A Star is Burnt

Once again, a performer whose career was, essentially, "dead" is revived by death. A few days ago, no one talked about Whitney Houston, let alone bought an album of hers or went to a concert because, quite frankly, there was nothing to talk about, she had no album or tour. In fact, she had no career at all. She had lost her main asset: her voice, a long time ago. She had lost her way to alcohol and drugs, long before that. Even aside from that, I think that she did herself a disservice by singing the way she did. The strain on her vocal chords would, sooner rather than later, prove to be too much and give out. Whatever the cause, as a performer, she did not have anything else to fall back on, once her voice was gone. Even her looks were gone prematurely due to her lifestyle of the rich and famous addicts. In her case, it turned into the lifestyle of the bankrupt and "has been." I think that she realized this, and that sank her even more into a depression from which she was unable to recover.

Now, in her death, she receives all this accolades, praise and attention. Maybe it would have helped her to get all this while she was alive. Or maybe she was too far gone to have done her any good.

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