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Steve Jobs Dies: Apple Co-Founder Had A Love-Hate Relationship With His Fame

Steve Jobs Fame

JOCELYN NOVECK   10/ 6/11 03:47 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — Of all the tributes that poured in after Steve Jobs' death, clogging up Twitter and dominating the airwaves, he might have most appreciated one small gesture from an anonymous fan: A juicy red apple, partially eaten to mimic the Apple logo, placed against the door of an Apple store in Manhattan.

The gesture was simple and elegant, but also a sign of a rare connection between the public and a visionary entrepreneur – one who transcended the business world to become a veritable pop culture icon.

By the time he died on Wednesday, after years of medical problems, Jobs had appeared on some 100 magazine covers and had numerous books written about him, not to mention an off-Broadway play, an HBO movie, even a "South Park" episode. He wasn't the first celebrity CEO, and he won't be the last. But he may have been the first in modern times to achieve such a lofty place in the public consciousness.

Jobs, who seemingly enjoyed the access his celebrity brought, also appeared deeply conflicted about his fame, zealously guarding the smallest details of his private life. And though he appeared smiling on countless magazine covers, he had a prickly relationship with the media and those who sought to write about him.

"Steve had a love-hate relationship with his own fame," says Alan Deutschman, author of "The Second Coming of Steve Jobs," an unauthorized biography. "He clearly enjoyed the celebrity and the access it gave him, but he wanted total control over his image."

And he largely got it. "Steve was masterful," Deutschman says. "No one has come close to Steve in his ability to control and manipulate the media and get what he wants."

Any doubts as to the scope of Jobs' remarkable fame would have been quickly erased by the avalanche of tributes that poured in after his death, from business leaders to entertainment figures to President Barack Obama. The Twitter-verse quickly became clogged with 140-character-or-less accolades, many punctuated with a bittersweet: "Sent from my iPhone." A top-trending tweet was "iSad."

On morning television Thursday, it seemed as if no less than a head of state had died. In a special edition of "Today," anchor Matt Lauer asked fans in the plaza outside NBC to hold up their Apple devices. Time magazine said it had stopped the presses – literally – for the first time in two decades, to redo its upcoming issue and put Jobs on the cover for the eighth time.

In the long run, where does Jobs fit in the pantheon of celebrity CEOs? Analysts struggle to find apt comparisons in the business world.

"He's on another plane," says Robert Sutton, a professor of management science at Stanford University. "He reached a level in the public consciousness that's beyond that of anyone in modern times. I mean, my mother doesn't know the name of (former General Electric CEO) Jack Welch."

Sutton and others find that they have to reach back into history for comparisons: to Henry Ford, for example, who revolutionized transportation with the Model T automobile, or to Thomas Edison, the master inventor who similarly transformed the way we live. Or to Walt Disney, with his vast influence in entertainment.

It's Edison's name that pops up the most often, partly because he wasn't only a visionary but, as Sutton says, "He could really sell. He was very good at his external image."

Like Jobs, whose name is well known to children as young as 6 or 7 (even if they're too young to read business magazines or, let's hope, to see that edgy "South Park" episode), Edison was emulated by young children of his time, says Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a professor at the Yale School of Management.

Sonnenfeld, who studies business leaders, compares Jobs – and his fame – to other "folk heroes" who've emerged in various fields at times of great change in our history, be it politics, culture, or, in this case, technology.

"What heroes do is personify complex change," Sonnenfeld says. "It's a shorthand that we use. It reduces things to the level of an individual." Jobs' ability to channel technology into products people didn't even know they wanted – but then had to have – is "almost unfathomable," he says.

Unfathomable, uncanny, otherworldly – such adjectives have frequently been used to describe Jobs. But there's another side to it all. Can being a celebrity be detrimental to one's performance as a CEO?

"It's a huge problem when the boss becomes the brand," Sonnenfeld says. "The upside is, it gives the brand human terms. The downside is that none of us are immortal. These branded bosses often start to believe in their own immortality."

On the other hand, one could argue that no rules or generalizations apply to Jobs and Apple. Sutton, at Stanford, wrote years ago that there was evidence that the more famous CEOs were distracted by all that public scrutiny, to the detriment of their companies. But, he says, "Jobs clearly doesn't fit into that category."

