List of 20 Celebrities Who Sold Outrageous Things (Yes, You Read That Right!)

Kim Kardashian scary

Let’s be honest celebrities are known for a lot of things. Wild red carpet outfits, luxurious mansions, headline-grabbing romances… but selling the most outrageous things imaginable? That’s a whole different level of fame.

In a world where celebrity culture thrives on shock value and virality, stars are constantly looking for ways to stand out. Some do it through groundbreaking roles or music. Others? Well, they literally bottle their farts, auction off chewed gum, or even sell invisible art. And while it might sound like a joke, these stunts have made headlines, sold out within hours, and even made millions.

What’s most fascinating is how these outrageous items many of which no ordinary person would ever consider valuable are transformed into gold just because a celebrity touched, used, or claimed them. It blurs the line between art, performance, satire, and sometimes even… exploitation.

But hey, who’s judging? In the age of social media and hyper-consumption, everything’s for sale including parts of your soul.

Ready to be shocked, amused, and mildly disturbed? Let’s start with one of the most iconic examples.

1. Gwyneth Paltrow – The Candle That Smells Like Her Vagina

When Gwyneth Paltrow’s lifestyle brand Goop released a candle labeled "This Smells Like My Vagina," the internet nearly broke.

The scent, according to Gwyneth, started as a joke during a fragrance brainstorming session. But that joke turned into a full-blown product. Crafted with notes of geranium, citrusy bergamot, and cedar absolutes, the candle was meant to be empowering, cheeky, and a conversation starter. And start conversations it did.

The candle retailed at $75 and sold out within hours. Despite or perhaps because of the controversy, it became Goop’s most talked-about product. Gwyneth defended it as a challenge to how society talks about female sexuality, flipping the narrative on discomfort and turning it into commerce.

But of course, not everyone was convinced. Critics called it a publicity stunt, others saw it as elitist satire, and some genuinely just didn’t want their homes to smell like what was claimed.

Still, you can’t argue with results. The candle spawned spin-offs, including "This Smells Like My Orgasm," and turned Goop into a punchline, a headline, and a cash cow all in one.

What’s so outrageous about this? It’s not just the name it’s the confidence. Gwyneth Paltrow didn't just sell a candle. She sold taboo wrapped in luxury packaging, and people couldn't get enough.

2. Grimes – Sold a Piece of Her Soul for $10 Million

Grimes, the genre-bending musician and visual artist, is no stranger to pushing boundaries. But in 2020, she made headlines for selling a literal piece of her soul. Yes, you read that right.

As part of a conceptual art exhibit, Grimes offered up a legal document transferring a portion of her soul to whoever purchased it. The asking price? $10 million. Though it’s unclear if anyone bought the full package, she did say in interviews that she was open to selling smaller pieces for lower prices.

This wasn’t just a publicity stunt. It was part art, part social commentary. Grimes explained that the project was a statement on the nature of celebrity, ownership, and commodification. It explored how modern culture consumes the identities of public figures as if they’re products.

While some critics dismissed it as pretentious, others praised it as brilliant performance art a spiritual evolution of Andy Warhol’s factory fame. Regardless, the buzz it generated was undeniable.

Grimes blurred the line between the metaphysical and the marketable, essentially asking: What is the value of a soul in the modern world?

And let’s not forget the timing. This was around when she was dating Elon Musk, father of her child X Æ A-12, and was already dominating headlines. Selling her soul only added to the mystique. It was weird, yes but it was also a perfect reflection of the surreal, tech-obsessed era we’re living in.

3. Stephanie Matto – Farts in a Jar

Probably one of the most mind-blowing entries on this list: Stephanie Matto, a former 90 Day Fiancé contestant, made a fortune selling her farts in a jar. It started off as a novelty but quickly turned into a full-blown business.

At $1,000 per jar, she claimed to have made over $100,000 in just a few weeks. Matto even shared her process openly on TikTok, explaining how she prepared herself for "maximum gas output" using a special high-fiber diet. Think protein shakes, beans, and eggs. The internet couldn’t look away.

But the stunt took a toll—literally. She ended up in the hospital with symptoms resembling a heart attack. The diagnosis? Too much gas buildup from her extreme fart-producing regimen.

What started as a quirky hustle turned into a health hazard. Still, Stephanie pivoted quickly and began selling digital fart jars (NFTs). Because of course she did.

