The Inner Circle
I was once told
that everyone who wish to play in the wonderful world of entertainment needs to
have an inner circle. The first thing that comes to mind are those who are with
you in the beginning (and for reasons of their own) had chosen to become
something similar to a support group. Actually it is a support group and so
much more. There was a TV series that (in its own way) showed this dynamic and
the rewards of participation and sometimes the price that is paid to all those
involved. That show was called Entourage.
Although this was a scripted show and not another director controlled and
edited sensationalized reality adaptation of reality, it had a solid idealistic
foundation. What I had gained from the show (unlike actual documentaries about
artists), is that public persona and real life are never one and the same. It
goes without saying that there are numerous instances where artist start
believing their own press and the line between reality and public persona
intertwine, blur, or just completely vanish. However, no matter how it all
ends, it had to begin somewhere. For me, I believe it begins and ends (happily
ever after with as little property damage as possible and sanity for the most
part intact) is with the artist inner circle. For me (another disclaimer), it
should start with deep consideration with your brain trust to protect yourself.
This should be followed up with your entourage to help you enjoy yourself, keep
your sanity, remind you of who you are to deflate your head when you get out of
hand, and to have people whom will get you into and out of trouble. Let’s not
forget the unseen price for this roller-coaster ride that everyone believes
they can handle, but sometimes handle them. This is where it all leads back to
the importance of your brain trust.
The Brain Trust
With this wonderful age of technology, one
person can wear many hats and have complete control of their destiny (to a
point). The hope of any person’s artistic endeavor is to be heard. Yes, there
is such a thing called fame and fortune, but it all starts with someone
recognizing what one person has to offer that affects many. The title of this
first topic of conversation says it all. who do you believe you can trust.
Sure, there are family and friends you can trust, but that only goes so far.
Once you hit a certain level, you will have to get other people involved. These
people I am talking about are those who make a living providing a specific
service. That particular short list will help your wildest dreams come true or
cause you to lose everything. If you must have a simpler term, then brain
trust, then think of them as your support group with precise professional
skills.
I know I had made reference to this
in a previous article (Ask SD #20) about the recording artist Sting (member of
the Police) and his manager explaining to the people who were to make up the
band that his client gets the lion's share (most money) from the project they
were about to begin. As business like and emotionally detected this
conversation was, it clearly showed the type of people you wish in your brain
trust or what is commonly known as those who watch your back (or there
percentage of the pot). Now don’t get me wrong, these people who you gather are
there to help you achieve your goals, they can be friendly to you and you them,
but they are not your friends (in some cases).
Your brain trust is there to take
some of the weight of numerous responsibilities off your shoulders to allow you
to focus on what brought you to the dance, your art. And here comes the disclaimer.
Not all those who you bring in will stay so make sure you have all those
involved sign none disclosure document! Your entertainment attorney is a
subject of its own we may or may not discuss in another Reason and Reality. What
we will discuss is getting bit on your butt, but later on in this article. Once
you have your support group together, now you can take a look at all those who
keep you grounded and hopefully doesn’t get you into too much trouble or arrested
nightly and the top story in heavy rotation.
Your Entourage
There shouldn’t be a need for me to point
this out, but if you don’t have a life when all hell break loose when fame
comes knocking at your door right before it drives a tank through when you turn
the knob. There is no way you can be solely committed to your craft every
second of every day. You will have to (a term passed on to me from a brother
from a different mother) blow it out sometimes. You will need people (family
and friends) who you don’t have to place a nondisclosure document in front of
their faces. Oh, but there are a few you would wish you had. we aren’t talking
about them, but those who you have total trust to let you be you when the spotlight
isn’t pointing in your direction. There is an old saying that you should keep
your friends close and your enemies closer, but that is to destroy your enemies
and not to gather a small group of trusted people to blow it out. Those in your
entourage will make mistakes at time, so you should be a bit more forgiving
than those in your brain trust when mistakes happen. This isn’t saying that
they should remain with you. Only one person can destroy you quicker than
family and friend and that person is you. Family and friends come in a close
second, but they are family and friends who will have to deal with other family
and friends when they screw up. besides, fame is fleeting, but you have little
to say about who is your family and they with you. however, no matter if they
are family or friends, there is a price. There’s always a price.
The Unseen Price
The most overlook aspects of any artistic
endeavor which place the artist in the public’s eye is anonymity. According to
http://www.merriam-webster.com; anonymity is the quality or state of being
unknown to most people. In plain everyday terms, you can no longer go anywhere
you once had without someone in your face. you can’t go visit people because
they will now have someone in their face. and most of all, your entire life
will go under a microscope for others to make money on who you have become so
they can the all-knowing authority of all things that are you. They do this to
sell you to anyone who wish to know how you made it so they can make it to. I
would also be remiss not to mention about those who are a little left of center
who believes they should be a part of your life and live in the world that is
portrayed through the media. Oh, but there is more, much more.
With this new age of internet’s
instant fame, electronic auditions, and self-promotion, someone forgot to
mention historic bread crumbs. Those who have received both minor or
substantial worldwide fame understands this monumental landmine. What I am
talking about is those less than perfect moments when all eyes weren’t on you
or you were just experimenting are coming back to bite you on your ass. We are
not talking about a miss note (although they can be endearing), we are talking
about those questionable things of bad taste or worst you removed once you
caught a good case of the common sense, sobered up, or just woke up to the
reality that you had screwed up big time. unfortunately, once that caged bird
is let out, its out. Another price to pay is family and friends. That’s a book series of its own and many will
have enough material in a short amount of time to write a ten year TV series.
There are too many cliché of jealous siblings
and best friends claiming to be better or having more to offer than you, people
closest to you waving you in front of any and everyone with promises on your
participation on their word alone, and those who will be front and center to
say they were the first to notice what makes you special that they were the
ones who help you could not do without to become who you are. In simpler terms;
if it wasn’t for them you wouldn’t be famous. However, no one wish to take
credit when the tables turn when famous becomes infamous. Go figure. But, the
first thing that comes to mind when family is involved is the disclosure of
something that is embarrassing even if you weren’t in the public eye. I
remember this one scene from a Korean drama called “That Fool” aka “Accidental
Couple.”
To make a very good storyline short.
An extremely overlooked and underappreciated mailman has an accidental run in
with a celebrity he idolizes and because of this chance meeting he choose to
help her escape a difficult situation. Because of his aid he is then asked by
his idol to pretend the two of them are in a secret relationship. This is where
family can bite you on the ass. The mailman has a younger sister who has a line
that fits perfectly into this topic. Her brother returns home after a fail
attempt to (what is perceived )as a elopement. His darling younger sister is
angry with him for not telling her about the concealed nuptials as asked him
what he truly thought of her. did he believe she would sell the knowledge of
the elopement to the media? Then she says just as innocently that she might
sell something small, but never something that important. You got to love family,
no one else will. Oh, and this 16 episode series also shows what happens when
the spotlight is turned off, relationships that occurs before fame, and the
important things that are lost because of it.
What makes all
of this a blessing and a curse is the truth that no matter what artistic
endeavor you chose, we all hope for the best, are saddened when we experience
the worst, but continue on because we wish to share what we have to give. SD Tracy Harper
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