Compounding Jobs' fame was the early age at which he achieved it. He spent virtually his entire career in the public eye, co-founding Apple at age 21. His first magazine cover came just five years later, at 26, on Inc. magazine, with the headline: "This man has changed business forever." Four months later he was on the cover of Time.

One of the covers he wanted most, though, was one he didn't get. A front-runner for Time's 1982 Man of the Year, Jobs instead lost out to a machine – the computer. An accompanying article about him included descriptions of him as a sometimes fearsome boss, and the fact that he had a daughter, Lisa, by a former girlfriend, whom he had not acknowledged and was not supporting. (He later acknowledged Lisa, and she became part of his family.)

"Steve was incensed," says Deutschman, the author, who also teaches journalism at the University of Nevada, Reno. "Ever since then he has been extremely controlling of everything – except for small, handfed amounts of carefully managed information."

Of course, that only led to huge curiosity about Jobs, compounding his fame. "He wasn't flaunting it like Donald Trump," says Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at the NYU Stern School. "He didn't do Architectural Digest. Do you even know what his wife looks like?" Indeed, Laurene Powell Jobs, whom Steve married in 1991, was rarely photographed with him.

Yet Jobs also showed early on how he enjoyed his fame.

At the 1999 Macworld Expo, he was the star of the show, coming out in his trademark black mock turtle, jeans and sneakers, hands clasped together as if in prayer, giving a pep talk about "the resurgence of Apple." But actually it wasn't Jobs at all – it was actor Noah Wyle, of "ER" fame, who had played Jobs in the HBO movie "Pirates of Silicon Valley."

Then the real Jobs, who had asked Wyle to make the appearance, came onstage, jokingly telling the actor his imitation was all wrong, all to the delight of the crowd. It ended with Jobs asking Wyle for a part on "ER."

As a celebrity himself, Jobs had easy access to other celebrities. Before his marriage, he was said to have dated Joan Baez, and, at one point, Diane Keaton.

Yet there were times that Jobs did appear to eschew his fame. Deutschman describes an incident where Jobs was helping a woman who had fallen on the street in Palo Alto, Calif., not far from Apple's headquarters in Cupertino. Her reaction: "Oh my God, it's Steve Jobs!" Deutschman says the incident left Jobs deeply upset.

However Jobs may have felt about his fame, there's no question that one key element of it was his struggle with – and triumph over – adversity.

It was a truly American story in many ways: First, achieving success despite humble beginnings. Then failure – getting pushed out of his own company. And finally, a return to grace, first at Pixar, then by returning to Apple for a string of huge successes that continue to this day.

"Our heroes are only truly heroic if they suffer crushing defeat – then come back from it," Sonnenfeld says. And again, the comparisons to Edison, Ford, Disney apply: Each suffered failures before their ultimate triumphs.

There was also, of course, Jobs' illness in his later years – a final bout with adversity. In keeping with his penchant for secrecy, few details were shared. However, his determination to keep working – even as he appeared increasingly and alarmingly thin – buoyed many, Galloway says.

"Everyone in America over 30 has had their life touched by illness in some way," he says. "This humanized him. You just felt for the guy. It was hard not to pull for him."

After years of opposing attempts by writers to capture his life – not only declining to cooperate in biographies but actively discouraging them – Jobs changed his mind in 2011. Simon & Schuster announced in April that Walter Isaacson, who'd written about Ben Franklin and Albert Einstein, would write the book, now simply called "Steve Jobs." (The early 2012 release date was later moved up to November; On Thursday, it was moved up again to Oct. 24, and advance sales quickly lifted the book to No. 1 on Amazon.com.)

As one small measure of the intense interest in Jobs, news of his first authorized biography was the top story on blogs that week – a rare occurrence for a technology story – and the second top story on Twitter, according to the Pew Research Center.

"There are very few business people who've been cultural heroes, icons, heroic figures to ordinary people – and we desperately want these heroes," Deutschman says.

"We needed Steve's story."