Beyond the absurdity, this story reveals something fascinating: the sheer power of parasocial relationships and internet fandoms. People were not buying jars of air. They were buying a piece of a viral moment, a ticket into the weirdest VIP club ever.

Stephanie Matto may have gone viral for all the wrong reasons, but she also tapped into the bizarre niche economy of influencer culture, where almost anything can be monetized if you dare.

4. James Franco – The Invisible Sculpture That Sold Nothing

James Franco has always played with the edge of art and absurdity. But when he offered up an invisible sculpture for sale, people were both baffled and intrigued. That’s right, he wasn’t selling a statue, painting, or performance. He was selling thin air.

This invisible artwork was titled Fresh Air, part of a collaboration with performance artist Praxis. Buyers received a certificate proving ownership of the "conceptual space." That’s all. No physical product. Just the idea.

What makes this so outrageous isn’t just the lack of a physical item. It’s the way people actually treated it as legitimate art. Some collectors reportedly paid thousands of dollars just for the bragging rights of owning an invisible piece created by a Hollywood actor.

Franco described it as a critique of materialism and an exploration of how fame adds value to literally nothing. Some people saw genius in it. Others called it pretentious nonsense. But that’s what made it so fascinating.

In the era of NFTs and digital ownership, selling invisible art somehow made sense. Franco may have been ahead of the curve, pushing the boundaries of what people will pay for when celebrity status is involved.

This wasn't just selling air. It was selling belief, clout, and the illusion of exclusivity. Franco proved that if you're famous enough, even nothing becomes something. And that’s a price some people are more than willing to pay.


5. Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie – Soap Made from Their Child’s Placenta

Leave it to Hollywood’s most iconic former power couple to take parenting and self-care to a whole new level. When Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie reportedly used their newborn child’s placenta to create custom skincare products, the story made global headlines. Some sources even claimed that Pitt had the placenta turned into soap.

While the couple never officially confirmed it, the rumor was strong enough to take on a life of its own. And honestly, it wasn’t too far-fetched. Celebs have been known to take wild routes in the name of beauty, wellness, and youth. Kim Kardashian popularized the vampire facial, after all.

Placenta-based skincare is not entirely new. It’s actually a long-standing trend in luxury beauty circles, with some brands claiming the nutrients help rejuvenate the skin. But using your own baby's placenta to whip up a custom bar of soap? That takes the cake.

Fans were divided. Some found it beautiful and symbolic, while others found it borderline grotesque. But the attention it received only added to Brangelina’s larger-than-life image. It fed into the idea that A-listers live in a completely different world where even human biology can be branded and bottled.

Whether it was a rumor or reality, the takeaway was clear. Celebrity parents, especially ones like Brad and Angelina, can turn even the most personal biological matter into a wellness trend. And fans? They’ll eat it up, no matter how bizarre it sounds.


6. Scarlett Johansson – Her Chewed Gum Sold for Thousands

It’s one thing for celebrities to auction off autographed items or designer outfits. But used chewing gum? That’s a new level of obsession. Scarlett Johansson became part of this strange phenomenon when a fan listed her chewed gum on eBay after she spit it out during an interview on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

The listing described the item in full detail, noting that Scarlett had chewed the gum live on air and then casually discarded it. The seller scooped it up, preserved it, and soon after, the gum went viral. It sold for over five thousand dollars.

This incident became a perfect example of how celebrity culture can turn the mundane into the coveted. It wasn’t about the gum. It was about the story behind it. The fan wasn't just buying a used item. They were buying a piece of a celebrity moment, something tied directly to a glamorous, untouchable figure.

Some fans collect autographs. Others collect collectibles. But a used piece of chewing gum? That’s on a whole other level of dedication. And let’s be real, it also speaks to the extreme parasocial connections people have with celebrities. The fact that a random piece of trash could become a treasure is hilarious, bizarre, and kind of iconic.

Scarlett, for her part, never made a big deal out of it. But this moment added to her mystique. It became one of those quirky Hollywood stories that prove when it comes to fandom, nothing is too strange to sell.


7. Miley Cyrus – Selling Her Used Underwear for Charity

Miley Cyrus has always been known for pushing boundaries, so it wasn’t shocking when she decided to sell her used clothing, including underwear and lingerie, to fans online. But before anyone could label it as another celebrity cash grab, Miley made it clear—the proceeds were going to charity.

