The teen-ager’s tone suggested he was sharing really big news.
“Did you hear that Bob Saget died?!” he asked me breathlessly.
I told him I’d heard that, but he apparently didn’t think I was suitably impressed. He added something about who Saget had been — that he had been a comedian and a big television star.
“And he died,” he said again, as though giving me another chance to be shocked or upset.
“Almost 8,000 people die in this country every day,” I said. “I didn’t know Saget, so his death doesn’t really affect me any more than the deaths of those other people.”
“But he was famous,” the teen repeated, confused. “He was on television.”
I’ve had variations of this conversation with many people over the years, and it still confuses me. I feel the same way almost every time a “celebrity” dies. I experienced the same thing last week when former actress Betty White died.
I don’t typically have negative feelings about such people, but their deaths rarely mean anything special to me. And every time I hear the loud outpouring from those around me — people who also didn’t know these celebrities — I’m baffled that our culture has trained us to feel something special about random celebrities.
We’ve been subtly brainwashed into believing people are special if they’re famous.

Society needs storytellers to help make sense of a changing world
Best years of our lives? For me, teen years were start of feeling like alien
Do great dreams really come true or do they just serve to haunt us?
Donald Trump is no conservative; he’s an immoral, narcissistic liar
Collectivists think they’re doing us favors as they force herd to follow
In an age when lies are expected, integrity matters more than ever
Does Ron Paul lead in Iowa? Does it matter for the long term if he does?
Dead man’s watch always there to remind me of my own mortality