

I felt I wasn't giving my fans anything, and they could see it - which, I think, was a complete distortion.… What I wanted to say is that life is so stressful, and I get the desire to just escape it.

Basically I felt I wasn't good enough, wasn't capable. I started to have panic attacks right before getting onstage, or right after leaving the stage. "Tours are a really lonely place for me," she said, adding that before she checked into a facility in Tennessee, "My self-esteem was shot. "I've cried onstage more times than I can count, and I'm not a cute crier," she revealed about the effects of being open and authentic with her fans at all times. In an interview with Vogue, Gomez opened up about the circumstances that pushed her to decide to cancel part of her Revival World Tour and enter treatment for depression and anxiety. Stuff could be super crazy for him right now.'" "That's why whenever people are having a go at Justin Bieber drag racing cars or whatever, I'm always like, 'Yeah, but you never know. "There is no blueprint for starting young and working stuff out," he said. The star's own unique experience helps him empathize with others who have dealt with growing up in the spotlight. You suddenly start to feel, 'Man, if I am just feeling some human emotion of sadness, does that mean I'm doing this wrong? Am I not good at being famous?'" "You have a great job, you're wealthy, you don't have a right to not be excited about the thing all the time. "Part of the thing is the expectation that you should just be delighted all the time," Radcliffe continued. "Then as you get very drunk, you become aware, 'Oh, people are watching more now because now I'm getting very drunk, so I should probably drink more to ignore that more.'" "The quickest way to forget about the fact that you were being watched was to get very drunk," he said about trying to enjoy nights out. I do remember that being very disheartening."ĭuring his sitdown with Sam Jones, the Miracle Workers star also opened up about using alcohol to cope with fame when he was a teen. "If you just hear people booing and shouting stuff at you and about you, that, as a kid, sucked. But there are also some people that will boo and shout at a child," he said.
#CELEBRITY WITHOUT VEEER PROFESSIONAL#
If you would be going into an event and the professional autograph hunters … There are some people who can do it and they go about it in a way that is okay, and they're not d- about it and they're fine. "As a kid, the thing that sucked, and the thing that did, you know, burrow its way in there and was really unpleasant was getting booed. "There were highly trained security guards being pushed around by, like, 6-year-old girls to 80-year-old women," he said.ĭespite never feeling like he was actually in danger, Radcliffe found it excruciating to deal with being harassed by photographers. "Crazy s- happened to us as a family very young," Radcliffe said of his childhood Harry Potter days in a new episode of Off Camera with Sam Jones.ĭuring one particular scary incident, the actor and his parents arrived in Japan to find thousands of fans waiting for them at the airport with only about 100 security guards there for protection.
