Idle Wandering

Friday, June 30, 2006

Stereotypes of Clay and His Fans--Then and Now

This time around three years ago I would’ve been thrilled to have a blog like this to record my thoughts about Clay Aiken. I knew some big articles and interviews were forthcoming, and I hadn’t been impressed with what I’d seen thus far, so I decided to write my own. Now, post Elle, post Rolling Stone, post Entertainment Weekly, post Time, I look forward to the print features I anticipate will be appearing soon as the new album promotion rolls out. I know now that I couldn’t possibly write anything remotely as interesting as those articles were.

While we’re waiting for these, I want to take a look back--not only for nostalgia's sake, but also because as great as those features were, they did not fully dispel some misconceptions that people had, and some still have about Clay. In the fall of 2003 I had three major concerns.

1) I wanted people to know that Clay is a handsome and sexually attractive man–that his AI-created image was false. Clay’s geek to chic makeover was quite effective, but it was also emasculating. Before AI Clay wasn’t a fey theatre boi, he was a geek--a college student who was tied to his laptop. During the summer after AI, he grew from boy to man. He gained in confidence, he learned to move. He has phenomenal stage presence. He has charmed politicians, upstaged Jay Leno, and bedazzled the goddess of older Clay fans everywhere, Diane Sawyer. He is witty, genuine, entertaining.

And--damn!--he photographs well. The man Simon Cowell called ugly is a photographer's dream. I wanted people to know that Clay’s a chameleon--he has a thousand different faces. He can go from looking like a teen to looking like a man in seconds, and a myriad emotions can play unguardedly across his face in just a few moments.

I wanted people to know that Clay could sing a lot more than just ballads, that he is funny and entertaining--funnier than most working comedians--that he's mesmerizing to watch and listen to, and a totally effortless live performer.

2) I thought people had missed the point of Clay’s place in the television landscape that year, and in television history. 2003 was arguably the peak year for reality TV. Survivor, Extreme Makeover, the Amazing Race, and MTV’s the Real World were favorites, and American Idol was an upstart that had just entered the scene a season before.

To my mind, Clay is the ultimate reality show winner (even though he didn’t win). He played American Idol like it was Survivor--analyzing and reacting to a wide variety of cues to make himself the most competitive contestant. He changed his appearance dramatically, as they did on Extreme Makeover, but without needing surgical help--just by his changing hair style, clothing, stance. Reality shows reveal a lot about their participants: Clay showed that he is personable, easy to get along with, a leader, and that he has strength of character. He is clean-cut, but quirky enough to be interesting--most of his fans knew by then that he is neither saint nor saintly. In the sense that the goal of all of these shows is to win big money, change one’s life, and/or be a great media success, Clay is the ultimate reality show winner of our time. It’s not a question of winning American Idol or any reality show--it’s what you can accomplish given that exposure, that opportunity. Quick! Name a non-Idol reality show winner or participant who has sustained a public presence since the show ended or who is widely recognized for his or her accomplishments since winning.

3) I wanted people to know about the people, mostly women, who are Clay’s fans--that we are intelligent, diverse, “cool” people. I wanted them to know that I’d never met so many women who are so adept in computer technology. Some of his fans work in tech industries, and others taught themselves and learned from generous fellow fans all kinds of wonderful skills: photoshop/blends, web design, photography, audio and video recording, DVD burning, montage making, file storage and archiving, live cell streaming, and so forth. The Clay fandom is a girl-geek’s paradise.

I wanted people to know about the charitable efforts of Clay and his fans. A couple of good blogs have been written about this recently: In the Beginning.....Look What Love Has Done and There Was a Man.

I wanted people to know that we are professors, lawyers, housewives, artists, students, rocket scientists, truck drivers, male and female, all ages. That we are generous, organized, and focused on making positive changes in the world.

__________________________________

Three years later, with Clay’s third album on the horizon, some of these stereotypes have been dispelled, but for many, thanks mainly to crass comedians, they are stronger and more distorted than ever. Hopefully, with his coming press for the new album, further steps like the surprise AI5 appearance will be taken to change that.