She launched this mini fashion sale through Depop and her Happy Hippie Foundation, which supports LGBTQ+ youth and homeless teens. The items ranged from wild stage outfits to her casual, personal pieces. Some of them were super rare, like exclusive tour looks. Others? Everyday socks and underwear.

Yes, fans could literally own Miley’s used panties, and many were happy to pay top dollar for it. The listings flew off the shelves, and the response was massive. Some fans saw it as a once-in-a-lifetime collectible. Others just wanted to support a good cause in a cool way.

What made it work was Miley’s tone. She was completely self-aware and unapologetic. It was part fashion drop, part fan service, and part rebellion against how celebrities are expected to sanitize everything they do.

This move wasn’t just outrageous. It was smart. Miley used her brand power to flip a taboo into a charitable trend. She blurred the line between intimate and iconic, making fans feel personally connected while doing good in the process.

If there’s one thing Miley has always done well, it’s take control of her narrative. Selling her used underwear didn’t scandalize her brand. It amplified it.

8. Kanye West – Selling Air from His Concert

Leave it to Kanye West to turn literal air into a commodity. During his Yeezus tour, a fan listed a Ziploc bag of “Air from Kanye’s concert” on eBay. What started as a joke quickly spiraled into something much bigger.

The listing claimed the bag had been filled during one of Kanye’s performances and was being offered as a rare collectible. The price? It started around 60 dollars—but within days, bidding reportedly shot up to over 60,000 dollars before eBay eventually took it down for violating their product rules.

But the point had already been made. Kanye’s fame had reached a level where people were willing to pay insane amounts for a bag of nothing, as long as it had some connection to him. And it wasn’t the first time. A few months later, others began copying the trend, bottling air from his Donda listening events and trying to sell those as well.

What’s so outrageous here is not just the absurdity, but what it says about modern celebrity culture. The idea that fame can turn something as intangible as air into a product is equal parts hilarious and disturbing.

Kanye never publicly addressed the air auction, but knowing his flair for the theatrical, he likely loved every second of it. Whether it was real or staged, the story blew up online and only added to Kanye’s unpredictable legend.

If Beyoncé sells elegance and Rihanna sells cool, Kanye sells controversy and chaos—and apparently, the air around him is valuable too.


9. William Shatner – Sold His Kidney Stone for Charity

Most actors auction off memorabilia like scripts, costumes, or signed headshots. But Star Trek legend William Shatner went way beyond that. In 2006, he sold his kidney stone for a whopping $25,000.

Yes, you read that right. His actual kidney stone, passed and preserved, became the most unusual piece of celebrity memorabilia ever sold. The buyer? GoldenPalace.com, an online casino known for buying odd celebrity items to boost its publicity.

Shatner didn’t pocket the cash, though. He donated the entire sum to Habitat for Humanity, proving that even the weirdest auction can be for a good cause. He joked during interviews that the stone was “so big, it required three handlers” and proudly declared it to be the most valuable thing he’d ever passed.

It might sound ridiculous, but this story captured the imagination of fans and media alike. Shatner leaned into the weirdness, showing once again why he’s beloved by multiple generations—not just as Captain Kirk, but as a pop culture icon who doesn’t take himself too seriously.

Selling a kidney stone might sound absurd, but it worked. It raised money for charity, made headlines around the world, and gave Shatner another legendary moment to add to his already outrageous résumé.

This sale also highlights something important. In the world of celebrity fandom, even biological waste becomes valuable, if it’s tied to someone fans adore. It’s fame at its weirdest and most profitable.


10. Kim Kardashian – Skincare Using Her Own Blood

Kim Kardashian is known for turning beauty trends into viral sensations. But even her most die-hard fans were stunned when she promoted the “Vampire Facial a cosmetic treatment using her own blood.

Kim documented the entire process on her show Kourtney and Kim Take Miami. The procedure involved extracting her blood, spinning it in a centrifuge to isolate the platelet-rich plasma, and then reinjecting it into her face to rejuvenate her skin. The result? A selfie that went viral worldwide, showing Kim’s face covered in blood, looking like something straight out of a horror movie.

While the vampire facial wasn’t invented by Kim, her endorsement turned it into a must-try luxury skincare trend. Clinics all over the world began offering it, often marketing it using her name. Some even claimed they could tailor skin products using DNA or blood analysis, inspired by what Kim had popularized.

