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  1. A dangerous level of snark And then there's social media. Its impact on celebrity cannot be understated: for one, it's allowed famous people to have direct access to their fans.

  2. Tragic and untimely deaths like Perry's suggest that fame itself might be a risk factor. For example, it is striking how superficially similar the circumstances surrounding Perry’s passing appear...

  3. And, from the other vantage point, how dangerous are the blinding lights of fame to the unsuspecting and naive star? How does fame affect mental health? How vulnerable are famous people to fames addictive qualities and its ensuing engulfing pathology?

  4. The right rule of thumb is to treat fame like a dangerous drug: Never seek it for its own sake, teach your kids to avoid it, and shun those who offer it.

  5. So I am not saying that fame is somehow intrinsically destructive. But it can be crazy-making for some. The psychological cost, for some, is too high. For Elvis and Cobain especially, it's the...

  6. A Point of View: A disease called fame - BBC News. 28 March 2014. Thinkstock. Ours is a fame-obsessed culture, writes Sarah Dunant, but is it really a goal worth chasing?

  7. Some celebrities, like tragic, traumatised Kurt Cobain, never seem to make it past the love/ hate phase. Kristen Stewart – who experienced the pivot from fame to notoriety after a 2012 affair with the director of Snow White and the Huntsman – has described fame as “ the worst thing in the world”.