Although numerous individuals think that being famous means being in the public eye on a daily basis, people do not understand how far some photographers and journalists will go to get a juicy story. Being famous does come with life altering changes that celebrities have to learn to accept no matter how drastic. Celebrities start to become familiar with people watching their every move from the minute they wake up to the time they will go back to bed. Journalists and photographers will literally stalk famous individuals down to simply get a juicy story or photograph that they can write about in the next editorial. Photographers seem to be the worst people when it comes to stalking celebrities with their cameras. Simply going out to run errands can turn into the biggest nightmare for celebrities. For instance, in a picture found on the NPR website about stalking celebrities, the caption for the photograph reads, “Ben Affleck hides his face from paparazzi as he enters the CNN building in Los Angeles for an appearance on Larry King Live” (Brand). As a result of being bombarded with cameras, the actor was forced to hide his face with his jacket and hands blocking the photographers from taking pictures of him. What some individuals fail to realize is that interviews and appearances are actual jobs for celebrities. In an interview about paparazzi, a celebrity publicist, Ken Sunshine, says, “It is crazy to have packs of people, whose full-time, quote, job, is to get the most embarrassing photo they can of a celebrity. How would you like to have a camera two inches away from your face, where the...the stalkerazzi is daring you to push...be pushed away” (“Why Paparazzi Are Wrong”). How would anyone feel if when going to work they were surrounded with cameras and light-bulb flashes constantly?