This isn’t just outrageous. It’s genius branding. Kim took something that looked terrifying and turned it into a status symbol. The treatment costs hundreds, sometimes thousands, depending on where it’s done. And it’s all thanks to one blood-soaked selfie.

Of course, it sparked debates. Some called it unnecessary and dangerous. Others questioned the science behind it. But once again, Kim won. She stayed ahead of the beauty curve, courted controversy, and controlled the narrative.

Kim Kardashian didn’t just sell a product. She sold the idea that beauty can come from your own biology. And millions lined up to believe it.


11. Paris Hilton – Designer Dog Clothes Empire

Paris Hilton was the early 2000s queen of excess, and nowhere was that more obvious than in the way she pampered her tiny dogs. But she didn’t just spoil them. She built a multi-million dollar empire by selling the lifestyle.

Paris launched a line of designer dog clothes, accessories, and luxury pet items that included diamond-studded collars, pet perfumes, tiaras, and tiny pink doggy beds that looked like thrones. For fans of her chihuahua, Tinkerbell, this was like buying into a royal fantasy.

Her products sold in pet boutiques and online, with prices ranging from $30 to several hundred dollars. And yes, people bought them. Paris marketed them as essential for fashion-forward pets, and her fans absolutely ate it up.

The most outrageous part? She also built a $325,000 mini mansion in her backyard for her dogs, complete with air conditioning, heating, designer furniture, and a crystal chandelier. Naturally, it went viral.

While some critics slammed her for being wasteful or disconnected from reality, Paris leaned in. She owned the absurdity and proved that there’s a massive market for luxury pet goods.

Her dog fashion line wasn’t just a novelty. It set trends and influenced other celebs and influencers to start styling their pets too. Before Instagram pet influencers were a thing, Paris Hilton’s dogs were living the dream.

This wasn’t just about pet clothing. It was about selling a fantasy—one where even your dog could live like an A-list celeb.

13. Marina Abramović – Sold a Promise to Perform Nothing

Performance artist Marina Abramović has never shied away from pushing boundaries. But one of her most intriguing and outrageous moments came when she offered to sell a promise—with no physical object, no performance, no art. Just a concept.

As part of a conceptual art series, she auctioned off the idea that she would do something, someday, somewhere. There was no description of the work, no timeline, and no guarantee. All the buyer received was a certificate of ownership stating they had the rights to a future, undefined performance.

The price tag? Thousands of dollars. And it sold.

This wasn’t a scam. It was a statement—about the way we assign value to art, identity, and anticipation. Marina’s career has always been rooted in philosophical questions: what is art? What is presence? What does it mean to witness something? By selling a promise with no form, she turned all of that into a transaction.

Critics called it pretentious, while supporters praised it as visionary. Either way, the media couldn’t get enough of it. It drew comparisons to the art world’s history of conceptual minimalism, but with a 21st-century twist. Now, even intention could be monetized.

What makes this especially outrageous is that Marina isn’t a pop star or influencer. She’s a respected fine artist. And yet she managed to stir more controversy than many celebrities by selling… well, nothing.

In a world where content is king, Marina proved that sometimes the lack of content is what sells best.


14. Justin Timberlake – Half-Eaten French Toast

Some celebrity memorabilia makes sense: signed posters, worn stage outfits, rare collectibles. But half-eaten breakfast? That’s a new level.

Back in 2000, Justin Timberlake appeared on a morning radio show in New York. After the interview, he left behind a piece of French toast he had barely touched. One of the radio station interns decided to keep it as a joke and then list it on eBay.

To everyone’s shock, the half-eaten French toast sold for over $1,000. The buyer was a teenage fan who claimed it was her dream to own something touched by her favorite pop star. She kept the French toast in her freezer, sealed and preserved like a precious relic.

This wasn’t a charity stunt or a marketing move. It was a spontaneous moment of fan obsession turning into cold, hard cash. And it became one of the most bizarre internet auctions of the early 2000s.

It also raised questions about how far fandom would go. Was this just a funny prank that got out of hand? Or a reflection of how celebrity culture blurs the line between admiration and fetish?

For Timberlake, it was probably just another surreal moment in the boy-band mania era. But for the fan who bought it, that French toast was a personal treasure a slice of her idol’s life, literally.

Sometimes, the smallest things become valuable just because they’re connected to someone famous. In this case, breakfast became a collectible, and the story became part of internet lore.


