Today, Selena Gomez made her American Vogue cover debutâa milestone for the former Wizards of Waverly Place actress. âI worked with Disney for four years,â Gomez told Vogue. âItâs a very controlled machine. They know what they represent, and there was, 100 percent, a way to go about things.â These days, Gomez is marching to the beat of her own drum, making tough calls like canceling her world tour (for the second time) in order to focus on herself and her health. She surrendered her cell phone and went into treatment for 90 days, she told Vogueâand itâs been working. Itâs this kind of mindful thinking that her legions of âSelenators,â defined by the Urban Dictionary as people who love Selena Gomez and support her in everything she does, would totally understand. For those who may need a little additional clarity, here are five other things you may not have known about the one and only Selena Gomez.
1. Gomez is in an Instagram-free zone. She no longer has the app on her phoneâand she doesnât even have the password to her account (that classified information is in the possession of her assistant). âAs soon as I became the most followed person on Instagram, I sort of freaked out,â Gomez told Vogue. âIt had become so consuming to me. Itâs what I woke up to and went to sleep to. I was an addict, and it felt like I was seeing things I didnât want to see, like it was putting things in my head that I didnât want to care about. I always end up feeling like shit when I look at Instagram. Which is why Iâm kind of under the radar, ghosting it a bit.â
2. Gomez wants to set the record straight as to why she canceled her tour. (Twice.) And no, it was not an addiction, or an eating disorder, or burnout (exactly), all of which the tabloids may have led you to believe. âTours are a really lonely place for me,â she told Vogue. âMy self-esteem was shot. I was depressed, anxious. I started to have panic attacks right before getting onstage, or right after leaving the stage. Basically, I felt I wasnât good enough, wasnât capable. I felt I wasnât giving my fans anything ⌠What I wanted to say is that life is so stressful, and I get the desire to just escape it. But I wasnât figuring my own stuff out, so I felt I had no wisdom to share. And so maybe I thought everybody out there was thinking, This is a waste of time.â She knew that in order to be the best artist she could be, she first had to be her best self.
3. The singer starts every morning by throwing back a shot of ginger, or eating a piece on its own. âItâs so good,â she recently told a visibly ginger-averse James Corden during a Late Late Show episode of Carpool Karaoke. âItâs killing everything insideâall of the bad things.â Even better if she can wash it down with a #7 off the McDonaldsâs drive-through menu, plus a medium Coca-Cola in one of the fast food chainâs to-go cups, featuring Gomezâs own song lyrics inscribed on the side, as seen in the clip. Gomez revealed in 2015 that she prepped for her performance at the Victoriaâs Secret fashion show with a McDonaldâs meal backstage; however, as she told Voguein May, her approach to staying Revival tourâready is somewhat different. âI always have water, tons of water. Itâs even in my bathroom because I used to be so bad at drinking water, and I want to stay hydrated,â Gomez explained. âI do two carrots, ginger; I do one piece of celeryâI know, thatâs lame, but oneâand then half of a beet. Those are the things I always keep around.â
4. Britney Spears was a âhuge inspirationâ to Gomez when it came time to shed her Disney image. âOnce Disney was over, I was like, âOh, shit,â â Gomez later said. âI didnât know what I wanted to be. I had to learn to be myself.â Of course, she got a little help from a belly-dancing Spears circa âIâm A Slave 4 U.â âThe video is so hot; itâs incredible,â Gomez said in 2013. âI definitely want to do that with my transition.â Four months later, Gomez channeled the original pop princess during her first solo tour, Stars Dance, citing everything from the performances to the costumes. Remembering the first concert she ever attendedâBritney Spears, coincidentallyâshe revealed her inner fangirl. âWe were in the nosebleeds,â Gomez said. âI got the T-shirt and glow sticks, and I just remember it being the highlight of my life! I felt like I was on cloud nine!â
5. Gomez has seven tattoos âand counting.â The story behind her most prominent permanent inkâa four-inch Arabic inscription etched below her right shoulder that translates to âlove yourself firstââcenters on a decidedly more short-lived moment she shared with a fan. âThis is ⌠probably the one that means the most to me,â Gomez told GQin April. âI did a concert in Dubai, and a 16-year-old came up to me when I was going through a rough time. She said, âI just wish that you would love yourself first.â â The singer debuted her latest body art on Instagram in 2014, eliciting 1 million likes and inspiring countless similarly inked Selenators: âA lot of my fans have actually gotten this tattoo,â she has said. âI love telling that story.â Two years later, the singer took to social media again to announce the news that a line of custom replica temporary tattoos would be included in her official Revival tour merchâjust one, or rather, seven more reasons to see Selena Gomez live.
