Dua Lipa is speaking out after being accused of anti-Semitism due to her support of Palestinians in the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.
04.05.2021 - 16:38 / glamour.com
New York Times documentary a , she's now chiming in on the BBC's newly-released film The Battle for Britney: Fans, Cash, and a Conservatorship. (If you're unfamiliar, all these docs dive into Spears's legal situation.
She's a conservatee, meaning she doesn't have full legal control over her life and finances. It's an arrangement that's baffled fans for years, and these docs are thrusting it into mainstream conversation.) But in a surprisingly candid Instagram post, Spears goes into length about
.Dua Lipa is speaking out after being accused of anti-Semitism due to her support of Palestinians in the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.
An advertisement was taken out in the New York Times this weekend that name checked Dua Lipa, as well as Bella and Gigi Hadid, for supporting Palestinians. The advertisement called them anti-semitic for their views.
Pink and Britney Spears have had very different careers over the past 20 years, but when they first started, they were often grouped together — and there’s one thing the “So What” singer, 41, wishes she’d done differently.
Pink wishes she had been there for Britney Spears back in the day. The 41-year-old performer appeared on Thursday’s “Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen” where she was asked by a fan about the recent New York Times’ documentary, “Framing Britney Spears”, which focuses on Spears’ conservatorship.
the New York Post — she does not have 16 peacocks on her farm. She has 21.
The Battle for Britney: Fans, Cash and a Conservatorship at the weekend on iPlayer, which will be broadcast on BBC Two on Wednesday. In February, the New York Times released a television film Framing Britney Spears which examined her career, her celebrity and the conservatorship she has been living under since 2008.
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Britney Spears has criticised documentaries being made about her life and career in the spotlight, describing them as "so hypocritical". Spears has been subject to a conservatorship since 2008 following a series of public breakdowns captured by paparazzi cameras, with the arrangement now being explored in two recent films - one by the New York Times earlier this year and another recently released by the BBC.
Britney Spears has slammed the documentaries made about her as “so hypocritical”. The singer, who has been subject to a conservatorship since 2008 when she had a series of public breakdowns captured by paparazzi cameras, is the subject of two recent films, one by the New York Times and one by the BBC.
Britney Spears' life has become a major point of discussion, ever since the Free Britney movement gained support as fans began to discuss the singer's conservatorship. The New York Times documentary, Framing Britney Spears further took a deeper look at the pop star's career, her imminent rise to fame and her tumultuous fall.
Britney Spears is speaking out in greater detail than ever before in response to the Framing Britney Spears documentary.
We have heard that a slew of Britney Spears documentaries are in the pipeline following the New York Times’ brilliant film, Framing Britney Spears, and the latest documentary from the BBC is set to be just as explosive.
On The Real World Homecoming: New York, the original cast members of the landmark MTV series reunite in the same loft where they filmed in 1992 to reflect on how it changed their lives, and the enduring resonance of the issues it brought to light.
When the documentary The New York Times Presents: Framing Britney Spears premiered on FX in February, it caused a sensation. More than 1 million reactions were tweeted within a few days of its debut. And Justin Timberlake, whose treatment of Spears after the pop stars’ breakup years ago was questioned in the film, felt compelled to issue a statement apologizing to his former girlfriend.
Almost everyone in America knows the name Breonna Taylor, the 26-year-old African American woman who was killed in Louisville last year in a botched police drug raid. But they may not know much about the circumstances around her death, other than that she was shot to death by police officers serving a “no knock” warrant at her home early on March 13, 2020.