomez comes across as both admirable and sympatheti­c. When she hugs someone on screen, whether weeping fan or old family friend, she wraps her arms fully around them and holds close. You feel her embrace from the other side of the screen.

This may be precisely what fans today respond to.

It’s worth noting that back in 1991, Keshishian directed the documentar­y “Truth or Dare” about another very different pop star, Madonna. Under the headline “No One Ever Called Her Shy,” The New York Times’ critic noted its subject’s “inexhausti­ble bravado.” At that time, pop singers like Madonna, Cyndi Lauper and Janet Jackson tended to project toughness over vulnerabil­ity, a position of not caring what other people think versus caring possibly too much. Perhaps they felt the need to project a strength only recently won. The resulting image could be inspiratio­nal, if daunting and unrealisti­c in its own ways.

It may be that each generation gets a slate of pop stars attuned to its own aspiration­s and insecuriti­es. Young women may be able to better relate to today’s pop stars — for better and for worse.

 ?? Jon Kopaloff/getty Images ?? In “Selena Gomez: My Mind And Me,” the admirable and sympatheti­c star describes the physical and emotional pain that can overwhelm her.
Jon Kopaloff/getty Images In “Selena Gomez: My Mind And Me,” the admirable and sympatheti­c star describes the physical and emotional pain that can overwhelm her.
 ?? ?? In "Midnights," Taylor Swift sings about depression and crisis. The woes that celebritie­s are sharing are in line with an increase in mental health issues — and openness.
In "Midnights," Taylor Swift sings about depression and crisis. The woes that celebritie­s are sharing are in line with an increase in mental health issues — and openness.
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 ?? Terry Wyatt/getty Images ??
Terry Wyatt/getty Images

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