A documentary about Britney Spears – from her rise to fame to the conservatory she is now in – makes headlines and attracts reactions from viewers, including famous colleagues and artists.
The New York Times documentary “Framing Britney Spears”, which premiered on February 5, explains the appearance The Free Britney Movement. While the movement was initiated by fans, it has spread from people concerned about its conservative to spectators, including celebrities, who are concerned about how Spears was treated in the media and allegedly treated by those close to him.
After watching the documentary, some Twitter users said they are “uncomfortable,” others said the documentary made them “furious”. Actress and host Valerie Bertinelli appointed the documentary is a “gut punch.”
Singer Kacey Musgraves posted on Twitter: “I … it was beating me that no one knows if @Britney Spears it’s really okay. Really hoping that if she isn’t, she can formally vocalize her in some way, and that she knows that everyone outside really cares about her well-being. “
Pop star Jamie Spears has served as a 39-year-old conservative since 2008 and recently became co-conservative of her finances, when Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Brenda Penny named Bessemer Trust Co.
Spears struggled to get her father out of the conservatory completely, and the documentary claims that she should not be in a conservatory at all, because she is able to understand the conservatory and be able to work.
Many fans involved in the Free Britney movement believe that Spears is trying to send secret messages for help via her Instagram, as she often posts somewhat bizarre videos with confusing subtitles.
On Tuesday, Spears ‘boyfriend Sam Asghari used his own Instagram to speak publicly about Spears’ father, writing: “Now it’s important for people to understand that I have zero respect for someone who tries to control our relationship and throws in. Constantly obstacles in our way In my opinion, Jamie [Spears] is a total d ** k. ”
The 27-year-old actor and model goes on to say that he will not go into details because he respects privacy. “But I did not come to this country because I could not express my opinion and freedom,” said Asghari, who immigrated from Iran.
CBS News has contacted Mr Spears’ lawyer, Andrew Wallet, to request comments from him and Mr Spears on the documentary, the Free Britney movement and Asghari’s post, and is awaiting a response.
Other celebrities said they watched the documentary and hoped Spears would release his conservative. Actress Amber Tamblyn posted on Twitter: “Britney’s framing was a tough watch, just like the Winehouse documentary, only we know how this story ended. I hope Britney is released from that conservatory -” released, “as she puts it in her own words. It’s discouraging. that any judge would continue to support him. “
Comedian Fortune Feimster posted on Twitter: “I watched the NYT document on Britney Spears and she is so confused that she does not let this very successful adult woman take care of her own life. She said very clearly that she did not want her father to have any of her finances and life decisions. That should be enough. “
Moderator Tamron Room he said “it’s an understatement” to call the documentary “heartbreaking.”
Miley Cyrus gave a Gratitude Spears during the post-Super Bowl show, saying, “We love Britney.”
Other celebrities, including Andy Cohen, Sarah Jessica Parker, Meghan McCain and Bette Midler, shared their support by tweeting “Britney free.”
Actress and activist Jameela Jamil shared a petition for the judge to end the conservatory, which was signed by more than 100,000 people.
Jamil spoke out against what she called “gas lighting” of women in the media, saying the media often portrays women as “annoying and hysterical.” Jamil said on Instagram on Tuesday that her theory applies to Spears.
Los Angeles attorney Lisa MacCarley, who specializes in estate planning, inheritance law and conservatives, sent a letter to more than 100 attorneys asking them to “contact the Los Angeles County probation department, especially staff. to be tried, and to ask Judge Penny to stop conservatively. “
In the letter, which MacCarley shared with CBS News, she writes that “Britney Spears ‘framing” “gave a subtle but powerful look at the unconstitutional way in which Mrs. Spears’ conservative initially did.” She tells her fellow lawyers that “We would be complicit in the remarkable violation of Ms. Spears’ constitutional rights if we looked and did nothing.”
The ACLU has advocated for Spears in the past, sharing in August how I believe the Conservative threatens his civil rights. A conservator is established when a judge appoints a responsible person or organization – the “conservator” – to care for another adult who cannot take care of himself or manage his own finances, according to the California judiciary.
“Conservatives limit a person’s civil liberties, which we at ACLU consider, of course, to be a basic concern. But beyond that, conservatives do not necessarily make people safer: they can lead to financial, physical or physical abuse. emotional, “ACLU writes.
“Britney Spears’ framing” reappears on the surface in old paparazzi videos and interviews in which the media seems to treat Spears with insensitivity.