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NEW YORK — Of all the tributes that poured in after Steve Jobs' death, clogging up Twitter and dominating the airwaves, he might have most appreciated one small gesture from an anonymous fan: A ...
NEW YORK — Of all the tributes that poured in after Steve Jobs' death, clogging up Twitter and dominating the airwaves, he might have most appreciated one small gesture from an anonymous fan: A ...
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Josephine AcostaPasricha
professor, researcher, writer
12:23 PM on 10/10/2011
In all his PowerPoint Presentations, Steve Jobs had a post script, a by the way, a stunning Surprise. In death, his surprise to the world is Laurene Powell Jobs, BA from the University of Pennsylvania, BS in Economics from Wharton School, MBA from Stanford University. She is the Apple in Steve's eyes. She is voted the most beautiful alumna of Wharton. A "home executive", she is quietly and competently into philantrophy -- focused on education, women's issues, art and cancer research.
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12:41 PM on 10/07/2011
Sorry. I recognize this guy was a genius, a visionary.

"Struggling" to me means not being able to sustain yourself.

This is just personal self-evaluation and self-doubt and guilty feelings, things you can worry about on a full stomach
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mondayboy
Rebel with a cause
12:17 PM on 10/07/2011
He also struggled with his stinginess
12:12 PM on 10/07/2011
What is an ipod, anyway? Some kind of phone thinggee, right?
11:25 PM on 10/06/2011
I am truly grateful for his inventions. My life would not be as enjoyable without the PC and internet. He is praiseworthy as an inventor.

But in many articles, he is also praised as a good human being. Now in a way, it does not matter if he strangled cats for relaxation, for his inventions, not his character, changed the world. However, he was cruel to his dad. His unmarried mom had all the legal rights. SHE, or rather her Dad, were responsible for the adoption, not that poor immigrant bloke. Yet he chose to punish him, not his mom, never calling his old dad. And then he acted douchebagly towards his first child. Folie des Grandeurs or supreme narcissism? As a Dad, I feel sore at how he acted.

He is a great role model as entrepreneur, but as human being, not.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Tom Joad
"While there is a lower class, I am in it "
11:06 PM on 10/06/2011
...iSad...
09:51 PM on 10/06/2011
Apple runs the biggest ponzi scheme in the history of the world making you buy something today and next year it is replaced by something new. Jobs and the people understood the ignorance of the American people and how you can make them buy anything but promoting it right. I laugh when I see these absolute morons lining up at stores when a new product is introduced. Jobs is the best fisherman ever he got a large group of idiots on the hook and he just kept reeling them in! All this stuff he invented is just junk to distract people from their miserable lives! PEOPLE ARE AMUSING THEMSELVES TO DEATH WITH THIS JUNK!
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hollybcars
10:50 PM on 10/06/2011
talk about someone with a miserable life.....
02:30 PM on 10/07/2011
If you are hung up on these gadgets then you are the one with the miserabel meaningless life. You have become part of that stupid item you are holding in your hand everyday and becoming less and less human each and every day. What real use is all this junk you buy over and over again?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JohnSawyer
arglebargy
03:11 AM on 10/07/2011
Electronics, materials science, etc. aren't forever fixed fields. They're always advancing, and so it make sense to incorporate newer technology as it reaches the crossing point of leaving the lab, and being relatively affordable. If that wasn't what Apple had done, you might be complaining that Apple didn't incorporate the latest advances, but rather stuck its customers with nothing but years-old technology.

