"All these people who say success changes people; well, no, it just magnifies what's there"
About this Quote
Kevin Smith’s line has the blunt, backstage candor of a guy who’s spent decades watching Hollywood mythologize itself. The comforting story is that fame is a corrupting potion: you were pure, then the money hit, then you became a monster. Smith flips it. Success isn’t a personality transplant; it’s a megaphone. If you were generous, you get the means to be loudly generous. If you were petty, you gain the leverage to turn pettiness into policy.
The intent is half defense mechanism, half warning. As a director who came up outside the studio machine (and built a career on autobiographical, talk-heavy honesty), Smith knows how quickly the public wants a morality tale when a celebrity behaves badly. “Success changed them” lets everyone off the hook: the star, the fans, the industry that rewarded the behavior. “It magnifies what’s there” is harsher because it makes character preexisting, not accidental.
Subtext: stop romanticizing the before-and-after narrative. The “real” person isn’t the broke one; it’s the one exposed under pressure, access, and attention. Context matters here: fame doesn’t just reveal private tendencies, it amplifies incentives. People with resources can indulge, enable, curate, and avoid consequences. So the line isn’t naive optimism about authenticity; it’s a reality check about scale. Success doesn’t create the impulse. It just gives it distribution.
The intent is half defense mechanism, half warning. As a director who came up outside the studio machine (and built a career on autobiographical, talk-heavy honesty), Smith knows how quickly the public wants a morality tale when a celebrity behaves badly. “Success changed them” lets everyone off the hook: the star, the fans, the industry that rewarded the behavior. “It magnifies what’s there” is harsher because it makes character preexisting, not accidental.
Subtext: stop romanticizing the before-and-after narrative. The “real” person isn’t the broke one; it’s the one exposed under pressure, access, and attention. Context matters here: fame doesn’t just reveal private tendencies, it amplifies incentives. People with resources can indulge, enable, curate, and avoid consequences. So the line isn’t naive optimism about authenticity; it’s a reality check about scale. Success doesn’t create the impulse. It just gives it distribution.
Quote Details
| Topic | Success |
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