Paris Hilton To Become More Popular After Jail Time
Paris Hilton is so pampered she doesn’t read her mail.
“I have people who do that for me,” she told a judge.
Legal documents and traffic citations elude her.
“I just sign what people tell me to sign,” she testified.
Facing a 45-day jail sentence – and perhaps her first brush with accountability – could be a reality check for Hilton. But regardless of how she handles it, it may make her more popular than ever.
“It will actually increase her star appeal in a very sick and demented way,” said longtime publicist Michael Levine. “There’s a segment of our society that’s somehow engaged in the soap opera that is Paris Hilton, and this a very compelling plot line in the soap opera.”
A judge ordered the socialite to report to a county jail in suburban L.A. by June 5 to serve 45 days for violating the terms of her probation in an alcohol-related reckless driving case. Her attorney has said he will appeal.
That only prolongs the publicity, said Roger Gillott, whose public relations firm, Gillott Communications, specializes in crisis management.
“If she wants to put this behind her and come off looking remorseful or repentant, then she should just serve her time as quietly as possible,” he said. “The more she protests, the more she claims she was innocent and doesn’t know what she’s doing, that she never reads her legal papers, the more she portrays an image of someone who doesn’t pay close attention and thinks they are above being held accountable.”
The 26-year-old hotel heiress, who parlayed her party lifestyle into worldwide fame, told the judge Friday that she didn’t have time to talk with her attorneys about her probation. That dismissive attitude is part of her appeal, said veteran publicist David Brokaw.
“The premise of her fame is being naughty,” he said. “This is a career move for her. It simply fuels the fascination. She can only win with this.”
Some celebrities have fared well after a stay in the graybar hotel. Martha Stewart started a TV show after her stint behind bars. Robert Downey Jr. rebounded with a recurring TV role that led back to the big screen. Others, including Bobby Brown, Heidi Fleiss and Fatty Arbuckle, weren’t as fortunate.
Bad behavior means big publicity for Hilton, Levine said, noting that she wasn’t maligned when her homemade sex tape surfaced on the Internet. Instead she became more famous than before.
“This is a girl who has total disregard for the rules of our society,” Levine said. “And she’s been rewarded for it.”
Time behind bars isn’t likely to impart any lessons for Hilton, said West Hollywood psychologist Jeremy Ritzlin. Jail time doesn’t equal rehabilitation and the club-hopping Hilton would need extensive therapy to make lasting changes in her life, he said.
“It’s going to make her very unhappy because she’s not used to this. She couldn’t buy her way out of it,” he said. “But one 45-day trip to jail is not going to change her behavior.”
Hilton’s plethora of professional pursuits – which include a namesake perfume and handbag line, a fledgling music career and a starring role in the reality show “The Simple Life” – can probably survive 45 days without her.
“Production for ‘The Simple Life Goes to Camp’ wrapped in early April and will premiere Memorial Day,” as planned, the E! network said in a statement. “We wish Paris all the best as she deals with this difficult time.”
Hilton’s fans filled her MySpace page with words of support over the weekend. Her spokesman, Elliot Mintz, declined to comment.
Associated Press
What Michael Levine and other publicists forgot to the mention is that the judge was extremely rude to Paris Hilton and that he had other options to punish Paris without having to go to prison. No mention that they’re using her as an example for other celebrities, and to prove the “system works” for the middle class.
And people like Michael Levine simply don’t understand why there are fans of Paris Hilton who aren’t just fascinated by her beauty, money and fame.
This is a very ignorant article written by Sandy Cohen from the Associated Press. It avoids the real issues.
Posted: May 6th, 2007
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