So, as we wait for yet another album and its attendance publicity, and, hopefully, for more stereotype-breaking moments, here’s an essay I wrote back in 2003 just before Measure of a Man came out. I framed it as a letter to TV Guide (though I never sent it). (Little did I know then that he would make the cover–not then, but three times so far.) It addressed some of those stereotypes that concerned me then, and still concern me now.

________________________________

10/1/2003

If the folks at TV Guide are not already planning to put Clay Aiken on next week’s (Oct. 11-17) cover, you should be: He appears on Jay Leno (NBC) October 13, Good Morning America (ABC) October 15, the Early Show (CBS) October 17, and the View (ABC) October 17. He was featured last week on a Primetime Special (ABC), and sang at the Miss America pageant September 20. Aiken has been nominated for an American Music Award as best male pop vocalist, without having ever released a commercial album. More copies of his platinum single, “This is the Night,” (with "Bridge Over Troubled Water") were sold in the first week than of Elton John’s 1997 “Candle in the Wind” tribute single to England’s Lady Diana, the next highest contender.

Many of the estimated 24 million people who watched the American Idol finale last May have not seen Aiken since the flurry of post-show interviews ended. Even some in the music business who ought to be better informed are not aware of the fact that Aiken is on his way to a stellar career. Those of us who have had the good fortune to see a lot of him since last May would like to prepare you for some surprises.

1. Clay Aiken’s new album, “Measure of a Man,” is about to be released on October 14, but this is not his first album. Aiken recorded several “demo” albums long before the American Idol show. The “demos” are low-budget, local productions to be sure, made for himself, friends, and family rather than to shop out to record labels, but the quality of his voice makes everything else irrelevant. Tracks include standards like “Unchained Melody” and “My Girl,” pop hits like Elton John’s “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” and Bobby Darin’s “Dream Lover,” country tunes such as “I Know How the River Feels,” “Not Supposed to Love You Anymore,” and “Look What Love Has Done,” as well as several Contemporary Christian songs. The best of these to me, and I am not normally a country fan, are the country tunes. This is less surprising when you know that he sang with a country band and in country music showcases back in the Raleigh area as a teenager. Whatever he sings, Aiken’s voice is divine. There are more than a few, I among them, who say his music has spoiled them for any other singer. His phrasing, his vocal power, the clarity and depth of his tone and emotion are that impressive.

Over the months since the AI finale, tracks from these demo albums have become widely available, on eBay and as free downloads from numerous sites on the internet. The few remaining originals sell for hundreds of dollars. All of Aiken’s AI performances were made available for free download by Fox. With a wealth of material to choose from, every self-respecting Clay fan has customized at least two or three different CD’s for her or his personal listening pleasure, and burned CD’s for others as well. Does this mean no one will buy his new album? On the contrary, his fans have dedicated themselves to the cause of making it go platinum in the first week of sales. If ever there were testimony to the value of free downloads in promoting the success of a recording artist, these homemade Clay Aiken tracks are it.

The “Measure of a Man” album to be released on October 14th is completely new material. Not an oldie is to be found on it (although older fans are still hoping for a bonus track of “Solitaire”). Despite his substantial baby-boomer fan base and his reputation as a crooner on Idol, RCA has decided to market Aiken as a “pop star.” After all, they might respond to our arched eyebrows, he is only 24 years old. The result is an ambitious, boundary-crossing production that aims to please teenagers and their parents alike.

2. The next item does not begin with a surprise, at least to those who voted for Clay. The AI finalists’ summer tour entertained in 40 venues throughout the country; they sold a lot of tickets, it was an excellent show, and Clay Aiken was the undisputed star. He proved himself to be a natural in an MC role, and in radio and television interviews all over the country he charmed everyone he talked to. The highlight of the show was Aiken’s performance of his new single, “Invisible,” recently released for radio play. Here’s the surprise–Clay CAN dance. He came into his own on this tour, and he was devastatingly seductive. Women screamed and threw panties, and a new term was invented--the Thud (the sound of a fan hitting the floor). Free fan videos of the concerts circulated wildly on the internet. Tribute montages were created, odes were written to every part of his body. Once geeky Clay Aiken is now a sex symbol, and without baring anything more than his forearms. Contemplate that, MTV!

