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"When Mark and I got Keenan, we said,
'OK, we're going to set this kid up right from day one," says Graham, who's based in Las Vegas. No drinking and no partying, they said, setting rules that were no problem for a kid who seems to have no interest in that, anyway. And no appearances on B-level talk shows. "He doesn't need that, doesn't need to be overexposed," says Graham, who's focused more on videos with celebrities, ad deals and club appearances. Several of the artists Keenan has done videos with work with EMI Records, which is Perry's label. Keenan also has recorded his own song
-- one in which he actually sings -- set for release this spring or in early summer. It sounds like it might be lucrative, but the financial rewards are not that great, Graham says. "He's not going to be able to retire off this. This is more or less a cool after-school job," he says. "For him to really cash in, he'd have to land a TV show or a movie." That's Keenan's big hope, that this attention will lead to a sitcom. But Graham isn't sure that will happen. "I don't want Keenan to go to LA and experience failure. I want him to come there, shoot something and go home," Graham says. "I don't want him to have a TV show that fails and have him go back to school and everyone makes fun of him." During the telephone interview, Graham pauses a few times to answer messages from Keenan, who is texting on his lunch hour at school. "It's like having a child," Graham says. "He's constantly asking questions." ___ Keenan's mom, who's back working in the mortgage insurance industry, continues to shake her head at all this, though usually with a smile on her face. Her boy is happy, and that makes her happy. "It's insanity," she says, "but a good insanity." Even she can't quite wrap her head around the mania surrounding her son when he lip-syncs at live performances. "You'd think Barbra Streisand was singing. It's like, really? For real?" she says as she sits in the suburban Chicago town house she and Keenan share with his younger sister. Keenan's parents divorced five years ago, though his dad still accompanies him to some of his engagements. It is, indeed, quite a heady and sometimes bizarre scene for a 16-year-old. Keenan is whisked in and out of nightclubs, where he usually can't stay too long because he's underage. He signs autographs. Poses for photos with Playboy bunnies in Las Vegas, baseball players at spring training in Arizona, people on the street who stop him. One club in Israel hosted a "Keenan Cahill Worshipping Party" late last year. Keenan wasn't able to attend, so partygoers danced with posters of him, instead. "He's amazing. He's so sexy. I love him!" one of them said in a video recorded at the event. "I think he's one of the most important artists of our time," said another. The party's tongue-in-cheek tone hinted that Keenan was more a curiosity, almost a pop culture caricature of himself. Some would call it playful fun. But it's gone well beyond that on his YouTube page, where the comments are sometimes brazen, and harsh. People have called him everything from a "rent-a-dwarf" to a "freak," and worse, though those comments often send his fans rushing in to defend him. Others question whether the celebrities who do videos with Keenan are really just using a naive teenager, one who has a disability no less. One could argue, though, that it was Keenan who originally used a lot of artists' songs, without permission, to get famous. So it begs the question: Who's using whom? "We think that about child stars: 'Oh, he's being used. He's being abused. People are taking advantage of him.' Why that hasn't been a problem so far (with Keenan) is that he seems to be enjoying himself," says Kelly O'Keefe, a professor of brand management at Virginia Commonwealth University. "He put himself out there. Now he's living a dream and getting to meet celebrities." Keenan would agree. He sees some of the mean comments online, but just shrugs. "I think it comes from my mom always telling me, 'You're normal,'" Keenan says. It doesn't really bother him. The fun he's having also has made dealing with the realities of his medical condition easier. This summer, he'll have yet another surgery to reconstruct a hip and straighten a leg. It'll mean that he can't make appearances for several weeks while he recovers. Other procedures he's undergone include surgeries to staple the growth plate in his knees to straighten them and another to decompress his brain stem. Each Thursday, he also gets a four-hour infusion, called enzyme replacement therapy, at home or at Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago. Keenan is among the first wave of patients with MPS 6 to receive these infusions, which seem to slow the progression of the disease. "We can't reverse necessarily all of the damage to various organs," says Dr. Barbara K. Burton, a clinical geneticist who heads the MPS treatment program at Children's Memorial. "But the hope is that we stabilize the disorder and increase life expectancy." Without treatment, she says, life expectancy for patients with MPS 6 is less than 20 years. ___ So there are many questions about what Keenan's future holds. How long will he live? Will he be able to stay out of a wheelchair? How long will this YouTube ride last? Few hold out hope that the latter will last too long. "These phenomena don't have forever staying power. At some point, his 15 minutes of fame may well be over, and that will feel like a letdown," says O'Keefe at VCU.
Graham, Keenan's manager, says he'd be happy if it lasted through high school and long enough for Keenan to earn money for a special car that allows people who aren't very tall to drive. "Keenan's one of the pioneers," Graham says of YouTube fame. "But viral is a notch below reality television, as far as how society views it." His mom says, "Whatever it is will be OK," though she knows Keenan clearly still has his hopes up. "I don't like talking about the end," he admits. With that, he asks if he can be excused from an interview. "Are we done?" His mom tells him to stay put, but he stands up, flashes that cheesy smile and slowly sidesteps away, so he can go back upstairs to his bedroom. And his computer. ___ Online: Keenan's website: http://www.keenansroom.com/ Birthday video: http://bit.ly/gnrQbU Aniston commercial: http://bit.ly/hiZO6w
[Associated
Press;
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