NEW YORK - Act 2 can be hard to do, even after an acquittal.
Many people believe celebrities get away with heinous crimes thanks
to their money and fame. So celebs who hear the words "not
guilty" can still fall into a career limbo more difficult to
escape than a cluster of paparazzi.HOT TRAVEL DEALS
Michael Jackson, acquitted of all charges in his child
molestation trial, could learn something from his celebrity
brethren's post-trial tribulations - going all the way back to 1922,
when Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle was acquitted.
After two hung juries, a third cleared Arbuckle of raping
and murdering actress Virginia Rappe. Despite the verdict, he was
seen as an archetype of Hollywood immorality and never regained
fame.
"There is such a thing as bad publicity",
psychologist Joyce Brothers told The Associated Press.
Hollywood playboy Errol Flynn's wild ways caught up to him
when two teenagers accused the then 33-year-old actor of statutory
rape in 1942. Unlike Arbuckle, Flynn didn't become a scapegoat for
Hollywood decadence. The American Boys Club for the Defense of Errol
Flynn, which included future conservative columnist William F.
Buckley Jr. among its members, was founded to organize support for
the actor.
"As a celebrity, you get a certain number of free
passes", said Brothers. "You're actually in a better
position if you're a celebrity because people care."
Flynn was cleared - increasing his lothario reputation
rather than killing his career. Although his alcohol abuse and hard
partying never wavered, he went on to appear in such films as
"William Tell" and "The Sun Also Rises."
His autobiography "My Wicked, Wicked Ways" was
published shortly after his death in 1959.
Seven decades after Arbuckle, O.J. Simpson was acquitted of
murdering his wife and her friend in a trial that gripped the nation
for most of 1994. He later lost a civil trial and was ordered to pay
a $33.5 million settlement.
Before the murders, the former football player graced the
C-list, appearing in two "Naked Gun" films and starring in
the HBO series "1st & Ten" and the failed NBC pilot
"Frogmen." He also was a Hertz pitchman and an NBC
sportscaster. Following the Trial of the Century, Simpson has been
unable to make another go at sportscasting or acting.
Simpson earns $25,000 in monthly pensions from his NFL days,
which is exempt from creditors. And Florida law states his $575,000
home in Miami can't be seized to pay off debts like the civil
settlement. Last year, Simpson attempted to drum up interest in a
"Punk'd" knockoff called "Juiced", but failed.
"As far as anyone can see", said Brothers,
"O.J. has spent his life looking for the murderer on golf
courses."
After a long legal battle in the '90s, Calvin "Snoop
Dogg" Broadus was acquitted of the shooting death of a rival
gang member. The case became lyrical fodder on "Murder was the
Case" and powered record sales of his debut album,
"Doggystyle."
"There's the judicial system and then there's street
justice", noted Morris Reid, a branding and political
consultant in Washington, D.C.
Snoop once was the face of gangsta rap, but he's since
undergone an extreme makeover. In 1997, he toured with the
alternative music festival Lollapalooza. In 2002, Snoop abandoned
marijuana - for a little while, anyway - and his gangsta ways,
maintaining street cred while morphing into the friendly
rapper-next-door.
Snoop recently appeared with Paris Hilton in a T-Mobile
commercial, lent his voice to the kid flick "Racing
Stripes" and played the pilot of "Soul Plane."
Snoop's "izzle" slang has even integrated itself into the
pop culture lexicon.
Much like Snoop, hip-hop mogul Sean "P. Diddy"
Combs also succeeded in the court of public opinion. In 2001, a jury
cleared Combs of firing a weapon during a 1999 dispute at a Times
Square nightspot that wounded three bystanders, and of bribing his
chauffeur with money and bling to take the rap.
The trial didn't damage Puffy's urban empire - only his love
life at the time. Combs and then girlfriend Jennifer Lopez, who was
present during the shooting but didn't testify in court, called it
quits.
Following the incident, Combs turned his attention to
business and politics. He searched for new music acts in the MTV
reality series "Making the Band", ran the New York City
Marathon for charity, starred in "A Raisin in the Sun" on
Broadway and urged young and minority voters to "Vote or
Die!" during the 2004 presidential election.
His success stands in stark contract to Robert Blake, best
known for the 1970s TV series "Baretta." Blake's acquittal
in March in the killing of his wife left him saying: "I'm
broke. ... I need a job."
He still needs one.
Before the trial, he hadn't been seen since 1997's David
Lynch movie "Lost Highway."
Daniel Castro, author of the upcoming book "Critical
Choices That Change Lives: How Heroes Turn Tragedy into
Triumph", says stars such as Blake and Jackson should devote
their lives to humanity. And Marshall L. Hennington, a Beverly
Hills-based clinical psychologist and jury consultant, believes that
if celebs assemble the perfect team of publicists and advisers to
craft a sound return strategy and dedicate their lives to charity,
they can rise again.
"The public is a very forgiving public", said
Hennington. "We love to have our celebrities go as high as
possible and then see them fall. And then we love to build them back
up again."
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On the Net:
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