Kashing in with the Kardashians
Kim Kardashian walks inside Armenian St. James Cathedral in Jerusalem with husband Kanye West, their daughter,
The celebrity couple baptized 22-month-old daughter North at a 12th century Armenian Apostolic church in Jerusalem.
(Mahmoud Illean / AP)
Kim Kardashian holds daughter
Kim Kardashian and Kanye West visit the genocide memorial, which commemorates the 1915 mass killing of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, in Yerevan, Armenia.
(Karen Minasyan / AFP / Getty Images)The fashion-forward couple attends the fall-winter 2015-16 ready-to-wear collection by Vuitton during Paris Fashion Week.
(Etienne Laurent / EPA)The rapper makes a face at photographers as the couple sits in the front row at Givenchy’s ready-to-wear collection collection during Paris Fashion Week.
(Jacques Brinon / AP)Singer Beyonce, Kardashian, her daughter North and Vogue editor Anna Wintour attend West’s Adidas Originals x Kanye West “Yeezy Season 1” fashion show during New York Fashion Week Fall 2015 on Feb. 12, 2015.
(Dimitrios Kambouris, /Getty Images for adidas)Kim Kardashian and Kanye West not only became parents last week, they also provided a new storyline for the reality show “Keeping Up with the Kardashians.” Now, for many TV seasons to come, America can watch a child grow up immersed in the world of high-end consumerism and easy celebrity from the moment of birth.
Not everyone cares about the Kardashians, but those who do cannot get enough information about every detail of their lives. A sociologist could spend a career analyzing the way in which certain attractive, rich people -- Paris Hilton would be a case in point -- who have no remarkable talents or achievements to their name, can cleverly turn themselves into celebrities with millions of followers.
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When Kim Kardashian enters a marriage to a pro basketball player that lasts a matter of days and follows it with an out-of-wedlock pregnancy with a rap star, it becomes big news. When Rob Kardashian introduces a new line of socks, some people will purchase his over others, even though they could be produced in the same Asian sweatshop as a pair on sale at Target.
The Kardashian women are all darkly beautiful, but they are hard to distinguish from any number of magazine models or even from each other. Other than the clan’s provisional patriarch, Olympic gold medalist Bruce Jenner, none of the family has done anything more remarkable than spend lots of money on nice clothes.
PHOTOS: Who’s who in the Kardashian clan
Nevertheless, the Kardashians deserve credit for turning their lives of excess into mass entertainment. There is no particular reason to care about any of them, but they have figured out how to make us care. Like seeing a Maserati collide with a mansion gate as we drive by, it is hard to look away.
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Two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist and columnist David Horsey is a former political commentator for the Los Angeles Times. Syndicated by Tribune Media Services, David’s work has appeared in hundreds of media outlets. After graduating from the University of Washington, Horsey entered journalism as a political reporter. His multifaceted career has taken him to national political party conventions, presidential primaries, the Olympic Games, the Super Bowl, assignments in Europe, Japan and Mexico, and two extended stints working at the Hearst Newspapers Washington Bureau. As a Rotary Foundation scholar, Horsey earned an M.A. in international relations from the University of Kent at Canterbury, England. He was also awarded an honorary doctorate from Seattle University. Horsey has published eight books of cartoons, including his two most recent, “Draw Quick, Shoot Straight” (2007) and “Refuge of Scoundrels” (2013). For escape, he spends a few weeks each year working as a cowboy in Montana.