A few months ago on my personal blog, I wondered who this Justin Bieber kid was I kept seeing on the cover of the teen magazines.
Now I know.
Oh boy, do I know.
Over the past six months, singer Justin Bieber has been showing up everywhere I go. Beaming at me from People magazine in the check-out line. Winking at me from t-shirts when I go to the mall. He even shows up in my living room every time I turn on TMZ. In fact, I know which restaurants he’s dined at and what embarrasses him, but I can’t tell you one song he sings.
According to Mary Sawyer, media expert and director of public relations at the Brighton Agency in St. Louis, Bieber’s been stalking a whole lotta people. With a savvy PR campaign behind him, Bieber was making fans across the world way before his first album was released in November.
Said Sawyer via e-mail, “Disney, Nickelodeon, Def Recordings (Bieber’s studio) and the other media companies that represent these young artists have publicists who continually push for interviews, spots on award shows, public appearances and social media coverage that fuel teens’ interest. The media plays a huge role in promoting new personalities to young audiences.”
In other words, marketers made sure our kids would fall in love with Bieber before his fans ever heard him sing a single note.
I understand why girls loved the Bieber. He sings well, he has a sassy hairdo, and he seems like the kind of boy who would feed you popcorn while you watch
“YouTube, e-mail, text messaging and other social media tools have enabled every budding musician to showcase his/her talent, but something has to propel the person to stardom,” wrote Sawyer. “In some cases, it may be purely whimsical, but in most cases, there are smart marketing managers engaged in a variety of promotional activities.”
It’ll be interesting to follow Bieber’s career over the next few years. To see if the tweens that fawn over him now will be in the future like my friend Jen who was psyched to get meet-and-greet ticket for NKOTB last summer or, um, like yours truly who, to her husband’s dismay, continues to wear her Michael Jackson t-shirt to the gym and perch her Michael Jackson doll on her desk (Thriller-era Jackson, not baby-dangling, mask-wearing, creepy-mannequins-in-his-house Jackson).
In the meantime, I know Bieber will be waiting around every corner for me. Until the next teen heartthrob comes along.
By Nicole Plegge, Lifestyle for SmartParenting
Metro East mom Nicole Plegge has written for STL Parent for more than 12 years. Besides working as a freelance writer & public relations specialist, and raising two daughters and a husband, Nicole's greatest achievements are finding her misplaced car keys each day and managing to leave the house in a stain-free shirt. Her biggest regret is never being accepted to the Eastland School for Girls. Follow Nicole on Twitter @STLWriterinIL
Take your family to watch birds of prey fly right over your head, meet the wonderful bird ambassadors of the World Bird Sanctuary up close and much more.
The St. Louis African Arts Festival, held in Forest Park, celebrates the rich and diverse cultures of Africa and African people. Children's activities include storytelling, arts and crafts, mask-making and educational workshops. In conjunction with the festival, the Saint Louis Zoo will have special activities focused on a different African animal each day.
There are more than strawberries (but plenty of those too) at this festival! Kids can enjoy carnival rides, a petting farm, pony rides, the children's play area and lots more.
See the Zoo's California sea lions perform acrobatic and athletic feats, including Olympic-style dives on a high-diving platform, flipper walks, frisbee tosses and plenty of surprises. While on stage with the sea lions, the Zoo's trainers explain sea lion behavior and positive-reinforcement training, in addition to the need for conserving the sea lion's ocean habitat.
Come face-to-face with mermaids at the St. Louis Aquarium during Mermaids on the Mississippi. Mermaids will swim the aquarium, and dive in shark canyon with the sharks, rays, sea turtles and other underwater creatures.