“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 - 06:08 / msn.com
Related: The betrayal of Britney Spears: how pop culture failed a superstar The ostensible motivation of Framing Britney Spears is to investigate the controversy surrounding the conservatorship (a kind of imposed power-of-attorney-on-steroids) given to her father, Jamie, after Spears was involuntarily committed to a hospital psychiatric ward in 2008.
“The only thing he ever said to me was: ‘My daughter’s gonna be so rich she’s gonna buy me a boat,’” recalled Spears’ record marketing director.
.“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.
Bella Throne is known for being a bold and empowering role model for standing up to the industry’s dark sides. The former Disney star doesn’t shy away from addressing real issues that affect the lives of people.
Taking it all in. John Mayer admitted to getting emotional while watching the Framing Britney Spears documentary earlier this month.
Framing Britney Spears documentary have said they have plenty of unused and new material to make a follow-up.The film explores the singer’s early career and Spears’ mental health issues as well as the #FreeBritney movement to end her father’s controversial conservatorship.Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter, director Samantha Stark and writer Liz Day said there was plenty left behind that they couldn’t fit into the film’s final cut.
Framing Britney Spears is the documentary on everybody’s lips these days and rightfully so.
Metro. More than 220,000 tuned in to look back on Britney's early career, following her journey all the way up to the present day.
Framing Britney Spears documentary has gripped Britney fans across the globe. It explores the singer's meteoric rise to fame, how the media has treated her over the years and also looks at her long-standing legal arrangements and the #FreeBritney movement.
© @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, 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
Framing Britney Spears director Samantha Stark and New York Times senior editor Liz Day were in the middle of interviews about their when news broke that to Spears via an Instagram post. “I’m hopeful that everyone can learn a little bit from reexamining the past,” Day tells Glamour when asked about the statement from Timberlake, which came after a from viewers who felt the singer's actions following his public breakup with Spears was out of line.“It's very shocking," Stark tells Glamour of the
Justin Timberlake, who famously dated Britney Spears in the early ’90s, responded to the backlash he’s received following the Framing Britney Spears documentary from the New York Times that debuted on Hulu last week. Timberlake has been coy about his relationship with Spears. Many thought his “Cry Me a River” song and music video seemed to blame Spears for their breakup, using a lookalike actress.
Britney Spears documentary is on Hulu and causing a second look at the pop star's conservatorship and media scrutiny during the 90s and 2000s. provides a look into the pop star's ongoing conservatorship battle with her father, Jamie Spears, as well as looking back at the now-39-year-old singer's treatment by the media over the years, particularly during the height of her stardom .Spears is aware of the documentary, which premiered on FX and Hulu earlier this month, a source tells ET.
Britney Spears and the controversy surrounding the control she’s been under for most of her career and her ongoing court battle with her father to decide who will control her estate.The documentary was just last week released and it’s already made headlines and caused a stir amongst Spears fans. While the “Baby One More Time” singer has been relatively quiet regarding what’s actually been going on in her life, she took to Twitter on Tuesday night to address the documentary.
Britney Spears’ ex-husband Kevin Federline has released a statement via his lawyer following the release of the “Framing Britney Spears” documentary.
EXCLUSIVE: The #FreeBritney movement is growing increasingly larger following the launch of FX’s Framing Britney Spears documentary.
Sarah Silverman was asked to explain herself over her 2007 roast of Britney Spears.