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Fame, popularity and celebrity status, frequently used tokens of success, are often loosely related to, or even divorced from professional performance.
The twenty-one-year-old wears his costume like the ultimate VIP lanyard, striving to grow his, possibly otherwise unachievable, fame, popularity, and brand.
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In contrast success, captured by fame, celebrity, popularity, impact or visibility, is a collective measure, representing a community's reaction to and acceptance of an individual entity's performance [6, 7].
These prefatory words are by way of saluting Johnny Hallyday, the French popular entertainer who died yesterday, at seventy-four, and whose cult, fame, and popularity — despite being entirely based on an American model — confounded everyone in the world who was not French.
Here, Price, now with dyed red hair and black nail varnish, tasted fame – and popularity.
But as Taos grew in fame and popularity, Santa Fe, the nearby state capital, withered.
Its rise to fame and popularity marks the precise moment of the start of the theatre industry.
As well as increasing sales, having a song in his game also boosts a band's overall fame and popularity.
Roache, 81, who plays Ken Barlow in the ITV soap, is accused of using his fame and popularity to exploit "starstruck" youngsters nearly 50 years ago.
Roache, 81, who plays Ken Barlow in the ITV soap, is accused of using his fame and popularity to exploit "starstruck" youngsters in the late 60s and early 70s.
Roache is accused of using his fame and popularity to exploit "starstruck" teenage girls for sex in the mid to late 1960s.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com