Britney Spears‘ aunt, Leigh Ann Spears Wrather, is speaking out.
27.09.2021 - 19:49 / perezhilton.com
Britney Spears’ former assistant is back with more harrowing details from inside her conservatorship.
Felicia Culotta first shared her experiences on the pop star’s team in the bombshell New York Times documentary Framing Britney Spears. The FX/Hulu production recently released a second installment that delved deeper into Britney’s conservatorship, Controlling Britney Spears, and Felicia once again participated with more upsetting recollections from her time on tour.
Related: Jamie Monitored
Britney Spears‘ aunt, Leigh Ann Spears Wrather, is speaking out.
Britney Spears has her aunt on her side.
Clearing the air. Following her recent win in court, Britney Spears decided to put her family on blast for not being present during her conservatorship struggles.
Moving forward. Following Britney Spears’ recent legal win after her father, Jamie Spears, was ousted from his position as conservator of her estate, she opened up about healing in a candid social media post.
Britney Spears' attorney Mathew Rosengart has been applauded for making great strides in assisting the "Toxic" singer's attempt to break free from her conservatorship, but a new report claims she's also received an overwhelming amount of support from a good friend behind the scenes. Cade Hudson is known as Spears' longtime agent from CAA.
Those who have finished Controlling Britney Spears may have questions about Robin Greenhill‘s net worth and how much Britney Spears’ former business manager made from her conservatorship amid claims that she was responsible for the idea to bug the singer’s phone and record her texts and calls.
If you watched Controlling Britney Spears, you may be curious about Edan Yemini’s net worth and how much he made as the head of Britney Spears’ security amid claims that his firm, Black Box Security, bugged her phone and recorded more than 180 hours of private conversations from a secret recording device placed in her bedroom.
Not true. Britney Spears’ response to Hulu’s Controlling Britney Spears documentary shows that she doesn’t agree with everything the new doc alleged about her life.
Britney Spears’ conservatorship was released on Friday, September 24th and the pop star says she watched “a little bit” of it. New York Times follow-up documentary to “Framing Britney Spars,” details the alleged intense surveillance that went into controlling the singer.
Britney Spears‘ legal team says the secret surveillance her father allegedly instated in her bedroom is “horrifying and unconscionable”.The surveillance claims were initially made in Controlling Britney Spears, the New York Times‘ follow-up to their earlier documentary Framing Britney Spears.
Britney Spears is speaking out. Earlier this year, interest in the 39-year-old pop star's conservatorship case skyrocketed with the release of the New York Times' documentary "Framing Britney Spears," which examined her life, career and court battle.
Kevin Federline would be furious if the claims that his children’s private conversations with mom, Britney Spears, had been secretly recorded prove to be true, his attorney exclusively tells Page Six. "I think that would be pretty outrageous and Kevin would be upset about that," lawyer Mark Vincent Kaplan told us on Monday, following The New York Times’ bombshell report over the weekend that first exposed the allegations.
Following the success of Framing Britney Spears, Hulu and The New York Times have released a follow-up documentary, Controlling Britney Spears, with even more damning details about Britney Spears‘ conservatorship. Among other allegations, the doc claimed that the pop star’s security secretly recorded conversations in her home without her knowledge, including her bedroom.
Britney Spears continued her grand return to social media with a post where she revealed her thoughts on the latest project attempting to document her life.MORE: Britney Spears details sons' birthday celebrations and reveals why she 'cried for two days'The singer shared a video of hers and captioned it with what she felt about the new New York Times documentary, Controlling Britney Spears.WATCH: Father of Britney Spears files to end singer's conservatorshipIn the video, she simply danced while
Britney Spears’ father, Jamie Spears, exerted so much control over the pop star’s life that he even monitored her text messages, phone calls and internet browser history, according to bombshell claims in a new documentary.
Bombshell claims from a brand new Britney Spears documentary have alleged that the singer’s father, Jamie Spears, exerted so much control of his daughter throughout her conservatorship, that he monitored her text messages, phone calls, and internet browser history.
The latest documentary about Britney Spears’ life reveals she may have been under more control for the past 13 years under the conservatorship than her supporters may have realized.
Britney Spears‘ lawyer is speaking out in response to some of the allegations made in the new FX and Hulu documentary Controlling Britney Spears.
Felicia Culotta, Britney Spears‘ former assistant and friend, tearfully commented on the star’s conservatorship struggles as well as the current status of their relationship in a new documentary. In The New York Times Presents: Controlling Britney Spears, which premiered on Sept. 24 on Hulu and FX, the emotional ex-confidant of the singer revealed she no longer has her phone number and doesn’t have a way of getting in touch with her.
On Friday, FX aired the new documentary “The New York Times Presents: Controlling Britney Spears”, which presented more shocking allegations about Britney Spears’ controversial conservatorship, controlled by her father, Jamie Spears.