15. Lady Gaga – A Polaroid of Her Brain Scan

When you think of Lady Gaga, you expect the unexpected. She’s worn meat dresses, arrived at award shows in eggs, and turned fashion into performance art. But one of her most bizarre moves came during her collaboration with Polaroid when she presented a Polaroid photo of her brain scan as a piece of art.

At the 2011 Consumer Electronics Show (CES), Gaga, acting as the creative director for Polaroid’s Grey Label line, revealed a collection of tech-meets-art concepts. One of them? A real Polaroid image of her brain waves, captured during a creative process.

Gaga didn’t sell this brain scan directly to the public, but it became a showcase piece, representing the connection between technology, creativity, and the human mind. It was Gaga’s way of saying, "My brain is part of the art."

Fans and critics were both impressed and puzzled. Some saw it as a bold fusion of science and self-expression, while others called it another stunt. Either way, it got people talking and that was the point.

The image was never mass-produced, but its symbolism was powerful. Gaga was commodifying her own mind, turning her neurological activity into visual art. It wasn’t just about fame. It was about redefining how personal experience and brainpower can be transformed into cultural commentary.

In the end, Lady Gaga’s brain scan Polaroid wasn’t outrageous because of what it was. It was outrageous because of what it represented the idea that even your thoughts could become content in the age of celebrity.

16. Deadmau5 – Sold His Ferrari Because It Was “Too Normal”

Electronic music producer Deadmau5 is known for his unpredictable personality and intense attention to aesthetic. So when he decided to sell his custom-wrapped Ferrari 458 Spider, it wasn’t just about flipping a car. It was about shedding something that had become, in his words, “too mainstream.”

The car was affectionately named the "Purrari" because it was covered in a sky-blue Nyan Cat-inspired wrap, complete with rainbow trails across the sides. Deadmau5 had the whole thing customized, down to the cat-themed floor mats and meme-worthy license plate.

Ferrari, however, didn’t appreciate the humor. They reportedly sent him a cease-and-desist letter for using their brand in a way they felt was inappropriate. Deadmau5 responded by removing the wrap and then selling the car. But not quietly. He auctioned it off while documenting the process online, poking fun at Ferrari’s rigidity.

The sale included all the original customizations in digital form, and the event was treated like an internet happening. Fans and collectors jumped at the chance to own a piece of meme history tied to one of EDM’s biggest names.

This wasn’t just a car sale. It was a digital-age performance piece that blurred the lines between fandom, art, and rebellion. Deadmau5 turned a Ferrari into a meme and a meme into money. It was bold, silly, and completely on-brand.

In the world of EDM, where personality is everything, Deadmau5 proved that even getting rid of a car can become an iconic cultural moment.


17. Logan Paul – Sold NFT Video of Himself for $20,000

Internet personality and boxer Logan Paul has made a career out of doing the unexpected. But one of his wildest ventures came when he jumped into the NFT space and began selling clips of himself as digital collectibles.

One of the most viral examples was when he minted and sold a short video of himself opening Pokémon cards. The clip was nothing out of the ordinary. It showed him doing what he had already done on YouTube. But the twist? It sold for twenty thousand dollars as an NFT.

The buyer didn’t get the rights to the video or any physical asset. They simply got digital ownership of a moment already available online for free. And yet, that didn’t stop Paul or his fans from treating the transaction like it was gold.

Logan used his hype, fanbase, and knowledge of digital culture to create scarcity. He made people feel like owning a Logan Paul NFT was being part of a new wave of internet celebrity collectibles.

Critics called it a cash grab. Supporters saw it as the future of content monetization. Either way, it worked. Paul made hundreds of thousands from NFT sales in just a few days.

The outrageous part? He didn’t sell anything new. He sold the idea of ownership, packaged in crypto gloss. And because it was Logan Paul, people paid attention. And then they paid money.

This proved that in today’s world, attention can be monetized in ways that defy logic. Even if the product is already out there for free, if it comes from the right celebrity, people will still line up to buy it.


18. Lindsay Lohan – Sold a Personal Voice Note as an NFT

Lindsay Lohan has made headlines for everything from movies and music to legal troubles and comeback tours. But in 2021, she entered a brand-new arena when she auctioned off a personal voice note as an NFT.

The audio clip, which was just a few seconds long, featured Lindsay talking directly to the buyer. It was personalized and exclusive, meant to be a one-of-a-kind token of her digital presence. The sale ended with the NFT being purchased for tens of thousands of dollars in Ethereum.

