miércoles, 5 de febrero de 2025

On fame

Introduction: I've always discarded fame as a solution or intermediary to a solution, possibly because it was uncool and anyways it was not something I was good at.

What is fame? Briefly described, it is a network. It is what happens against all will when you are born or raised around people who govern relatively influential social channels. A couple examples are mafia and Hollywood.

Fame is dependant on positioning. Fame is not a choice, it is a consequence. Skrillex was not a nobody before he "met" Joel and got himself a record deal. No one who is famous was a nobody. Everyone who is famous was never a nobody. Tales of "I used to sell shoes" are completely misleading and are to be considered outright lies. All famous people were recognisable since inception.

There is a difference between being poor and being the most famous of all poor. Being the most famous of all poor means you are a positioning away from being the most famous of all rich. This is why niggers like Jay-Z and Dave Chapelle got popular. When they were "broke", when they were "fighting for bread", they were already famous around their people, they were around the most famous of their people. What they call "luck" is a shift in positioning. They had to put no effort—none additional, it is meant—to become mainstream.
Just being poor guarantees you stagnation. Being the most famous of all poor guarantees you the top stop, and the top stop is fully dependant on positioning; it indeed is theoretically unlimited. This explains niggers in diamond chains and 7-digit mansions.

Fame and the just poor

Niggers like Jay-Z and Dave Chapelle were born and/or raised among the elite of their whatever slum class. What about the just poor? The psyche of the just poor is that of the just poor. Regardless of their desires, their actions—result of their psyche—will, just like gravity, take them back to who they are: the just poor.
"But, Mr. J, there are famous people, breed of network, that have the psyche of the just poor. Does this mean—could this mean—that a just poor can be famous just by exploiting location? Can they get famous just by standing there? I should answer: yes, especially by standing there. Jaden Smith.

Jaden Smith has a bigger body count than me.

Where is there?

There is wherever you want it to be. For an aspiring politician, there might be a political party; for an aspiring inventor, there might be the local inventor's club. The key is to stick and later to kick. Some competency is needed. Luckily, I am particularly talented. Sticking is the hardest part. You need all to dispose you to naturally be around that place. Since we are dealing with social environments, you need connections, as in, people who keep you connected to the place. One connection and then another and so you solidify your stay. You kick by making others irrelevant.

The just poor who are also famous are so because they are stuck there. To make an extreme example, you can meet Brad Pitt all you want, but you can't stick with him.