by Screenmancer
When the Oops, I Did It Again Popstar Britney Spears found herself the subject of CBS News “Timeline: Britney’s Meltdown” her fate from the then-temporary conservatorship on Feb. 1, 2008 was litigated in the media. It became a permanent humiliation for the next 13 years. Now there is a new release to lift the Conservatorship Curtain once and for all in “Britney vs Spears.” The official tagline is “No more secrets. No more silence. Britney vs Spears is only on Netflix September 28.”
But Netflix could be seen as a late-comer to the #FreeBritney social media tsunami that swept the sand from the public eye on what really happened to the child-star turned international icon.
Breakdown Alley
CBS was not alone in 2008, with opening with lines like: “From “Mickey Mouse Club” to sex symbol and single mom, Britney Spears has always been noticed for a bit more than her music. Here are some of her recent perils and pit stops.” Nearly every single mass consumer outlet piled on, not to mention late night comedians, except for Craig Ferguson, who went on the record in 2007 as the lone late night host who refused to trash her.
TMZ, Us Weekly, Daily Mail in the UK, X-17 online, Radar, Just Jared, and countless other paparazzo chimed in throughout the crisis. Even mainstream media blogs amped up the negative coverage, from late-night ambulance rides to endless court dates for one Britney Jean Spears, who in 1998 had breakout album “Baby One More Time” that once topped the Billboard the charts for a reported 32 weeks.
Jokes in the thousands ranged from ‘Why couldn’t Britney call 911? She couldn’t find the 11,” to “Why did Britney Spears jump off a building? Because she thought Maxi pads had real wings.” The relentless glut of Britbashing went from meme to meme, from the bald-head-umbrella academy to twisted non-stop chat room abuse.
By 2003, Britney released the hit single “Toxic” which many saw as her artistic response to the family drama, on the “In the Zone” album from Nov. 12, 2003.
Yet the manufactured social media and consumer media ‘train wreck label’ would not come to a full stop literally until Oct. 15, 2017 when Jodi Kantor and Meghan Twohey called time on one of the biggest Hollywood moguls (who shall remain unnamed) and kicked off a sweeping re-think on how women in Show Business are treated.
#FreeBritney Saves the Day
The #FreeBritney movement that finally triumphed this year, 2021 – after signs showed up outside a West Hollywood court room in 2019 – began almost accidentally by two comedy circuit friends who became podcasters.
“In this inaugural episode of Britney’s Instagram, comedians Tess Barker and Barbara Gray discuss their reason behind starting the podcast, and they breakdown Britney’s video of her painting on her veranda.”
The first episode included their origin story, as “It started when we got tagged a lot on Britney’s Instagram… it’s just like the most fascinating Instagram out there.” Babs and Tess sought to dissect Britney’s Instagrams not only out of sympathy, but also to find the truth about a woman who was competent enough to play Las Vegas, but not able to spend her own money.
Described as ‘her only outlet’ by the podcasters, they said “This is the place where she harnesses her Britney Spirit in one place.” You can find the episodes dating back to Nov. 2, 2017 here.
Side-eye on Jamie Spears Finally
Almost overnight, the ‘teary-eyed father,’ Jamie Spears, who took away his multi-millionaire daughter’s human rights over a decade ago to his own financial benefit, became suspect as the Conservatorship came under the same scrutiny as Britney Spears had been under for years.
Except this time? The Conservators were ‘batshit crazy’ – a term often attached to the Popstar in hit media pieces. Not only did The New York Times spearhead documentary expose “Framing Britney Spears” to debut around the February date of her Conservatorship this year; they just followed up with “Controlling Britney Spears.”
“Framing Britney Spears” from The New York Times Presents (FX & Hulu), lost out at this year’s EMMYs to? “Boys State.” Enough said in the title alone.
For now, the new Netflix documentary which details (spoiler alert) listening devices in sensitive places as endless privacy violations for the Popstar, including her own bedroom and placed there by her father, is the one that may restore the lost decade-plus for one of the world’s most famous women, Britney Jean Spears. It premiers just in time, as she turns 40 this year on Dec. 2, having spent 13 long years under this legal form of adult-child abuse.
First watch the trailer, and no trailer jokes
Next catch the whole documentary here.
Follow #FreeBritney on social media.
And of course, follow the real @britneyspears official now.
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