Icons shine — From ‘Gangnam Style’ to ‘50 Shades’

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By JOCELYN NOVECK

By JOCELYN NOVECK

Associated Press

NEW YORK — Marilyn Monroe. The Rolling Stones. And Bond — James Bond. What do they have in common?

Sure, one’s long gone, and one’s fictional. But all three marked a golden anniversary in 2012. And after a half-century in our pop-culture consciousness, they each displayed a surprisingly enduring appeal.

So even though, as a culture, we still worshiped at the fountain of youth this year, marveling at the precocious talents of a Lena Dunham, a Taylor Swift, and a slew of charming young Olympians, let’s also give a shoutout to some of our most enduring icons. Turns out some things never go out of style.

Once again, our highly subjective pop-culture journey through the year:

JANUARY

Here begins the incredible ascendance of Lena Dunham, as HBO picks up the actress-director-writer’s “Girls,” a meditation on the awkwardness of being female and 20-ish in New York. By year’s end Dunham, at 26, will have gathered so much buzz, she’ll be on her way to becoming what her character, Hannah Horvath, can only dream of being: “The voice of my generation. Or at least, A voice. Of A generation.”

FEBRUARY

Let’s hear it for the adults! Meryl Streep, 62, wins her third Oscar for “The Iron Lady.” It’s her 17th nomination, a record. The whole ceremony has a vintage feel: Billy Crystal is back as host a year after the rocky appearance of the “young and hip” hosts, James Franco and Anne Hathaway. The best supporting actor, Christopher Plummer, is 82, and the best picture, “The Artist,” is a throwback to silent films.

MARCH

Enter springtime, and youth again: Billboard’s top moneymaker for 2011 is Taylor Swift, less than half Madonna’s age. In 2012, Swift will have the biggest sales week for any album in a decade, for “Red.” She also writes for the soundtrack of one of the year’s hottest movies, “The Hunger Games.”

Speaking of which, Jennifer Lawrence, 22, becomes a
breakout star this year, rocketing to fame as Katniss Everdeen in the first installment of the Suzanne Collins trilogy.

APRIL

In technology news, Facebook buys Instagram for a cool $1 billion, banking on people’s insatiable desire to share photos of their most mundane moments. And oh yes, it’s an election year, and it’s dog eat dog: Talk focuses on Seamus, GOP candidate Mitt Romney’s Irish setter. The pooch is long departed, but the image of him strapped to the roof of the family car, suffering gastric distress, is too much for many dog lovers to stomach (sorry) and will continue to dog Romney (sorry) for some time.

MAY

The weather’s getting warm, and certain phrases are fast becoming ingrained into our consciousness. One of them is “Call Me Maybe”; Carly Rae Jepsen’s dangerously catchy tune hits No. 1 on iTunes. Another is “Fifty Shades of Grey.” The so-called “Mommy Porn” trilogy — the publishing sensation of the year — is banned by some libraries due to its steamy content.

JUNE

“Call Me Maybe” hits No. 1 on the Billboard chart. But let’s dedicate the month to NORA EPHRON, the author, filmmaker and essayist whose searing wit put her in a class of her own. Her death at age 71 brings a flood of tributes. And rarely does a secretary of state make it onto our pop culture radar, but let’s welcome HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON, ever more popular, who wears green-and-purple cat-eye sunglasses to swear in a purple-loving public servant.

JULY

Who’d have thought the cheesy words “Hey, Sexy Lady” would go so far? South Korean singer Psy’s video of his song “Gangnam Style,” emerges this month and the rest is history — it will become the most watched YouTube clip of all time. At the London Olympics, young athletes like the ebullient gymnast Gaby Douglas and swimmer Missy Franklin, both 17, shine, but Michael Phelps — now 27 — still shows fellow swimmers how it’s done.

AUGUST

Fifty years ago this month, Marilyn Monroe died, and look how a ’50s icon has become a 21st-century phenom. Her platinum locks, slightly parted ruby lips, and curvy, clinging styles are copied by actresses and singers from Madonna to Taylor Swift to Lindsay Lohan to Rihanna to Nicole Kidman. And there are a slew of Marilyn-themed enterprises on the horizon.

SEPTEMBER

The most uninhibited person on the planet is now officially Dunham, who gets naked at the Emmys — she sits naked on a toilet and eats a birthday cake, to be precise, in an opening skit. At the MTV Video Music Awards, the boy band One Direction makes its mark as a new teen-girl obsession.

OCTOBER

Binders full of women! Big Bird! Malarkey! Debate season is on, so let the instant memes begin. This is the first election where you could have followed the debates purely via Twitter. Edward Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” is back on Broadway exactly a half-century after it first premiered, and it’s getting some of the best notices of the season.

NOVEMBER

Bond. James Bond. Embodied by the tough and chiseled Daniel Craig, the world’s most famous British spy is in better shape than ever as the franchise marks its 50th anniversary with “Skyfall,” regarded by many as one of the best Bond films. Another iconic image doesn’t fare so well: Lohan’s turn as Liz Taylor in a new TV film is pilloried. And we must mention the oldest pop-culture hero of the year: Abraham Lincoln is back via a mesmerizing performance by Daniel Day-Lewis.

DECEMBER

As the year ends, the world is abuzz with news of a royal pregnancy. Soon, a baby will be one of the biggest celebrities in the world. But for now, let’s give a shoutout to the Rolling Stones, whose average age is 68-plus, slightly older than the average Supreme Court justice. They marked their 50th year with five concerts. The grizzled foursome showed the world they still have the power to rock huge arenas (at huge prices), and upstage celebrity guests like Lady Gaga with their own charisma.

Along with aging rockers McCARTNEY, SPRINGSTEEN, THE WHO and PINK FLOYD, they dominate a televised benefit for storm victims. As for MICK JAGGER, who at 69 hasn’t lost any of those “moves like Jagger,” we can only say, to paraphrase the famous movie line: “We’ll have what he’s having.”