Abstract

Previous research indicates that persons who self-report a high level of preoccupation with celebrities tend to have lower levels of well-being. We administered the "Romantic Partner Conflict Scale", the "Love Attitudes Scale", the soulmate subscale from the "Relationship Theories Questionnaire", and the anxiety subscale from the "Experiences in Close Relationships Scale" to 330 students from four universities to see how well scores on these measures would predict scores on each of the three subscales from the "Celebrity Attitude Scale" (CAS). We predicted that persons whose scores on these measures of intimate relationships indicated a troubled, anxious, or poor quality relationship would have higher scores on the CAS, especially on its two problematic subscales. In three multiple regressions, specific measures of behavior during conflict with a romantic partner and certain love styles significantly predicted scores on all three of the CAS subscales. We discuss the implications of being a celebrity worshiper on one's relationship with an intimate partner.

Details

Title
Intimate Relationships and Attitudes Toward Celebrities
Author
McCutcheon, Lynn E; Gillen, Meghan M; Browne, Blaine L; Murtagh, Michael P; Collisson, Brian
Pages
77-89
Section
Articles
Publication year
2016
Publication date
2016
Publisher
International Center for Interpersonal Relationship Research
ISSN
19816472
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English; Portuguese
ProQuest document ID
1803344354
Copyright
Copyright International Center for Interpersonal Relationship Research 2016