What made it truly bizarre wasn’t just the price. It was the concept. A personal message, normally sent for free or through fan platforms like Cameo, was now a blockchain-verified collectible. The buyer got no commercial rights, just bragging rights. And for a fan of Lindsay, that was enough.

This moment signaled how celebrities were starting to see NFTs not just as art but as personal brand extensions. Lindsay wasn’t selling a song, a video, or merch. She was selling herself, digitally bottled and sealed.

While it might seem ridiculous, this move was strategic. It placed her at the forefront of a cultural shift where fame and technology intersect. By being early to the NFT game, she gained attention not just from fans but from the crypto community too.

Love it or hate it, the idea worked. Lindsay Lohan took a simple voice note and turned it into a high-value product. It was weird, bold, and totally in sync with how 2020s celebrity culture works.


19. Post Malone – Sold a Dorito He Licked

Post Malone has always had a quirky relationship with his fans. He’s the kind of celebrity who doesn’t mind looking unpolished or weird. And that’s exactly what happened during a Doritos promotional campaign that turned into an outrageous collectible moment.

At a fan meet-and-greet event tied to his partnership with Doritos for the Flamin’ Hot Limón flavor, Post Malone took a single chip, licked it, and handed it to a fan. Naturally, the fan listed it on eBay as “Post Malone Licked Dorito.”

The listing quickly went viral and bids rolled in. Prices soared into the thousands before eBay removed the listing, citing health concerns and biohazard rules. But the buzz around the item kept growing. Fans joked that the chip could be cloned to create a “Post Malone 2.0,” and memes flooded the internet.

What’s insane is that the fan wasn’t trying to sell a real snack. They were trying to sell a trace of celebrity DNA a connection to fame via saliva. And people were genuinely ready to pay for it.

Post Malone, of course, laughed it off. He’s never taken himself too seriously, which only makes fans love him more. This stunt was as much about personality as it was about the item itself.

It’s proof that if fans think something came from their favorite star, no matter how gross or weird, they will attach value to it. Even a soggy Dorito.

20. Bella Thorne – Crashed OnlyFans by Selling “Exclusive” Content

When actress and influencer Bella Thorne joined OnlyFans in 2020, she broke the internet. Literally. Within just 24 hours, she made over one million dollars, and by the end of the first week, that number doubled. But it wasn’t just the earnings that sparked headlines. It was what she sold and how it backfired.

Bella promised exclusive, never-before-seen content for $200 per message. Many assumed this meant nudity or explicit material. What subscribers received, however, was a set of lingerie photos that were already similar to her Instagram content. Fans were furious. Refund requests flooded in, and the platform’s payment policies were soon adjusted.

This caused real issues for actual adult creators on the site. OnlyFans changed payout timelines and capped tip limits, claiming it was due to a surge in transactions. Many blamed Bella for shifting the platform’s model and hurting the creators who relied on it.

Bella defended herself by saying it was an experiment for a movie role and a way to destigmatize adult platforms. Still, the damage was done. She had turned exclusive access into a controversial business model, one that sparked debates across media.

The outrage wasn’t just about what she sold, but what it represented. Bella’s fame allowed her to enter a niche platform and make millions, while others struggled for a fraction of that without the celebrity edge. It was a masterclass in viral monetization, but also a cautionary tale about misleading digital promises.

Bella Thorne didn’t just sell content. She sold hype, controversy, and access. And the world paid for it, both literally and metaphorically.


Conclusion: 

If this list proves anything, it’s that celebrity culture has redefined the idea of value. In the hands of the famous, even the most absurd things become coveted treasures. Whether it's a used piece of chewing gum, a fart in a jar, or a digital voice note, people will line up and pay simply because of who touched it, created it, or claimed it.

These stories aren’t just strange. They reflect a deeper shift in how we consume fame. It’s no longer just about movies or music. Fans now want intimacy, even if it comes in the form of a licked Dorito or an invisible sculpture. And celebrities, always eager to stay relevant and profitable, are more than happy to turn themselves into walking brands.

But beyond the laughs and the weird headlines lies a very modern truth. In a digital world where attention is the most valuable currency, outrageous sells. Whether it’s for charity, art, or pure clout, celebrities are now marketing the intangible, the bizarre, and sometimes the downright gross.

And we can’t look away.

So the next time you hear a headline about someone selling their soul or bottling air, don’t be surprised. Chances are, there’s a waiting list.


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