IF you ask a young person what they want to be when they grow up, more than half will say they’d like to be famous, according to a recent survey. I can see why. It’s a world of glamour and excitement. You are invited to awards shows where you mingle with other celebrities, you get the best tables in restaurants and you spend half your life on the beach in Dubai, becoming even more orange. All of which is better than working at Morrisons.
![[Gino D'Acampo at the Loose Women TV show.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/2ecc1ca2-1e1b-4931-b37e-80cfd5b44a70.jpg?strip=all&w=694)
Or is it?. The latest fame-seeker to crash and burn is an Apprentice candidate who this week was accused of using the wrong word to describe someone. So that’s him done for. One word out of place and it’s over and out for the poor chap. Others to have become pariahs in recent times are Gino D’Acampo, that man from the Go Compare adverts, Philip Schofield and Gregg Wallace. It’s getting to the point where, soon, only Monty Don will be left.
![[Wynne Evans in a lavender suit for Strictly Come Dancing.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/NINTCHDBPICT000931961846.jpg?strip=all&w=640)
And we are not talking here about kiddy-fiddlers or international terrorists. None of them is accused of doing something illegal. They just said something or did something which someone found offensive. And that’s that. It doesn’t even have to be a current misdemeanour. It could be a tweet you sent when you were 17. Or something you said to your brother when you were four. And think about it. Can you say, hand on heart, that you have never said or done anything which might be deemed, in the court of social media, to be out of order?.
![[Portrait of Gregg Wallace.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/gregg-wallace-home-new-year-700361179.jpg?strip=all&w=640)
There might be a few people, I guess, whose crimes are limited to running through a field of wheat. But this sort of person rarely wants to be famous anyway. People who crave fame tend to be extroverts. Show-offs. The life and soul of the party. They are people who’ll do pretty much anything to get a laugh. Fun people. The exact sort of people who occasionally say something “wrong”. So what happens when they make it?.
![[Two women topless on a beach in 1994.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/NINTCHDBPICT000970446780_0eb515.jpg?strip=all&w=768)
The money’s rolling in. They’re best friends with Marcus Rashford. They have a speedboat and personal plates on their car, and then, bang — a lip-reader is brought in, studies some social media footage taken at a party in 2005, and they’re done. There’s no trial. No chance to mount a defence. They’re just out. On the scrapheap. That’s bad enough when you get fired from a job stacking shelves, but when you have a household face and you are catapulted into oblivion it’s a very different kettle of fish.
![[Liz Hurley and Trinny Woodall in bikinis on a boat in 2024.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/NINTCHDBPICT000970444432_77c251.jpg?strip=all&w=768)
Because if you go to the shops or to the pub or even the park, you know people are going to stare at you and maybe even say something unpleasant. So you are forced to stay indoors, in the mock Tudor mansion you bought with your earnings and which you can no longer afford. In other words, you have your five minutes of fame and then. because we live in a world where everyone is offended by everything, it’ll be followed by 50 years of being a hermit.
Probably best, then, to forget the celebrity lark and strive instead to become a fireman. SIR STEPHEN FRY came into my phone this week saying that the nation’s water companies should be owned and run by the Government. And there are many who say that the railways should be put into the public sector as well. Really? I only ask because this week we read about a bunch of lads on a stag night. They were on a train going from Glasgow to Aberdeen and decided that when they pulled into the station at Montrose, they should get some pizzas delivered.
This would be quite an operation because the train would only be stationary for 90 seconds. And guess what. The pizza delivery company pulled it off. Can you imagine any government-run operation doing that?. No. Neither can I. I USED to think that people in their sixties were old. When my mum reached 60, she looked ancient and had ancient thoughts, mostly about Jimmy Young. At 61, my dad was so old he was dead.
When I reached 60, I started to think about those gardening trousers you see in the back of the Daily Telegraph’s colour supplement, and whether I should spend my retirement building a train set or learning how to do watercolour paintings. But then I saw that picture of Liz Hurley and Trinny Woodall in bikinis. And it’s snapped me back to attention. Liz may only be 59 but Trinny is past the big six-zero now. And I can’t see her in a pair of action trousers heading down to the bingo hall under a blanket with rheumatism and arthritis.
As a result, I’m going to take up off-piste skiing and being a playboy. Sixty? It’s the new 16. AFTER he was forced to flee some dismal field in Milton Keynes this week, because no one could hear what his adenoids were saying over the din of 50 tractor horns, Sir Starmer went to a TV studio and said, with a condescending chuckle, that getting NHS waiting lists down was more important than a tax break for farmers.