Gwyneth Paltrow does nothing by accident. A couple of weeks ago, when she gave a controversial quote about infidelity (she said that she wouldn’t end her marriage because of it) to a fashion website, I knew something was up.
[Disclaimer: yes I know it is pitifully sad that I would devote thinking time to Gwyneth Paltrow’s media strategy but what can I say: I’m pathetic and ashamed.]
Gwyneth has been famous her whole life. She comes from a famous family, she has famous god-parents, famous best friends, her ex-boyfriends are famous and so is her husband.
Gwyneth does fame extremely well. Better than anyone, I reckon. Having been burnt by the media interest in her previous high-profile relationships, she speaks openly of the decision she and her Coldplay husband Chris Martin made when they got together to simply not become a Celebrity Couple.
They go to great lengths never to be photographed together: in public or private. Gwyneth does her movies, runs her lifestyle brand GOOP, writes her cookbooks, runs her e-commerce business, raises her kids privately and does it all on her terms, handing out edited glimpses on social media.
Until now.
Vanity Fair has begun work on an unauthorised profile of Gwyneth Paltrow which she has instructed her friends not to take part in. Fair enough. She’s not taking part in the story herself so why would she want her friends to talk to the journalist who is writing it.