George Clooney Lashes Out at Paparazzi Photos of Twins
The comments come as pictures on the cover France's 'Voici'
magazine made the rounds online.
The 56-year-old actor fired back at Voici magazine on
Friday after photos of his newborn twins with wife
Amal were shared online. Clooney later released a statement about his plans to
prosecute "to the full extent of the law" and how he wants to ensure
the safety of his children.
"George
and Amal are so in love with their kids," a source tells ET. "They
are settling in so well and enjoying the time off being at home with their
family. Having children has made George
even more protective and aware of who he surrounds himself with. He will do
everything he can to make sure the children live as normal of a life as possible."
The source also adds that
the couple has plans to stay in Como, Italy, until the end of the summer and
will then head back to the U.K. No word if they are planning to make a
permanent move back to the U.S.
George and Amal welcomed
twins Ella and Alexander on June 6 and
the couple has yet to publicly share photos of the little ones. Upon hearing the news of Clooney's intention to sue Voici,
the magazine released a statement saying that because George and Amal are
"very public personalities" the images published were a
"response to a public demand."
The French tabloid that published photos of George and Amal Clooney's
month-and-a-half-year-old twins that, according to George, were taken
illegally, said in its defense that the pictures were simply
"a response to a public demand." Hey, leave us out
of this.
It's doubtful that any real fans
of the Clooneys would have approved of a plan to scale a fence, climb
a tree and snap Alexander and Ella within the
family's Lake Como home, as George said these paparazzi did. "Make no
mistake—the photographers, the agency and the magazine will be prosecuted to
the full extent of the law," Clooney, easily the most famous face of the
tony Italian enclave, promised in a statement obtained by E! News Friday.
"The safety of our children
demands it."
The new parents, who otherwise
are said to be happier than ever devoting themselves to their son and daughter
right now, were surely aware that the first picture of their babies was going
to be a hot commodity. But the realization that photographers had actually
managed to get the goods in such a manner (the magazine denied that the
Clooney family was in any danger
from the publishing of their photos) must have still come as an unpleasant
jolt.
The babies were born June 6 in
London, not exactly off the grid but still far away from the beating heart of
the paparazzi zone, in Los Angeles.
And Lake Como—where George has been a part-time resident for over a
decade—would have seemed like an even more promising place to avoid exactly
this sort of thing.
But then again, while L.A. has
its moments, paparazzi across the pond are notoriously invasive, and they
apparently haven't given up going to greater lengths than just waiting and
following to get scoops. Because
even if people find scaling a tree and climbing a
fence distasteful under any circumstances, that isn't to say they wouldn't
also pick up a copy of Voici and look at the pictures.
Meanwhile, across the pond, Tyra Banks was telling
Seth Meyers on Late Night Thursday that she had only
posted a full-face photo of her son York on Instagram recently
because she had spied paparazzi snapping them leaving a restaurant on Father's Day and she wanted to drain.
As it turned out, she had done a
perfectly good job hiding him in the first place.
"I'm like, 'I've got to put
this picture out before the paparazzi. I don't want them to make money off our
child and have the first picture.' So,
I posted the damn picture," Banks recalled. "The next day,
there ain't no paparazzi pictures, 'cause mama knew how to hide that camera.
She's a supermodel for a reason! And so now his picture is out there and I didn't need it to be!"
And these are just three of the
different approaches celebs have taken to sharing photos of their
kids with a larger audience.
Meyers said he had no intention
of posting any pics of Ashe on social media and didn't do so for more
than a year. But then he tried it and...he liked it. "It was just like,
'The world needs to see this little angel,'" he joked to Banks.
Tyra, meanwhile, kept the very
fact that she was expecting via surrogate a complete secret until York was born
in January 2016, and the first pic
she shared of him that Valentine's Day was taken from the side, so
his full face wasn't visible. Zoe
Saldana went that route with her twins, regularly
posting pics but at first only of their adorable little hands, the
backs of their heads, etc. She has more recently ventured into side views, but
has yet to go with a full-on, looking-into-the-camera pic.
Meanwhile, the Clooneys don't do
social media and...well, they're the Clooneys. It's either going to be a glossy
magazine cover with all proceeds donated to charity or nothing. They may have had some sort of
idea about how they might introduce their little ones to the world down
the road, but in the meantime they obviously just wanted to be left alone.