3. Perhaps the biggest surprise to some who have not seem him lately will be my assertion that, second only to his voice, the popular appeal of Clay Aiken lies in his physical beauty. “I’m not a model, that’s for sure,” he said about one of the first times he was photographed for a magazine. But since then he has been photographed endlessly, and if you’re in the celebrity photography business, you already know that he is a dream to shoot. He is a kaleidoscope of personalities. His facets are so many and so varied that one can scarcely believe all are the same person. Some people who saw Clay on American Idol regarded him as giggly and effeminate, and he can be that, but he can also be unmistakably masculine. People who meet him for the first time say they are struck by how tall he is (6' 1"), and, as the photographs have revealed, he’s no smoothed-skinned girly-man. He has moved from the wispy gamin look of the July Rolling Stone cover to the September Entertainment Weekly cover portrait in stubble, t-shirt, and sunglasses. A feature article in the October Elle was accompanied by a photograph of Clay in a tux that caused the Thud heard round the world. The writer, Allison Glock, is an obvious and unashamed victim of Aiken’s charms. She begins thusly: “Clay Aiken smells like fresh laundry. It’s the first thing you notice about him–that he’s well-scrubbed, radiant in his cleanliness, a walking, freckled dryer sheet. The second thing you notice are his lips, which are plump and ripe and shell pink. Much has been made about his hair–the whole flatironed, geek-hipster, red nest of it all, but little, too little, has been made of his lips....”

4. While Aiken’s transformation from geek to gorgeous may be a surprise to some, it will be less of a surprise, at least to AI fans, that Clay speaks in public easily and well. He is charismatic and quick-witted, and these days he radiates self-confidence. Labeled the “thinking woman’s idol” by Diane Sawyer, and "the fantasy fodder of sophisticated women everywhere" by Glock, Aiken was as impressive delivering a speech on education this summer in Washington, D.C., or helping Mayor Bloomberg open the new Wachovia bank on Wall Street, as he is as a singer.

A topic as frequent among his fans as his good looks or his voice is his character. Aiken demonstrated admirable selflessness when Ruben was named the American Idol, and he has refused to engage in controversy over the vote. During the concert tour, he graciously and enthusiastically introduced Ruben every night as “your American idol.” He has displayed humility and genuine concern for others countless times in countless ways. He’s the kind of pop idol you want your kids to admire. While launching his new album this fall, he is also completing his college degree in special education, hoping to graduate in December. Many of his fans are parents of children with special needs, and a host of stories have circulated about Clay’s easy, thoughtful manner with these kids at fan gatherings before and after the concerts, and about the kids’ reaction to him and even to his recorded voice.

This summer Aiken created the Bubel-Aiken Foundation to support inclusion of children with special needs into mainstream programs like the Y and children’s camps. His fans raised $42,000 in less than a week to donate to the Foundation on the occasion of his return home for the Raleigh, NC, concert, spearheaded by a group who named themselves after one of his demos, Look What Love Has Done. Additional checks poured in at every AI concert this summer. For those of you who may have missed his performance at the Muscular Dystrophy Telethon on Labor Day, Clay sang in the time slot traditionally held by Frank Sinatra, and Jerry Lewis made the comparison explicit in his introduction. Fans raised over $30,000 for the MDA. A number of other charitable projects have been initiated by Clay’s admirers.

Neither Aiken nor his fans are wanna-be saints. Aiken has a snarky wit, for instance, and can be abrupt at times; he admits he is “not as innocent as he seems,” but even his faults can seem endearing to those who have been captivated by the total package that is Clay Aiken. He is a man with a huge heart and a playful nature whose caring for others shines through in everything he does.

