long post, psychology of interacting with a famous person.
@freemo
Well, it makes (unfortunate) sense, since normal person you know is normal person you know and also generally have to interact with more than once so you can't afford to be *too* dickish or else the game's over, while famous person is defined in your memory by their façade, rather than their… I hesitate to say more real self, because Wil Wheaton did in fact play Wesley, but their more personal, normal, conversational self. So most people are dicks to famous people not out of any malice but because they're talking to the wrong person.
Maybe.
Or maybe my late-night Petersenpai-infused ramblings borne of procrastination just make no fucking sense.
@wilw
long post, psychology of interacting with a famous person.
@freemo
Clarifying: they see Wil as "guy who played Wesley" and therefore "guy with higher status than me", so they play maniacal "NoTiCe Me SeNpAi" games to get his attention so they can put that on their status sheet (to comically exaggerate: "omigosh omigosh omigosh, Carrie, I got a toot from WIL WHEATON!" "*ugh* Jealous."), forgetting that Wil is also some guy who uses Mastodon to be goofy and socialize with people. (Presumably. I don't follow him, so.)
@wilw
long post, psychology of interacting with a famous person.
@4of92000
It should be. But I think many people have a tendency to dehumanize anyone in the public spotlight.
@wilw