Meanwhile, though we're not yet
operating in a media landscape where to share or not to share is left up entirely to the discretion
of the parents, there is no such thing as reasonable "public demand" for baby pictures taken by whatever means
necessary.
Not that there isn't any demand,
though. The public does love to know more—and look at
pictures. And so like a lot of social policy that seems so obvious now but
wasn't always that way, the evolution toward a more respectful zone with regard
to how celebrities are photographed when they're out with their children has been a process.
After years of regularly
utilizing the supply provided by the ever-swarming shutterbugs, a few years
back a number of outlets (including this one) stopped publishing photos taken
of kids that aren't sanctioned by their parents, taken in a setting where
professional photographers are known to be chronicling the happenings, like at
a red carpet premiere or a sporting event, or posted on the parents' (or
trusted friends' or family members') social media accounts.
Jennifer
Garner and Halle Berry were among the famous
parents who went to bat to
help decrease the supply, calling for harsher repercussions for intrusive
paparazzi in California after having too many photographers get in their kids'
faces. And in 2014 Kristen Bell and Dax
Shepard put their foot down in what turned out to be a successful attempt at
altering the demand.
"I'm telling you right now,
we don't want our daughter's face anywhere ever until she decides, because I
have the utmost respect for her," Bell explained to Access Hollywood. And while plenty of outlets
disregarded Bell's wishes and continued to run paparazzi pics of her with her
daughters, the actress has stuck to her own promise. Last year the
mother of two offered up a knowing photo of her younger child, Delta—a
far-away shot of a small silhouette in the ocean that's mostly
Shepard.
Bell explained that, while she
and Shephard have chosen (or at least accepted) a public life because they're
actors, daughters Lincoln and Delta have not. That's a common
refrain among the famous parents who've also opted not to do the baby-album
thing on Instagram.
"I continue to kindly ask,
Please don't post/publish photos of our kids," Ashton Kutchertweeted July 17.
"They haven't chosen life in the public eye." He added, "Yes we
took them to a public place (we like sharing life with our kids) no that
doesn't mean we are ok with their photos being published."
He and Mila Kunis have gone the
no-shares route when it comes to their daughter Wyatt and
son Dimitri, and Kunis herself doesn't even do social media. By way
of appeasing the curious when Wyatt, who's now almost 3, was born,
Kutcher posted
a batch of eight baby photos on his blog and said one of them was
Wyatt.
"Here's your baby photo.
Well, one of them is. Now can the helicopter please stop hovering over our
house, there is a baby sleeping inside! And she's super cute," he
promised.
Kutcher's plea for more privacy
comes in the wake of a number of paparazzi pictures of Wyatt having been
published over the years anyway because, as he said, he and Kunis like to share
life with their kids and go outside from time to time as a family.
And since there are still buyers for paparazzi pics of the whole family,
photographers have continued to take them.
Even Kate Middleton and Prince William have their
critics who say they haven't made Prince George and Princess Charlotte as
visible as the people of the U.K. would prefer. However, while the Duke and
Duchess of Cambridge know that endless photo opportunities are part of the
job for them, they're still trying to give their toddlers as normal a life
as is humanly possible until the whole third-and-fourth-in-line-to-the-throne
thing trumps normality.
Social media has helped
celebrities manage the media coverage of their children, making it more
difficult for paparazzi to be able to sell photos of their kids by
basically handing out free pictures. beyonce for instance, stopped the Internet in its tracks a
couple weeks ago when she posted the first photo of twins Rumi and Sir
Carter on Instagram, and Blue Ivy has been the
real star of Mom's various platforms for years.
And for those who don't use
social media, plenty of magazines are happy to be the place for proud
famous parents to debut their babies. Many, many A-list
celebs have gone that route, including Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, and Sandra Bullock—who,
after introducing son Louis on the cover of People in
2010, opted to only show the back of daughter Laila's head when she
made her debut in 2015.
And this isn't to say that every
paparazzi photo of a child that isn't posed (some are posed, you know) was
taken maliciously or that every celebrity despises the paparazzi all the
time—some celebs don't mind them so long as everyone behaves
themselves.
But the famous do not owe their public
(no matter how much fans might have shipped Mila and Ashton on That
'70s Show or how much they admire George and Amal) anything when it
comes to sharing photos of their children.
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