Current:Home > Markets'The Super Models,' in their own words -Momentum Wealth Path
'The Super Models,' in their own words
View
Date:2025-04-13 19:18:04
The Apple TV+ docuseries The Super Models will, for some, be an introduction to the very idea of supermodels, who don't exist in the same way they once did. In the '80s and '90s, they were not influencers, they did not have Instagram, and many of them were seen often and heard rarely. Even to people who didn't follow fashion, they were celebrities, but rarely were they fully in charge of their own images.
There were more than four of them, but certainly the series focuses on four of the very most famous: Cindy Crawford, Christy Turlington, Linda Evangelista and Naomi Campbell. They knew each other, back in the day, and they've stayed connected for many years. They speak of themselves as members of the same "class," models who emerged at the same moment, competed in some respects, and often walked in the same shows. They headlined ad campaigns, they made TV commercials, and they wrote books. How big were these four women in their field? Along with Tatjana Patitz, who died in January of this year, they were the featured lip-sync performers in George Michael's iconic "Freedom '90" video. If the idea of your video was "supermodels," this was who you would get.
The four models are also executive producers of the series, which primarily tells their stories through interviews with them and people who know them, meaning they largely control the narrative. Such self-produced or self-directed projects, which some have reasonably suggested should really be called memoirs, have become ubiquitous, with plenty of other celebrities producing their own stories including Taylor Swift, Michael Jordan, Naomi Osaka and Beyoncé.
A documentary produced by its subject can be blank and dull if it comes off like too much of a hagiography, like it's too committed to establishing greatness or sanding down every edge. But The Super Models feels more like a corrective produced by women who were rarely given the opportunity to be seen as complete human beings, and whose images — as they recount in harrowing detail — were managed and leveraged by others from the time they were teenagers. Now and then, some element of their personal lives would circulate, as when Crawford married Richard Gere, when Campbell was accused of being "difficult," or when Evangelista made a remark about not getting out of bed for less than $10,000 a day that dogged her for years (and that she talks about here). But for people who followed their rise in the media, they are more pictures than voices, and what we know of what they had to say was often grabbed in bits and remixed.
The Super Models seems committed less to arguing that its subjects are heroes or role models than to taking a step back, decades later, and talking about what it was like to be in this extraordinary position in which they were idealized and villainized, told when and how they would cut their hair or travel, and, in some cases, subjected to abuse. Evangelista has a particularly painful story to tell about the agent she married when she was very young, who she says was abusive to her and who was later the subject of sexual abuse and assault allegations from other women.
But this is also an interesting document about the long friendships among these women and the relationships they've had with their favorite designers and photographers — who were as close as the models would come to finding true mentors and protectors.
If you came of age in the '80s and '90s, the power that supermodels seemed to have was enormous. If you listen to their stories now, it was more complicated than that. And with so much of their careers devoted to images of them being created, edited, bought and sold by others, it's hard to begrudge them this effort to create a version of their histories that they can shape with their own visions of themselves in mind.
This piece also appeared in NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter. Sign up for the newsletter so you don't miss the next one, plus get weekly recommendations about what's making us happy.
Listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
veryGood! (843)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Kansas won’t have legal medical pot or expand Medicaid for at least another year
- Fed’s preferred inflation gauge shows price pressures stayed elevated last month
- Authorities search for tech executives' teen child in California; no foul play suspected
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Minneapolis approves $150K settlement for witness to George Floyd’s murder
- Some urge boycott of Wyoming as rural angst over wolves clashes with cruel scenes of one in a bar
- Arbor Day: How a Nebraska editor and Richard Nixon, separated by a century, gave trees a day
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Reese Witherspoon & Daughter Ava Phillippe Prove It’s Not Hard to See the Resemblance in New Twinning Pic
Ranking
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Ex-Nebraska deputy is indicted in connection with fatal highway shooting
- Google plans to invest $2 billion to build data center in northeast Indiana, officials say
- University protests over Israel-Hamas war in Gaza lead to hundreds of arrests on college campuses
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Ashlyn Harris Reacts to Girlfriend Sophia Bush Coming Out
- Wade Rousse named new president of Louisiana’s McNeese State University
- Nixon Advisers’ Climate Research Plan: Another Lost Chance on the Road to Crisis
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Owner of exploding Michigan building arrested at airport while trying to leave US, authorities say
Only 1 of 10 SUVs gets 'good' rating in crash test updated to reflect higher speeds
Ace the Tenniscore Trend With These Winning Styles from SKIMS, lululemon, Alo Yoga, Kate Spade & More
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Elisabeth Moss reveals she broke her back on set, kept filming her new FX show ‘The Veil'
How to easily add your driver's license to your Apple Wallet on iPhone, Apple Watch
At least 15 people died in Texas after medics injected sedatives during encounters with police