Selena Gomez on Instagram Fatigue, Good Mental Health, and Stepping Back From the Limelight
On an unusually wet and windy evening in Los Angeles, Selena Gomez shows up at my door with a heavy bag of groceries. Weâve decided that tonightâs dinner will be a sort of tribute to the after-church Sunday barbecues she remembers from her Texan childhood. I already have chicken simmering in green salsa, poblano peppers blackening on the flames of the stove, and red cabbage wilting in a puddle of lime juice. All we need are Gomezâs famous cheesy potatoesâso bad theyâre good, she promises. She sets down her Givenchy purse and brings up, in gaudy succession, a frozen package of Giant Eagle Potatoes OâBrien, a can of Campbellâs Cream of Chicken soup, a bag of shredded âMexican cheese,â and a squat plastic canister of Frenchâs Crispy Fried Onions.
âI bet you didnât think we were going to get this real,â she says, and when I tell her that real isnât the first word that springs to mind when faced with these ingredients, she responds with the booming battle-ax laugh that offers a foretaste of Gomezâs many enchanting incongruities.
But real is precisely what I was expecting from the 24-year-old Selena, just as her 110 million Instagram followers (Selenators, as theyâre known) have come to expect it. Of course, celebrityâs old codes are long gone, MGMâs untouchable eggshell glamour having given way to the âTheyâre Just Like Us!â era of documented trips to the gas station and cellulite captured by telephoto lenses. But Gomez and her ilk have gone further still, using their smartphones to generate a stardom that seems to say not merely âIâm just like youâ but âI am you.â
âPeople so badly wanted me to be authentic,â she says, laying a tortilla in sizzling oil, âand when that happened, finally, it was a huge release. Iâm not different from what I put out there. Iâve been very vulnerable with my fans, and sometimes I say things I shouldnât. But I have to be honest with them. I feel thatâs a huge part of why Iâm where I am.â Gomez traces her shift toward the unfiltered back to a song she released in 2014 called âThe Heart Wants What It Wants,â a ballad about loving a guy she knows is bad news. The title derives from a letter written by Emily Dickinson, though Woody Allen reintroduced the phrase when he used it to describe his relationship with Soon-Yi Previn. We can assume that Gomez is referring here to Justin Bieber, with whom she ended a three-year relationship at around the time the song debuted.
If you are over 30 and find yourself somewhat mystified by Gomezâs fame, unable to attach it to any art objectâapart from several inescapable pop songs and a cameo in The Big Short in which, as herself, she explains synthetic collateralized debt obligationsâthen you might wish to watch the video for âThe Heart Wants What It Wants.â (You will be late to the party; it received more than nine million views in the first 24 hours following its release.) Before the music begins, we hear Gomezâs voice as if from a recorded psychotherapy session, ruminating over a betrayal. âFeeling so confident, feeling so great about myself,â she says, her voice breaking, âand then itâd just be completely shattered by one thing. By something so stupid.â Sobs. âBut then you make me feel crazy. You make me feel like itâs my fault.â Is this acting? Is it a HIPAA violation? Either way, there is magic in the way it makes you feel as if youâve just shared in her suffering. Pay dirt for a Selenator.
Gomez queues up a playlistâDolly Parton, Kenny Rogersâand back in the kitchen, there is a chile relleno casserole to assemble, green enchiladas to roll, and her cheesy potatoes to mix together. As I slip an apron over her mane of chocolate-brown hair, for which Pantene has paid her millions, and tie it around her tiny waist, I wonder whether her legions have felt for years the same sharp pang of protectiveness that Iâm feeling at present. Even as she projects strength and self-assuredness, Gomez is not stingy with frailty. âIâve cried onstage more times than I can count, and Iâm not a cute crier,â she says. Last summer, after the North American and Asian legs of her âRevivalâ tour, with more than 30 concerts remaining, she abruptly shut things down and checked into a psychiatric facility in Tennessee. (This was the second time Gomez had canceled a tour to enter into treatment; in January 2014, shortly after being diagnosed with lupus, she spent two weeks at the Meadows, the Arizona center that has welcomed Tiger Woods, Rush Limbaugh, and Kate Moss.) The cause, she says, was not an addiction or an eating disorder or burnout, exactly.