5. By now it should be no surprise that an avid fan base for Aiken has developed, largely on the internet. These fans freely share gigabytes of photos, audio and video files from concerts; they have created hundreds of internet sites; message boards with thousands of members hang on his every breath, analyze his haircuts, his eating habits, his music, and his sexual attractiveness. While some of what you may find on these sites is unexceptional, and sometimes even off-putting, Aiken has attracted many supporters of great wit, intellect, and humor. After the AI concert tour began, odes to Aiken’s sexual appeal proliferated: The Weapons of Mass Seduction thread, which evolved into a message board; the Lecherous Broads for Clay Aiken website, known for its BEVR’s (Broad’s Eye View Reports of the concerts)–the LBFCA got their own picture in Rolling Stone. It’s by no means all about sex appeal; there is a bounty of websites and message boards with a depth and variety of offerings that should prove attractive to anyone who wants to catch up on all that’s been missed as this new phase of Clay Aiken’s career begins.


Technorati tags:



Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Mt. Iwaki

I noticed that a lot of Japanese fans have been visiting this blog, so I just wanted to let you know that my background and profile pic are photos of Mt. Iwaki in Japan.

Iwaki-san



For those who don't know Iwaki-san, it's near Hirosaki, in the Tohoku region. I went there for an autumn festival, and fell in love.

Iwaki-san is a dormant volcano. It's been dormant so long that a crater looks like this now:



The day I went to the top it was very foggy:



My friend and I had planned to walk down from the mountain top. After riding a bus up the switchback in my background, taking a ski-lift without a safety bar, and then climbing up, up, up a rough path, including some huge boulders, to the very top, we began the walk down. By the time we had reached the lake in the crater, my friend said, sorry it's too foggy, and it's very dangerous -- we'll have to go back. And of course, to get down, first we had to climb back up!


That's OK, it was the festival we came for anyway. Here's the view from the base of the mountain on festival day:



Here's a similar view when there's no festival going on:

Iwaki_11_smaller


At the top of that long flight of steps framed by the torii gates is a Shinto shrine. This picture was taken from the level of the shrine entrance. Beyond the shrine is the real beginning of the climb to the top of Iwaki-san.



The shrine was newly painted for the festival, and looked beautiful:

Iwaki_6_smaller_cropped

Iwaki_9_smaller


Many people spent the night on the mountain to greet the sunrise on festival day. Here are a few on their way down in the morning.

Iwaki_5_smaller


This little girl is so cute!

Iwaki_4_smaller


Here's a case where a picture is not worth a thousand words. This was a once-in-a-lifetime sight. The man in the middle of the circle did an amazing shamanic deer dance. I had never seen anything like it, and probably never will again. The photo doesn't begin to do it justice.

Iwaki_3_smaller


One last photo. This is a beautiful view of Iwaki-san with some ugly ducklings (LOL) on a lake below.

Iwaki_12_smaller


I just had to add a link to this blog I found giving an account of a full climb up and down the mountain. The blog includes some really nice photos!
Greg's Japan: Summiting Mount Iwaki and Descending a Small Intestine.
At the end there's a link to more photos: Greg's Iwaki photos

I'm going to steal one. Click here to see the full-size version:
panorama


The photo of swans on the lake, the photo of the steps to the shrine when there's no festival, and the switchback photo are scans of post cards. Thanks to the photographers and the post card makers for their use. Thanks to Greg for his gorgeous panorama. Rights belong to the owners.

Technorati tags:



Sunday, June 25, 2006

International Fans

I found a new fan site today. It's been up less than a month. Biography, discography, photos, great design. Clay's official site should only be so nice! It's Japanese: The New Clay Aiken.

Awhile ago, maybe a year and a half or two years ago, a few fans in Korea started a fan site after "Shine" was used in a camera commercial starring a famous Korean actor. Today that site has over 10,000 members! Clay's never been to Korea; he has never been promoted in Korea. The interest in him is totally spontaneous, and is nurtured by random American TV appearances rebroadcast in Korea and lots of clack: Korean site.

