Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Schumer are suddenly best friends after a year spent frolicking on vacation and writing a movie script. After the past two weeks, they have one more thing in common: They fell into a trap.
Specifically, that celebrity trap in which people assume that you are the characters you play. Not the characters onscreen in movies and TV shows - but the actual person you present to the world.
The problem with celebrities being more accessible than ever these days is that people assume their personalities on Instagram (or Twitter, talk shows, Reddit AMAs, etc.) are actually what they're like in real life. Hey, maybe Lawrence really doesn't have any kind of filter, and Schumer really is that self-deprecating. Those goofy personas are relatable, which is why both actresses have such rabid fanbases. Regardless, those personas are still crafted for the public and the press as they promote projects.
However, people forget that, which is why Lawrence and Schumer experienced recent controversy. Lawrence got flack after the Golden Globes when she snapped at a reporter backstage who was looking at his phone. "You can't live your whole life behind your phone, bro ... You gotta live in the now," she told him.
Lawrence was harshly criticised when the video went viral, especially given that the reporter didn't speak English as a first language and may have been using his phone to help ask her a question. Others jumped in to defend Lawrence, saying the reporter was indeed taking pictures of her. It didn't matter. The incident trended on Facebook and Mic declared Lawrence's moment as America's Sweetheart over.