In recent years, the global spread of social media has intensified cultural interconnectedness, contributing to the increase of fan culture and the growing salience of global identity among young people. Despite these developments, relatively little is known about how such orientations relate to one another or to broader aspects of self-concept and well-being. The present study examined the associations among celebrity attitude, life satisfaction, self-esteem, religiosity, and global identity in a sample of 312 young adults from Turkey. Participants ranged in age from 18 to 31 years (M = 23.0, SD = 3.47). Using validated self-report measures, we assessed correlations across the five constructs. Celebrity attitude was associated with life satisfaction (r = .16, p = .02), but was not related to self-esteem, religiosity, or global identity. Life satisfaction correlated positively with religiosity (r = .31, p < .001) and global identity (r = .21, p < .001), and negatively with self-esteem (r = -.25, p < .001). Self-esteem was positively correlated with global identity (r = .27, p < .001) and weakly with religiosity (r = .11, p = .05). The strongest association showed between religiosity and global identity (r = .37, p < .001). Taken together, these findings point to the interplay between identity, belief systems, and subjective well-being in Turkish youth, suggesting that globalizing cultural influences and personal orientations toward religion and self-concept shape young people's psychosocial adjustment.