“I understand that every story needs a villain, but people have it so wrong here,” Jamie Spears, though his lawyer, Vivian Thoreen, said during the Feb. 25 episode of Good Morning America, nearly three weeks after Framing Britney Spears aired.
17.02.2021 - 17:54 / hollywoodlife.com
Britney Spears‘ Instagram followers took to the social media platform following the pop star’s February 16 post, in which she captured a snap of a Scrabble board full of letters. The photo, which you can see below, featured a series of real words and some that were not real. “Can you find a word that isn’t actually a word ???? Sometimes it’s fun to make ones up,” she captioned the photo.
Once the post went up on the “Circus” singer’s IG, fans immediately took to the comment section to speculate
“I understand that every story needs a villain, but people have it so wrong here,” Jamie Spears, though his lawyer, Vivian Thoreen, said during the Feb. 25 episode of Good Morning America, nearly three weeks after Framing Britney Spears aired.
Britney Spears‘ father has claimed that fans “have it wrong” about the pop star’s conservatorship.Vivian Thoreen, who represents Jamie Spears, said he stopped his daughter from being exploited by others and is a “fiercely loving, dedicated and loyal father”.Thoreen told ABC News’ Good Morning America yesterday (February 25) that unnamed people had been “harming and exploiting” Britney and that Jamie had “rescued” his daughter from “a life-threatening situation”.“Britney’s assets were clearly
Ready for an encore! Britney Spears’ former assistant Felicia Culotta misses seeing the pop star on stage amid her indefinite work hiatus.
© @Copyright HELLO! Hello! Magazine After much anticipation, the New York Times' investigative documentary, Framing Britney Spears, finally landed in the UK on Tuesday night and, as expected, it was a tough watch for the pop star's fans.
Britney Spears herself talking. Framing Britney Spears, a new documentary produced by the New York Times looks back on the pop star's 28-year career and her attempts to remove her father from her controversial conservatorship - a court-appointed guardianship usually reserved for elderly and infirm people, or anyone who cannot make their own decisions.
A new documentary about Britney Spears has been making headlines since it aired in the US recently. Framing Britney Spears tracks the highs and lows of Britney’s career, including her 2008 breakdown and the conservatorship she was subsequently placed under, has been talked about for the last week.
Framing Britney Spears will be happy to know that the New York Times-led investigative film finally has a UK air date. Discussing Britney’s ongoing legal battle with her father Jamie Spears (not to be confused with the star’s sister, Jamie Lynn Spears), the documentary aims to piece together the timeline surrounding her conservatorship and will detail her battles with childhood stardom, music industry misogyny and insensitive global tabloids.
“Framing Britney Spears” documentary chronicling the pop star’s portrayal in the media. Social media was incensed after the series showed Hilton’s actions while the “Baby One More Time” singer was at her lowest point.
Framing Britney Spears, the documentary that delves into the #FreeBritney movement, has been at the centre of internet chatter since its release, and will soon be available to stream in the UK. The one-off Hulu special charts the singer's rise to fame, as well as the highs and lows of her private life, which eventually resulted in a conservatorship: a legal arrangement that gave her father, Jamie Spears, control of her finances and personal decisions.
Britney Spears documentary Framing Britney Spears is set to be available for UK viewers from this week.The film, which looks at the singer’s career and the #FreeBritney campaign over the conservatorship she is under, has been widely talked-about since its release in the US a few weeks ago.Viewers in Britain will be able to stream the documentary on Sky Documentaries and NOW TV tomorrow (February 16), both live from 9pm and on-demand thereafter.Since the film aired in the US, a number of famous