âTours are a really lonely place for me,â she explains. âMy self-esteem was shot. I was depressed, anxious. I started to have panic attacks right before getting onstage, or right after leaving the stage. Basically I felt I wasnât good enough, wasnât capable. I felt I wasnât giving my fans anything, and they could see itâwhich, I think, was a complete distortion. I was so used to performing for kids. At concerts I used to make the entire crowd raise up their pinkies and make a pinky promise never to allow anybody to make them feel that they werenât good enough. Suddenly I have kids smoking and drinking at my shows, people in their 20s, 30s, and Iâm looking into their eyes, and I donât know what to say. I couldnât say, âEverybody, letâs pinky-promise that youâre beautiful!â It doesnât work that way, and I know it because Iâm dealing with the same shit theyâre dealing with. What I wanted to say is that life is so stressful, and I get the desire to just escape it. But I wasnât figuring my own stuff out, so I felt I had no wisdom to share. And so maybe I thought everybody out there was thinking, This is a waste of time.â
On August 15, Gomez uploaded a photo of almost baroque drama: her body collapsed on the stage, bathed in beatific light. Whether this was agony or ecstasy, it drew more than a million comments from fans (who have handles like âselena_is_my_life_foreverâ). It would be her last Instagram post for more than three months. She flew to Tennessee, surrendered her cell phone, and joined a handful of other young women in a program that included individual therapy, group therapy, even equine therapy. âYou have no idea how incredible it felt to just be with six girls,â she says, âreal people who couldnât give two shits about who I was, who were fighting for their lives. It was one of the hardest things Iâve done, but it was the best thing Iâve done.â She stayed for 90 days, making her first post-treatment appearance last November at the American Music Awards, where she collected the trophy for Favorite Pop/Rock Female Artist and gave a tearful speech about her struggles; it quickly went viral.
In the tearoom at the Peninsula Beverly Hills hotel, little girls in pinafores and pink high-tops sit on heavily tasseled sofas and drink sparkling apple juice out of champagne flutes. One by one they approach our table, shyness replaced by rapturous giggles as Gomez praises their pretty dresses and invites them to sit with her for a picture. Her seemingly infinite patience with these intrusions is something between a habit and a principle. âSomebody I used to hang out with would always get very frustrated with me,â she says, presumably referring to Bieber, whose name she will not utter. âBut I have a hard time saying no to children.â
Donna Gigliotti, who produced The Fundamentals of Caring, a 2016 drama in which Gomez plays the love interest of a boy with muscular dystrophy, recalls the throngs of children ready to engulf her outside the set even in rural Georgia. âThey love her because she is so generous and so authentic,â Gigliotti says. âI admit that I didnât quite understand her huge fan base at first. Now I see her as a sort of third-generation feminist. Sheâs adorable and flirty and funny, but sheâs also kind of kick-ass. I think her young fans go wild for that combination.â
âThereâs a vulnerability about Selena,â says Paul Rudd, her costar in The Fundamentals of Caring. âSheâs never trying to sell herself or impress anyone. She doesnât put on airs, and she was a good sport about really long days in sometimes uncomfortable conditions. Youâd never know she was so famous by the way she behaved, which, I think, is a huge key to her appeal.â
Doll-like and startled in pictures but almost breathtakingly at ease in person, Gomez was once described by her good friend Taylor Swiftas âboth 40 years old and seven years old.â She grew up in Grand Prairie, Texas, raised by a single mother who was sixteen when she was born. Gomez remembers being asked to feel between the cushions in the car for change so that they could buy Styrofoam cups of ramen. But at age seven, after a few years on the pageant circuit, she landed a role on the childrenâs show Barney & Friends, which shot in Dallas and recruited talent locally. By twelve she was one of Disneyâs young players, plucked out of thousands of hopefuls. At thirteen she moved to Los Angeles with her mother and stepfather, and the following year Disney gave her the lead in Wizards of Waverly Place, a sitcom about a family of wizards who own a downtown Manhattan restaurant. The show was a hit, and Disney did what Disney does, fanning Gomezâs talent across music and movies, with her mother, Mandy Teefey, continuing to act as her manager. (Gomez hired a Hollywood management firm in 2014, after her first mental-health crisis, but she continues to develop projects with her mother and prizes her opinion above all others.) âI worked with Disney for four years,â Gomez says. âItâs a very controlled machine. They know what they represent, and there was, 100 percent, a way to go about things.â
No child star enjoys easy passage through the morass of adolescence, and Gomez struggled to shed her blandly perky Wizards persona. âFor a guy thereâs a way to rebel that can work for you,â she believes. âBut for a woman, that can backfire. Itâs hard not to be a clichĂŠ, the child star gone wrong. I did respect my fans and what I had, but I was also figuring out what I was passionate about and how far I was willing to go.â The first thing she did post-Disney was Harmony Korineâs darkly lurid Spring Breakers, a 2013 film about four college girls on a rampage of sex, drugs, and murder. (Gomez played Faith, the one who canât quite stomach it all and heads back early.) âMy mom wanted me to work with a director who would really push me,â she recalls. âI watched Kids, Trash Humpers, Gummo, and I was like, Mom, are you crazy? But it was fun to imagine how you might behave if you were set free of whatever was holding you captive. Iâm a late bloomer. I grew up around adults, but in terms of getting out, having friendsâat times I really didnât know anything but my job.â