Here's what one of the first members, Bloomingclay, said when they had reached 5,000 members:

Clay's Internet fan cafe in Korea, now 5,000 people joined!!!! WITHOUT any promotion.

Isn't it really neat people search if there is any fanclub site of him after they just watched his music video (sometimes played on cable channel) or a video clip of his performance on the internet and find here, and then join??

Many of those who joined even didn't know what American Idol is. They just saw the clips of him performing or listen to one or two songs of his album, thought he has great voice or the songs are pretty good and became interested in him. There are pop/rock fans, r&b/soul fans, and those who haven't listen to pop music until they get to hear Clay. For us, there is no 'cool/not cool' standard. If you like the song and the singer can sing, that's "cool".

American Idol was shown all over the world this year. Clay's appearance on the AI5 finale yielded approximately 1,000 new members to the Korean site! Message board posts from international members indicate the response was fantastic in many other countries as well. Not bad for two minutes on TV, eh?






Well, it took less than a
minute for a lot of us to fall
for him in the first place.






Clay's never been played much on the radio, hence all this interest has been generated by television. Not the usual way for a pop star to gain fame, but nothing about Clay Aiken happens in the usual way. With this new album, I predict Clay's international popularity will skyrocket.

Analysis of google searches over the last few years shows that the countries in which searches for Clay Aiken are highest (as a percentage of total searches) are Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Phillipines. Oh, and the US (comes in fourth). Also Canada, Sweden, Australia, and the UK. (Thanks to moonhead for the research. Much more detail can be found here: Clackhouse post.)

The Korean and Japanese sites are by no means the first Asian Aiken fansites. Smaller but closely-knit fan clubs have existed a long time for fans in Singapore and Hong Kong. There are many international fans on the Aiken message boards, with the largest number being Canadian. When Clay visited Indonesia last year, he stopped by Malaysia afterwards just to say a few words at a Forces of Nature benefit for tsunami relief, and charmed the audience by speaking in the native vernacular. See Out of Sight, a blog with many photos and a video of the speech, and this live journal entry, Forces of Nature, for a local perspective.

Now a Japanese site has been created. Did TBPB notice how many Anime montages on YouTube use Clay's music? Did they decide to give him Anime hair because they plan to market him in Asia? How long before his Japanese fandom skyrockets?

International fans - please add a comment and tell me where you're from!

ETA: *waves* at the fans from Canada, Argentina, the UK, Singapore, Thailand, the Phillipines, and New Zealand who have already visited since I wrote this blog a few hours ago!! ETAA: And to more visitors from these countries, as well as Germany, Slovenia, Estonia, Austria, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, France, South Africa, Dubai, Kuwait, Brazil, Argentina, Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Japan, and Korea.

I am very excited to have received a comment from the creator of the Japanese "New Clay Aiken" fan site.

Edited again: I learned of two more international fan sites, both from Brazil: Flogao Official Clay Aiken and Clay Aiken: Brazilian Fan Club. (Thanks pax!) I think the latter is the site of Lucia, who has attended a number of concerts and is a member of Clayversity. Here's Lucia's blog: clayaikenbrasil.


Technorati tags:



Friday, June 02, 2006

My mother is losing it!

My mother is almost 93, still healthy, lives alone, and until recently has been pretty clear-headed. There seemed to be some deterioration in her mental clarity after the Raleigh ice storm of 2002 when she was without power for 8 days. She refused to go to a shelter or anyone else's home, and though she had a roaring fire in the fireplace, the temperature inside never left the 50's.

Still, it was just minor things at first. Always a stickler for correct grammar and spelling, she would misspell words when playing Scrabble. She tended to repeat herself a bit. Nothing major, nothing to be really concerned about. After all, she is quite old.

