Why do people like the Kardashians

She is talentless. All she does is uploading seducing photos with insolent looks. Her over-confidence for doing nothing is such an irony and very pathetic. She has monetized act of living. She actually owns her fame to her father’s client Simpson’s talents, also Kanye West’s talents, and Paris Hilton’s family fame. Her only asset is the ability to connect with the right people.

Her lifestyle, which is directly against most social or moral values and norms in the world is a another reason.She has an over exaggerated body, and that disturbing look. But she behaves like she is nirvana. Kim Kardashian represents everything meaningless about women. She got famous due to a set of highly unlikely circumstances, and her very presence on TV encourages women to follow her cult of buying her products with her name on it in hopes of becoming rich, pretty, famous and popular because of it, when in reality, Kim doesn’t want any of that, because it would give her competition in the marketplace. If she cared about people before they showed up on TV to criticize her, then she would follow a path that was meaningful, and- heck, she might even realise and admit it to herself that she had a responsibility to the people who followed her!

So her philosophy is basically lying to people and telling them what they want to hear- pretending to be their absolute babe UNTIL THEY CROSS HER- THEN THEY NEED TO BE ABSOLUTELY ANNIHALATED!

Her philosophy is basically, “I want, gimme that”, “look pretty and care about nothing”. It’s not a good example for society.

Two things are particularly striking about Kim Kardashian. The first is how she has managed to catch the attention of the global media. The second is that there are so many reasons why she shouldn't be famous. Indeed, it is tempting to suggest that in a logical world Kim Kardashian would be a peripheral citizen rather than a modern cultural icon. Is Kim just another symptom of postmodernist confusion and cultural decline, or is there a deeper psychological explanation for her fame?

Celebrities have been around since Alexander the Great, whose face became a public emblem reproduced in coins, tableware, and jewellery, even before his death. The difference is that the contemporary celebrity is not necessarily associated with any form of talent, achievement, or power. In other words, famous people have always been celebrated, but the last decade has seen an unprecedented rise of the empty celebrity cult, that is, our tendency to worship people just because they are famous, without any regard for what they are famous for.

As Chris Rojek, a professor of sociology at City University, notes in his book Celebrity, fame can be inherited, achieved, or ascribed. While the first two paths make sense, the third is by definition associated with arbitrary and questionable qualities.

It appears society has learned to embrace ascribed fame as a democratic and anti-elitist alternative to inherited or achieved fame. The average consumer can now crowdsource someone's fame via YouTube, Instagram or Twitter, which makes Prince George more irrelevant than Miley Cyrus, and top celebrities as unremarkable as their typical fan (except for their fame). Unsurprisingly, the Daily Mail is now the most read online newspaper in the world, attracting almost 200m visits per month; and in America, Glam Media sites attract more traffic than Wikipedia.

It would be hard to explain the power of the celebrity cult without reference to two factors: social media and the rise of narcissism levels. Social media enables users to broadcast their lives as if they were celebrities, creating an alternative reality that turns friends, acquaintances and strangers into fans and followers. Crucially, the same media platforms – eg, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram – are used by actual celebrities, reinforcing people's perceived emotional proximity and intimacy with the stars, who, in turn, share details of their personal lives with fans directly, just like their real friends do.

As a result, the social relationship between fans and celebrities feels like a genuine relationship, and in the minds and brains of Kardashian's fans they are as close to her as Kanye is. For the same reason, Beyoncé can have a stronger real time impact on her fans' emotions than on Jay Z's.

But as much as social media may intensify our narcissistic tendencies, it is simply a symptom of human narcissism, rather than its cause. Indeed, narcissism levels have been rising – at the rate of obesity – long before the arrival of social media. As scientifically demonstrated by Jean Twenge, we are now more self-obsessed, materialistic, entitled, fame-hungry, and egotistical than ever before.

Although this does usually translate into higher self views, these are more disconnected from reality and rarely translate into higher levels of self-esteem (ie, how happy we actually are with ourselves). Paradoxically, the more we try to love ourselves, the more reassurance we need from others about our worth, and the more depressed we end up when we fail to obtain it.

Ultimately, the only truly worrying thing about admiring narcissists is that it reflects the collective acceptance of narcissism as a desirable trait and value. Kardashian may be an extreme case study, but the underlying psychological reasons for her popularity are probably generic: people who worship celebrities are more narcissistic, and worshiping narcissistic celebrities is the quintessential manifestation of latent narcissism.

Kardashian is not the disease; she is just a symptom of it. And yes, there are also intellectual differences between those who like her and those who don't, but the same was true for Johan Strauss II, the DJ Tiesto of the 19th century.

Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic is a professor of business psychology at University College London and vice-president of research and innovation at Hogan Assessment Systems. He is co-founder of metaprofiling.com and author of Confidence: Overcoming Low Self-Esteem, Insecurity, and Self-Doubt.

Read more stories like this:

Sharing the (self) love: the rise of the selfie and digital narcissism

We are Facebook's digital guinea pigs: the web as a real-life experiment

To get weekly news analysis, job alerts and event notifications direct to your inbox, sign up free for Media Network membership.

All Guardian Media Network content is editorially independent except for pieces labelled 'Advertisement feature'. Find out more here.

Why is the Kardashians so popular?

The route to fame for the family is widely credited with that of the second eldest Kardashian daughter, Kim Kardashian, and her infamous sex tape with R&B singer Ray J - but before we get into that story, it's important first of all to acknowledge that prior to the sex tape, the Kardashian name wasn't just some totally ...

What do the Kardashians do for society?

Outside of the limelight, the Kardashians' charity work shows their commitment to helping the disadvantaged and contributing to global poverty reduction.