@TechConnectify As you say, it's not equivalent, and the the thing is, the troubles you experience are because of your privilege in success which makes people interested in you. So while I sympathize with your predicament, I think it's a very, very small issue in comparison to more systemic issues connected to marginalized status.
The point I'm trying to make is, regardless of how successful you are as a celebrity, you're just one user, and you don't contribute to keeping the fediverse alive any more than any other one user.
As for the refrain to use blocklists and move instances, I wholeheartedly agree on the former point (blocklists should never be relied on, and this is actually one of the reasons I dislike Twitter). As for the latter point, while I agree that the user experience is not good, that's not solely a cultural issue per se; it's also a technical issue. You, for example, are not on a singular platform called "Mastodon", you're specifically on mas.to, which is accountable only to the person who runs mas.to. There are things that can be done to minimize the damage; I've said before, for example, that the official source used by the Mastodon developers to recommend instances to people should have much stricter requirements as far as what it will list. But if, for example, you join the fascist instance Gab, you will encounter rampant fascist and otherwise rhetoric everywhere, and the only way to deal with that is to move instances, because Gab is literally hosted by fascists.
This, of course, runs on a continuum. Your instance, for example, is not a fascist instance, but it's known to be overly lax in its moderation approach (which is why it's restricted on the instance I'm on). There's no systemic solution where, for example, the Mastodon project can fix mas.to; the best that can be done is for mas.to to no longer be recommend it to new people, but regardless, if you want to get away from it, you will likely have to leave it for another instance (unless mas.to's admins specifically decide to improve things on that instance).