Nor does Apple "make" anybody buy anything, or require people to replace what they buy every year. Lots of people don't, and most of them are perfectly happy with what they've got.
09:40 PM on 10/06/2011
Steve Jobs was a technological genius no question about that but what he has left us with is a society of Zombies that walk around in a trance looking at all these hand held devices he created. People cannot think anymore they can just react and they do it for hours on the day! Why do we need all this useless crap? Do we need to be connected to something every min of the waking day? You can be standing and talking with a person and if their cell phone rings they act like you are not even there! I don't understand who people are constantly talking to because it seems everyone has a phone stuck to their ear. I think his well intentioned inventions have been a curse to our society, a curse we will never recover from and it will only get worse!You see people at sporting events texting and talking on phones like there is not even a game going on so why are they even there? I see no use for all these things because all they do is fill up a person's head with images and nothing else! WE ARE BECOMING LESS AND LESS HUMAN WITH EACH PASSING DAY AND TO ME THAT IS SO SAD!
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FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
10:39 AM on 10/07/2011
Why don't you light a candle, rather than curse the darkness? What is the payoff for your chiding comments?
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mltmama
09:02 PM on 10/06/2011
I wish HuffPo would post photos of a healthy Mr. Jobs.
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teachone
Knowledge is Power
08:54 PM on 10/06/2011
Such a brilliant man, he will never be forgotten, he made history!!! It is very hard to understand when someone so young passes away,I believe God needed him now in heaven! He sure left some amazing things on this earth for us all to learn from, which we all should be grateful for, what a wonderful gift!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill Duckworth
It is a DOOZY
06:55 AM on 10/07/2011
What did Christ say about an eye of a needle and the Rich Marketeers.
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FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
10:40 AM on 10/07/2011
No one really knows. The words were written decades after His supposed death.
08:51 PM on 10/06/2011
Steve Jobs is an American ICON. His story only happens in America. I wish we had hundreds more who had his vision, drive, and brilliance.

RIP Steve.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill Duckworth
It is a DOOZY
06:47 AM on 10/07/2011
Who invented the Microwave, Headlights, Pencil,

Funny how I seed him as a Marketeer and nothing else. As a 40 year veteran of IT I have never touch an IPOD, IPHONE, etc.

His death does not hold a candle to the death of my son, at ALL

Ideal worshiping. Mammon in this case. But with eternal life you is probably what, making something for GOD to keep track of who is naughty or nice or making a Million, right?
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BlackYowe
I am a classical- liberal woman and a Jeweler.
08:43 PM on 10/06/2011
Steve Jobs never came across to me as a happy person. If you watched him do a talk it was like watching one of those southern tent preachers. His style was way too aggressive for my taste and Apple's products have always been way too expensive for me and my family. RIP you were a human like the rest of us and its always sad to see someone die in their prime.
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
08:11 PM on 10/06/2011
Wow..I could love 8 billion $$$ very very easily.
08:04 PM on 10/06/2011
I must applaud Steve Jobs (and his office) for actually doing what the rest of his staff
at the Apple stores could/would not do for me.
Steve sent me out a brand new IPod Touch 4th Gen,
and a voucher “Customer Recovery Coupon” for
an IPhone 5 ‘global phone’, which operates on iOS 5 - when it’s released.
My iPod Nano was literally “trash”, with a dead battery - and the ITunes
was ‘over the top’, in asking me for even ‘more money’ just to get rid of
unwanted songs, etc., that I did not want. I tried for months to move forward on this…
The store people always tried to ‘upsell’ me,
making me feel very badly about the whole experience.
I’m grateful that it took CEO Jobs to actually provide me good feelings,
when his store staff unfortunately had absolutely ‘no clue’ what they were doing,
or how they were treating me...
In my book Steve is a literal STAR!!!!!
Thank you very much Steve Jobs !!!!!
09:41 PM on 10/06/2011
You are one of the new Zombies I am talking about get a life man!
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FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
10:45 AM on 10/07/2011
And someone seems to love raining on other people's parades. Happy zombies (whatever they may, in fact be) are better than petty grumblers, any minute of any day.
ElCojonuo
I believe in WISDOM
07:54 PM on 10/06/2011
How many JOBS to manufacture his gadgets did JOBS export to the Eastern Pacific during his lifetime ?
Just asking.
09:08 PM on 10/06/2011
And your point? No different than almost every other business that grows
ElCojonuo
I believe in WISDOM
07:23 AM on 10/07/2011
Don't cry then when you're unemployed and out of work for years.
09:34 PM on 10/06/2011
Well, maybe those JOBS didn't exist before JOBS invented the gadgets everyone wanted at that price point, did you ever think of that? Don't be so disrespectful the day after he died!
ElCojonuo
I believe in WISDOM
07:24 AM on 10/07/2011
We invent them so others may get to do and enjoy them; NICE !