Cory Kennedy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cory Kennedy (born February 21, 1990, full name Cory Kennedy-Levin) is an American Internet celebrity who became an international style phenomenon in 2006. Labeled an "Internet It girl" by Gawker.com[1] and a "club urchin" by LA Weekly[2], her MySpace page has garnered over 5,000 "friends". She was able to parlay her minor celebrity into a career as a fashion model, all before her parents were even aware of what was going on.
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[edit] Story
Kennedy met photographer Mark Hunter (who goes by the alias "The Cobrasnake") at a Blood Brothers concert at the El Rey Theatre in Los Angeles, California in the summer of 2005. He took some photographs of her for his web site and they exchanged phone numbers. In January 2006 Kennedy began an internship at his office, a requirement from her high school for graduation.[3] Hunter's web site featured photos of celebrities at various parties and he began bringing Kennedy and her friend Maggy Rogow, who was also interning at Hunter's office. Hunter and Kennedy also began dating, with the approval of her parents, Barry Levin and Jinx Kennedy.
In December 2005, Hunter had posted photos of Kennedy with the title "JFK CORY KENNEDY", which begat speculation that she was somehow related to the Kennedy family[3]. In February of 2006, a blog entry about Kennedy appeared on Fashionologie that called her "the heroin chic chick"[4]
By April, Hunter had noticed every time he posted photos of Kennedy on his site, the web traffic from fashion community sites would spike. Hunter quickly realized that Kennedy had the potential to be a star.[3] That month, as the Kennedy-Levin family visited New York City on vacation, Kennedy and Hunter visited the offices of Nylon. The very next day she was in a photo shoot for an issue focused on music and MySpace, which hit news stands in June.
At this point her profile and popularity began to rise dramatically. She was mentioned in a New York Times article about interns[5] and LA Weekly did a short article about her.[2] Then in October, she appeared in a mock music video for Good Charlotte's "Keep Your Hands Off My Girl", directed by Nylon's editor-in-chief Marvin Scott Jarrett. The entire clip is shot from a single camera at a fixed angle, and consists of Kennedy shaking salt and pepper to the beat while eating Indian food and listening to the song on a portable music player. The viral video became one of the most popular videos on the Web.[3] In addition, she was being paid by high-profile nightclubs to show up with her friends and be seen despite being only 16 years old (the legal drinking age in California is 21), and hanging out with celebrities such as Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan.[3]
Her parents had known about her exposure online but had not realized the extent to which it had grown until the June issue of Nylon appeared. Because Kennedy had been previously treated for clinical depression, their primary concern had been her health and well-being. By September 2006, her celebrity life began to conflict with her home and school life. Kennedy and Hunter had broken up, but she was still accompanying him to parties mid-week and staying out past 2 AM.[3]
Having had enough, her parents had her placed in boarding school, a "nonpublic therapeutic placement"[3] with limited phone and computer use, although she is free to leave on weekends. Since then, her Internet profile has slightly decreased, but she is still making appearances in glossy fashion magazines.
[edit] Perception
Kennedy's celebrity status has proven to be controversial, as most people seem to either love her or hate her. Her fans leave adoring comments on her MySpace page, but others leave harshly negative messages for her. About this tendency to be polarizing, Kennedy herself says, "Maybe it's 'cause most celebrities are, like, perfect. They have their hair brushed and their makeup done and no bruises on their legs ... and I'm like BLEURRRRGH!"[2]
[edit] Background
Kennedy has a fraternal twin sister named Chris and two younger sisters, Cody and Chandler. The LA Weekly reports that "her folks run education programs for adults who did not complete high school," but the LA Times says they can produce diplomas "in one week or less" on the Internet.
[edit] References
- ^ Live Footage of Cory Kennedy, "Internet It Girl" (November 9, 2006). Retrieved on 2007-02-25.
- ^ a b c Ryder, Caroline. "Cory's World", LA Weekly, August 2, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-02-25.
- ^ a b c d e f g Hubler, Shawn. "The secret life of Cory Kennedy", West magazine, Los Angeles Times, February 25, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-02-25.
- ^ the heroin chic chick. Fashionologie (February 5, 2006). Retrieved on 2007-02-25.
- ^ Tkacik, Maureen. "Interns, the Founts of Youth", July 30, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-02-25.