In retrospect, Gomezâs childhood successes were always tinged with sadness. âMy mom gave up her whole life for me,â she explains. âWhere weâre from, you donât really leave. So when I started gaining all this success, there was a guilt that came with it. I thought, Do I deserve this?â Though she has been in several other films since Spring Breakers, Gomez has enjoyed greater success as a musician. And yet the musicianâs life exhausts her. On film sets she is buffered by the ensemble and can retreat into her character, but in a concert, all eyes fix upon her. âItâs weird,â she says, âto get up onstage and have everybody know where you were last night.â
With the tour and treatment behind her, lately Gomez is feeling unusually relaxed. The Netflix miniseries 13 Reasons Why, which she executive-produced, airs this month, and it addresses several issues dear to her, among them teen suicide and the pressures of social media. Eight years ago, Gomez and her mother reached out to Jay Asher, who wrote the novel from which the series has been adapted. Its title refers to the thirteen reasons why its protagonist, Hannah Baker, chose to take her life. âI didnât know much about Selena back then,â Asher remembers. âI think I watched Princess Protection Program to prepare. She explained to me how deeply she connected to the book, which is really about how thereâs no way to know what people deal with. In that very first meeting we talked about Twitter, and I remember her telling me that thereâs this idea that celebrities arenât supposed to notice or care about whatâs being said about them. But she canât help but care.â
Gomez has also been in the recording studio off and on, and in February she released âIt Ainât Me,â a song cut last November, produced by the Norwegian DJ Kygo. Itâs both a dance-floor anthem and a polemic against dependency and enmeshment. (âWhoâs gonna walk you through the dark side of the morning?â she sings. âIt ainât me.â A few years back, it might well have been Gomez.) She is collaborating with Coach on a line of accessories, out this fall, and Stuart Vevers, the houseâs creative director, recently met with her in Los Angeles for a bit of brainstorming. âThereâs a very warm and inclusive way that Selena has with her fans,â Vevers says. âThatâs the nature of her power. What fashion house wouldnât want to tap into that?â
There are no movies in the works and no time pressure from her record label. âFor a change,â she says, âit feels like I donât have to be holding my breath and waiting for somebody to judge a piece of work that Iâm doing. Iâm not eager to chase a moment. I donât think thereâs a moment for me to chase.â Gomez currently lives in an Airbnb in the Valley and honestly doesnât get out much, except for long drives with her girlfriends: a realtor, a techie, some folks from church. âI think seventeen people have my phone number right now,â she says. âMaybe two are famous.â She is taking Spanish, which she spoke fluently as a little girl but lost, in the hope of recording some Spanish-language music in the future. She sees her shrink five days a week and has become a passionate advocate of Dialectical Behavior Therapy, a technique developed to treat borderline personality disorder that is now used more broadly, with its emphasis on improving communication, regulating emotions, and incorporating mindfulness practices. âDBT has completely changed my life,â she says. âI wish more people would talk about therapy. We girls, weâre taught to be almost too resilient, to be strong and sexy and cool and laid-back, the girl whoâs down. We also need to feel allowed to fall apart.â
She has hardly been posting on Instagram. In fact, the app is no longer on her phone, and she doesnât even have the password to her own account. (Itâs now in the possession of her assistant.) She sometimes fantasizes about disappearing from social media altogether. âAs soon as I became the most followed person on Instagram, I sort of freaked out,â Gomez says. âIt had become so consuming to me. Itâs what I woke up to and went to sleep to. I was an addict, and it felt like I was seeing things I didnât want to see, like it was putting things in my head that I didnât want to care about. I always end up feeling like shit when I look at Instagram. Which is why Iâm kind of under the radar, ghosting it a bit.â
Well, not entirely under the radar. A few days after we met, Gomez flew to Italy with her new beau, The Weeknd, and the paparazzi did not fail to notice. (Neither did The Weekndâs ex, the model Bella Hadid, who took to social media and promptly unfollowed Gomez.) When I ask Gomez about the romance, she tells me that everything she has said about her relationships in the past has come back to bite her, and that she will never do it again.
âOh, Mylanta!â she wails, watching her cheesy potatoes travel around the table, a whiff of the simpler joys of home. âLook, I love what I do, and Iâm aware of how lucky I am, butâhow can I say this without sounding weird? I just really canât wait for people to forget about me.â
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