Yes, because people who give up doing what they love (classical piano and concert hall singing) and sell out their life to an image specialist defiantly fall in the 'hero' category.
We throw around words far too often. Heroes... are heroes. People who sacrifice for the good of humanity, like Florence Nightingale or Charlemagne.
Modern celebrities will never be considered heroes.
A hero is just someone who is admired. War hero. Guitar hero, sports hero. It been a longtime since "hero" was limited to "People who sacrifice for the good of humanity" Though I'm
m not exactly clear what Charlemagne sacrificed while expanding his rule over Western Europe.
His life, if I'm not mistaken. In exchange for starting Europe down the path of modernization (unification of tribes into nations, and such). I used him as an example because he was pretty famous for traveling everywhere on horseback and not really doing the regal thing, sitting in palaces or being escorted in a horse drawn carriage. Of course it ultimately undid him when disease took him early.
Back on the topic of Lady Babynoise.
Giving money to charity is great, but it doesn't make you a hero; it makes you a philanthropist. Even Rockerfeller is not considered a 'hero' by traditional means, just a philanthropist, and he gave
all his money away. So, no amount of giving should make you a hero if he isn't, because that would be unfair. You could argue times have changed but I really think it's more along the lines of "Lady Gaga is young, beautiful, and I think she gives money to people, she must be a hero!" Seems more about the image than the heart behind it, and that's quite sad.
So, I'm not getting this throwing money at people poorer than yourself makes you a hero thing. What about other things people concentrate on? She somewhat supports the gay community.
Well I would argue she supports the gay community like Twilight supports 15 year old girls. It's more acknowledging them because they are your fans and
pay you. To treat them like crap would be a sure fire way out of Hollywood, unless you're already well established. Yes, many celebrities do treat their fans like dirt but that doesn't instantly make liking your fans some sort of heroic sacrifice.
This seems massively blown out of proportion. I have actually, in real life, heard people call her a "Civil Rights symbol." Really? Again, if the gay community didn't buy her music or at least watch her youtube videos I really don't think she would care that much about them. At the very least she could care, but not care enough to thank anyone or speak out about it with the camera rolling.
See real Civil Rights symbols had basically nothing to individually gain and everything to lose. They did what they did for the good of their fellow men and the countries they lived in, for the name of fairness and equality. They didn't get paid to do this, and they didn't WANT attention (especially because it was a dangerous time). Methinks if this was a Civil Rights movement more akin to the 1950s, with the threat of Lady Gaga getting lynched for speaking her beliefs, she would not speak those beliefs.
In short I honestly believe her support of the gay community is just another part of her fabricated image. Everything about her screams "safe experiment", regardless, and what could be more safe than a person on a computer screen saying they support something that may or may not be unpopular? No one is going to throw eggs at that, it will only help.
So, is a hero someone who only helps when they stand no chance of defeat and also only when it could possibly benefit them? No. Not that all heroes fail or die, but they're not supposed to care if they do because it's not about them.