![]() More: 'A festival of anxiety': Ryan Reynolds talks returning to the red carpet with Blake LivelyĬrisis communications consultant Holly Baird said stars being vocal about their opposition to having their children photographed can help draw a clearer boundary between the professional and the personal. (Celebrity couples) have a familiarity and this intimacy that, frankly, we’re all craving because many people can’t see their family and friends the way they used to.” “Most people during the pandemic have been in some form of isolation now for a-year-and-a-half, Díaz said. “And so of course, we want that intimacy with our known ones or our loved ones. Díaz said a craving for intimacy has only been exacerbated by the isolation of the coronavirus pandemic, eliciting a stronger interest in photos of celebrities and their families. Vanessa Díaz, a cultural anthropologist at Loyola Marymount University and the author of “Manufacturing Celebrity: Latino Paparazzi and Women Reporters in Hollywood,” previously told USA TODAY that our extensive knowledge of celebrities’ personal lives makes it feel like they are friends or family, which helps create a sense of intimacy. ![]() More: Lil Nas X, Jennifer Lopez, Grimes and the enduring appeal of celebrity paparazzi photos "Our wish is that she can choose how to share herself with the world when she comes of age and that she can live as normal of a childhood as possible, without worrying about a public image that she has not chosen.” “You know we have never intentionally shared our daughter's face on social media," Hadid wrote on her Instagram story at the time. Hadid issued a plea to paparazzi, media and fan social media accounts in July, asking that they not share any photos of her and Malik's 1-year-old daughter, Kai, citing the family's decision to keep her childhood private. Lively and Reynolds are not alone in their stance on paparazzi photos of their children. Stars such as Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan, Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard, Gigi Hadid and Zayn Malik and Mindy Kaling go to great lengths to keep their kids out of the public eye. More: Gigi Hadid, Blake Lively hide their kids' faces online. “Some parents are ok with this,” Lively concluded her comment. While some parents take no issue with “sharenting” – sharing uncensored photos, videos and anecdotes about their children on social media – Lively made it clear she and Reynolds are not part of this camp. “This is not casual appreciation: This is you also exploiting very young children. You said you would stop you personally promised me. "I've personally shared with you that these men stalk and harass my children – and you are still posting. “This is so disturbing,” Lively wrote this week in the comments of the since-deleted post. ![]() ![]() Lively called out the Instagram account that posted the photo of herself and husband Ryan Reynolds walking with their three daughters – James, 6, Inez, 5, and Betty, 2, – this week. Blake Lively is railing against invasive paparazzi culture after a photo of her children was posted online without her consent. ![]()
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