It’s only in the last six months that she’s been really slipping. My sister came up to visit me in March, and my mother called me in a panic because she couldn’t find her in Raleigh, even though we’d talked to her on the phone after my sister arrived.

And now I know for sure that she has lost it. Why? She’s a big fan of Clay Aiken’s, so I told her to be sure and watch the American Idol finale last week. When I talked to her later, I asked her if she saw it. “I’m not sure,” she said, “I don’t think so.” Ever since her old remote died and she's had to figure out a new one, she's had a hard time finding channels and knowing what station she's on. Still, you'd think she'd be able to tell if she was watching American Idol or not! Well, OK, the look was a big change–she just didn’t recognize him, I thought, so I sent her some pictures.

I talked to her again yesterday, and she asked me how Clay was doing, as always. I told her his AI appearance had been a great success and caused quite a stir. “Did you see the pictures I sent you?” I asked. “You mean the one with a hat?” she replied. I laughed, and said, “Well, it might have looked like a hat.” “No it was a hat,” she insisted, and then I realized what picture she was talking about. This one, which I e-mailed to her last August:



My mother and I became Clay Aiken fans together. Every week after American Idol the year he was on, we would talk about the show and his performances that week. She had a friend who knew Clay well, and we were all thrilled that a Raleigh boy had advanced so far in the competition. That was my nickname for him back then: “Raleigh boy”. After the show ended, I got hold of his demos on e-Bay and made her copies for her birthday. I gave her a copy of the Rolling Stone when it came out, and it disappeared mysteriously into her bedroom. I bought her each single and album, and put copies of his AI performances, photos, and television appearances on her computer. She liked these better than the CD’s because, she would always say, “I need to look at him when he’s singing.” Every now and then she’d chuckle and say, “I may be old but I’m not dead yet.” She compared Clay often to Frank Sinatra–“It’s just like Frank,” she would say–the screaming fans, the pop culture phenomenon. I think Clay made her feel like she was his age again:



Then it seemed that her interest cooled. I’d start to talk about him and she would change the subject. I don’t know what happened, and I probably never will, but my theory is that she was tormented so often by my Clay-hating sister and brother that she became embarrassed about loving Clay so much. I know she didn’t really stop caring, because when we went to see my cousin a couple of summers ago–my cousin is also a Clay fan--my mother took all her clack along to share with her. But Mom wouldn’t talk about him with me anymore.

My mother’s laptop crashed that winter, and with it went all her clack. I wasn’t in town, and my brother bought her a new one and replaced all her files–everything except the Clay stuff. No more clack, and too much pride to ask for more.

Last December the whole family went to see Clay’s Joyful Noise concert in Raleigh–everyone except Mom. She hates crowds and doesn’t get around well, so she wouldn’t go. I had bought her a ticket, so I gave hers to my brother. My niece loves Clay, so of course I had a ticket for her, and my sister, who had agreed to go along "just to keep us company". My brother's son decided since "everyone else was going" he wanted to go too, so we got him a ticket at the box office. Everyone enjoyed it immensely. The show put us all in the Christmas spirit, and we were giggly and uplifted by the experience. My brother recorded the concert on his i-Pod, and we all downloaded it onto our mp3 players. On his recording you can hear my sister going "wah hoo" at the end of "Beautiful Star of Bethlehem, and exclaiming at how cute little Gregory was in his Rudolph nose--gotcha Sis! Clay was the talk of our household for a couple of days before and after that concert.

Since then, my mom talks about Clay again. She still won’t admit to being a fan, but she does want to hear all the news. I don’t think she remembers much of it, and I guess she’ll never know the “new” Clay, but she definitely remembers this:



The story behind the picture. During the Jukebox Tour, Clay went into the audience every night to find a man to come up and dance with his back-up singers. He tried to find the guy who looked least like he wanted to be there. Funny stuff, great Aiken ad-libs. One night, as he was returning to the stage, he spotted this lady in the audience and took her with him to the front to a better seat. What a sweet man he is!!


Technorati tags: