Britney Spears failed to regain visiting rights to her two young sons after a chaotic Los Angeles custody hearing last night.
The singer missed the morning session of yesterday’s hearing arriving in the afternoon, only to leave before entering the building. Reports suggest the singer refused to enter the court room after becoming intimidated by the paparazzi.
"Move back. I'm scared. Stop it. Stop it. I want to get back in the car. Just stop it. Let me get in the car, please," Spears is reported to have told photographers before driving away in a 4 x 4 vehicle.While neither Spears, 26, nor her former husband Kevin Federline, 29, were required to be in court for the hearing, the singer’s presence was considered key to her chances of regaining access to her children. Federline, sporting a new Mohawk hair style, was in court.
Spears had all access to her sons suspended after she refused to hand Sean Preston, 2, and Jayden James, 1, over to Federline following a visit on January 3.
Police were called after the singer locked herself in a room with one of the boys. After a four-hour stand-off, she was strapped to a stretcher and taken to hospital by ambulance.
Behind closed doors, Superior Court Commissioner Scott Gordon yesterday heard a full day of testimony concerning the incident.
Allan Parachini, a spokesman for the court, said two Los Angeles police officers, Paula Strong, the court-appointed monitor who was present for the visit at Spears' home, and Lisa Hacker, a parenting coach who has been working with Spears and Federline testified. Lonnie Jones, Federline’s bodyguard who had been sent to collect the children on January 3 also gave evidence.
After ruling that the children should remain in the custody of Federline, the court commissioner set another hearing for February 19.
Outside court, Mark Vincent Kaplan, Federline's lawyer, said: "The word victory is not something Mr Federline or his counsel would ascribe to this. There is no joy. This is a grave situation for all."
Mr Kaplan said that Federline thought the ruling was correct, but added: "His goal, his hope for the future is at some point he will be able to parent the children with the participation of their mother."
Spears has also missed previous court hearings, including a court-ordered deposition on December 12 when she called in sick. She then arrived nearly two hours late to a lawyer's office on its rescheduled date, January 3.
The child star turned chart-topping singer has made headlines for her increasingly erratic behaviour since her marriage to Federline ended in late 2006. Last year, she shaved her head, attacked a car with an umbrella and used a designer dresses to clean up vomit while on a magazine photoshoot.
Her music career has survived the turmoil. Her latest album, Blackout, has won critical acclaim and new track, Piece of Me, is at number 17 on the UK singles chart.
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Britney wrote 'suicide note'
OUT-of-control singer Britney Spears has written a suicide note detailing how things would be better if she was dead, it has emerged. A friend of the 26-year-old found the note before her infamous Beverly Hills meltdown this month. It reportedly told of Spears' loneliness and fear of not living up to the expectations of fans and family. The star has been suffering with mental problems including depression and possible multiple personality disorder "for years" - but docs say she needs urgent help as her condition seems to be worsening. Another bizarre incident came to light overnight when Britain's The Sun newspaper revealed Spears emerged from a clothes shop changing room nude after spending 45 minutes inside with her British photographer lover Adnan Ghalib. An assistant said they made “weird” noises like they were having sex - and Spears swore at staff when she left. “She was slurring and spitting," one worker told the paper. "Her face was covered with cold sores and acne, and her scalp was patchy.” It has also been reported that Spears lost the right to see her sons after missing a vital court date in her child-custody battle because she was too busy waiting for a home furniture delivery. Spears' suicide note was found in her bathroom just before she was rushed to a psychiatric ward after refusing to hand her sons to Federline’s security guards. It was discovered by a friend who thought it “a cry for help”. “The letter was very sad," an insider said. "Britney talked about her loneliness, how unfair life is and not being able to trust people. “She wrote about how she will never be what people want her to be. She said, ‘Perhaps it would be better if I was dead’.” When confronted, The Sun revealed Spears laughed it off and said: “Everybody thinks about death.” Spears' manic depression is also known as bipolar disorder. The source said: “She also has something much more serious she doesn’t want to talk about. “She may have multiple personality disorder. And she had post-natal depression after both births.”
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Kevin Federline Says His Custody Battle With Britney Spears 'Makes Other People Feel Normal'
Dancer-turned-rapper-turned actor opens up to Interview magazine on eve of his 'One Tree Hill' debut.
Isn't it funny how Kevin Federline went from being perceived as a deadbeat dad to being seen as father of the year?
Sure, ex-wife Britney Spears' antics help, but it's a bit strategic on his part as well, as the dancer-turned-rapper-turned-actor explained to Interview for the magazine's new issue. "You have to have an overall vision of how you want people to see you," he told the mag.
Since Federline has been keeping a low profile, part of how people see him is via the characters he plays on TV — a string of punk types who don't respond well to authority. Is it typecasting or is it playing with the image he knew people had of him at the time? "We did this spot [for Nationwide Insurance that aired during last year's Super Bowl] of me making fun of myself," he told Interview. "And the way that it turned out is that I started changing people's perceptions of who I was and it opened up my mind to do more stuff."
Sure, ex-wife Britney Spears' antics help, but it's a bit strategic on his part as well, as the dancer-turned-rapper-turned-actor explained to Interview for the magazine's new issue. "You have to have an overall vision of how you want people to see you," he told the mag.
Since Federline has been keeping a low profile, part of how people see him is via the characters he plays on TV — a string of punk types who don't respond well to authority. Is it typecasting or is it playing with the image he knew people had of him at the time? "We did this spot [for Nationwide Insurance that aired during last year's Super Bowl] of me making fun of myself," he told Interview. "And the way that it turned out is that I started changing people's perceptions of who I was and it opened up my mind to do more stuff."
After a one-off guest stint more than a year ago on "CSI," K-Fed is back on the small screen via a recurring guest spot on "One Tree Hill," starting Tuesday (January 15) and continuing through February 12. "I loved that they kept bringing [my character] Jason back," he told MTV News. "I got to find out who he is and how to portray him. It was great!"
A fan since the first season, Federline said that he was hooked once a friend of his, Antwon Tanner, got cast on the show as Skills. Federline calls his own character, a wannabe rocker who resists anyone else's input, "an arrogant ass." "Hopefully none of that is me," Federline told MTV News, "but I'd say the part that is me is the performer. I love being onstage, whether it's dancing or acting — there's just something about being onstage."
Like his ex, Federline shaved his head — but when he took the shears to his hair, it was to help him get in character. "It was mostly my idea," said K-Fed, who sported a Mohawk when he showed up to court on Monday.
But unlike his ex, Federline doesn't want to make a public display of his private life — one of the things that appealed to him about shooting "One Tree Hill" is that it's filmed in Wilmington, North Carolina. He attributes the out-of-L.A. experience to the reason the cast feels more "like a family." "I know every cast says that, but I think it's different because they all live in the same small town and really do get along," he told MTV News.
And whether he's on the set or at home, "Family comes first," he told Interview. By that, he means he's not going to offer up information about either his two sons with Spears (Sean Preston and Jayden James) or his daughter and son with Shar Jackson (Kori and Kaleb), or their respective mothers, even though he's in a very public custody battle. "You won't ever really hear me talk about them, other than I love them," Federline told the magazine. "I wish I could get into all the personal stuff, but like I said, I can't. I can't do it. I won't do it."
Not that he doesn't understand the public interest. "I think the infatuation with the whole thing is that watching us go through things makes other people feel normal," he told Interview. But even though "everything is so publicized and everybody is looking at it, it's normal for us," he said.
"People put it up on this pedestal when it's really the same way that everybody goes through their stuff, you know?" he told Interview. "It's not really any different. Not to say that I like having the paparazzi around or that I like having my life in the media. But as much as I try to be mad at it, I can't be. I just can't. I'll never be. I've been upset at it before, but ... I had to learn that there are good things that can come from it."
Such as fledgling acting and rapping careers. "The paparazzi and the press have given me a voice," he admitted to Interview. "No matter how I got the voice, it's there." And he confessed to MTV News, "I have officially caught the acting bug. ... I am just getting started." He just wants to find "the right opportunity" that he can balance with his other new role, handed down by the court — "full-time dad."
A fan since the first season, Federline said that he was hooked once a friend of his, Antwon Tanner, got cast on the show as Skills. Federline calls his own character, a wannabe rocker who resists anyone else's input, "an arrogant ass." "Hopefully none of that is me," Federline told MTV News, "but I'd say the part that is me is the performer. I love being onstage, whether it's dancing or acting — there's just something about being onstage."
Like his ex, Federline shaved his head — but when he took the shears to his hair, it was to help him get in character. "It was mostly my idea," said K-Fed, who sported a Mohawk when he showed up to court on Monday.
But unlike his ex, Federline doesn't want to make a public display of his private life — one of the things that appealed to him about shooting "One Tree Hill" is that it's filmed in Wilmington, North Carolina. He attributes the out-of-L.A. experience to the reason the cast feels more "like a family." "I know every cast says that, but I think it's different because they all live in the same small town and really do get along," he told MTV News.
And whether he's on the set or at home, "Family comes first," he told Interview. By that, he means he's not going to offer up information about either his two sons with Spears (Sean Preston and Jayden James) or his daughter and son with Shar Jackson (Kori and Kaleb), or their respective mothers, even though he's in a very public custody battle. "You won't ever really hear me talk about them, other than I love them," Federline told the magazine. "I wish I could get into all the personal stuff, but like I said, I can't. I can't do it. I won't do it."
Not that he doesn't understand the public interest. "I think the infatuation with the whole thing is that watching us go through things makes other people feel normal," he told Interview. But even though "everything is so publicized and everybody is looking at it, it's normal for us," he said.
"People put it up on this pedestal when it's really the same way that everybody goes through their stuff, you know?" he told Interview. "It's not really any different. Not to say that I like having the paparazzi around or that I like having my life in the media. But as much as I try to be mad at it, I can't be. I just can't. I'll never be. I've been upset at it before, but ... I had to learn that there are good things that can come from it."
Such as fledgling acting and rapping careers. "The paparazzi and the press have given me a voice," he admitted to Interview. "No matter how I got the voice, it's there." And he confessed to MTV News, "I have officially caught the acting bug. ... I am just getting started." He just wants to find "the right opportunity" that he can balance with his other new role, handed down by the court — "full-time dad."
Britney Spears "panicked" outside court
Britney Spears was "trembling" with nerves when she arrived at court yesterday, according to a paparazzi boss.The troubled singer turned up at the Los Angeles Superior Court over four hours late for a pivotal hearing in her custody battle with ex-husband Kevin Federline. She then refused to enter the building and drove off in her 4x4 with new boyfriend Adnan Ghalib.Sheeraz Hasan, the head of a paparazzi agency, revealed that Britney was "really nervous" and "really panicking" when confronted with a swarm of photographers outside court. He also said that he had spoken to Ghalib about Spears' mental state."She was just so overwhelmed. She was panicked. She was so nervous," Hasan explained during an interview on The Early Show. "She was really, really stressed out in a major way. She knew from the moment that she left home, there were [news] helicopters following her. "I mean, normally, on a day-to-day basis, OK, it's kind of like her friends are with her on a daily basis, kind of following her, but this was just really panicking.""When she got to the courthouse, you know, even Adnan was telling me that it was just way beyond her, and she was nervous," he added. "She was panicking. And all she was saying is, 'I need to pray. I'm praying. I'm praying. I'm praying.'"Spears has been banned from seeing her two sons until the next hearing takes place on February 19.
Britney Spears: Is Troubled Pop Star Trying To Sabotage Herself?
OK, she wasn't actually required to be there. Still, knowing how important Monday's custody hearing could be in the process of regaining visitation rights with her two young sons, you might think Britney Spears would actually go inside the courtroom — after all, she practically made it to the courthouse steps anyway. So why didn't she?
"I'm scared," the singer told her companions when she got out of a sport-utility vehicle at the Los Angeles courthouse. "I want to get back in the car. Let me get in the car, please."
It could be that Spears was scared of more than just the paparazzi throng at the courthouse. After all, she deals with photographers following her every day, though, lately at least, with much less patience and more anger than fear. Last weekend, in an incident in a shopping-mall parking lot that was caught on videotape, she screamed at the paparazzi, "I'm f---ing over it. Get out of my g--damn face!"
According to experts, what might have scared Spears about the Monday hearing, as well as the handful of depositions she has also skipped or left early, could have been the prospect that she'd have to start becoming a responsible mom once again. (Note: None of these people have treated or represented Spears.) By not participating or cooperating in the process to get her kids back, she might be sending a clear message to the court that she doesn't want them back. At least not right now.
"She does not seem to want to be with these kids, because she's not following the rules," New York family law attorney Joshua Forman said.
"It could be that she wants to go back to the old days where she was single and successful," suggested Dr. Jean Cirillo, a psychologist with a private practice in Huntington, New York. "She probably has very mixed feelings about doing that, and she feels guilty. 'I should want the custody for my own self and my public image. Something must be wrong with me.' "
There's an easy solution to Spears' dilemma: Let Kevin Federline have full custody of the kids, at least temporarily (which the courts have already done for her). But if Spears were scared of the public perceiving such an action as abandoning her kids, she could have worked out a private arrangement with Federline instead of escalating the situation until the court intervened.
"If a mother abandons her kids, people wonder, 'What's wrong with her?' " Cirillo said. "People assume she's selfish."
And it may not be that she's selfish — it could be a case of postpartum depression or postpartum mania that's spiraled out of control. "If someone's too depressed to think outside of themselves, it's hard to be an adequate parent," Dr. Robi Ludwig, a New York psychologist, said. "The best thing for her would be to clear the plate for a while."
So, perhaps unintentionally, Spears' possible self-sabotage might actually be healthy for her in the long run. If losing custody and visitation rights of Sean Preston and Jayden James, for at least the next month, makes her realize she now has the time and space to focus on herself, she might get healthy and seek help for whatever's ailing her. It's up to her now.
"For a woman undergoing a divorce, with custody issues, with two small children, with tremendous stress, it wouldn't be unusual to be depressed," New York psychiatrist Dr. Gail Saltz said. "Being watched going through this process makes it more difficult to get help, and it's difficult enough. She's in a tough spot now."
"I'm scared," the singer told her companions when she got out of a sport-utility vehicle at the Los Angeles courthouse. "I want to get back in the car. Let me get in the car, please."
It could be that Spears was scared of more than just the paparazzi throng at the courthouse. After all, she deals with photographers following her every day, though, lately at least, with much less patience and more anger than fear. Last weekend, in an incident in a shopping-mall parking lot that was caught on videotape, she screamed at the paparazzi, "I'm f---ing over it. Get out of my g--damn face!"
According to experts, what might have scared Spears about the Monday hearing, as well as the handful of depositions she has also skipped or left early, could have been the prospect that she'd have to start becoming a responsible mom once again. (Note: None of these people have treated or represented Spears.) By not participating or cooperating in the process to get her kids back, she might be sending a clear message to the court that she doesn't want them back. At least not right now.
"She does not seem to want to be with these kids, because she's not following the rules," New York family law attorney Joshua Forman said.
"It could be that she wants to go back to the old days where she was single and successful," suggested Dr. Jean Cirillo, a psychologist with a private practice in Huntington, New York. "She probably has very mixed feelings about doing that, and she feels guilty. 'I should want the custody for my own self and my public image. Something must be wrong with me.' "
There's an easy solution to Spears' dilemma: Let Kevin Federline have full custody of the kids, at least temporarily (which the courts have already done for her). But if Spears were scared of the public perceiving such an action as abandoning her kids, she could have worked out a private arrangement with Federline instead of escalating the situation until the court intervened.
"If a mother abandons her kids, people wonder, 'What's wrong with her?' " Cirillo said. "People assume she's selfish."
And it may not be that she's selfish — it could be a case of postpartum depression or postpartum mania that's spiraled out of control. "If someone's too depressed to think outside of themselves, it's hard to be an adequate parent," Dr. Robi Ludwig, a New York psychologist, said. "The best thing for her would be to clear the plate for a while."
So, perhaps unintentionally, Spears' possible self-sabotage might actually be healthy for her in the long run. If losing custody and visitation rights of Sean Preston and Jayden James, for at least the next month, makes her realize she now has the time and space to focus on herself, she might get healthy and seek help for whatever's ailing her. It's up to her now.
"For a woman undergoing a divorce, with custody issues, with two small children, with tremendous stress, it wouldn't be unusual to be depressed," New York psychiatrist Dr. Gail Saltz said. "Being watched going through this process makes it more difficult to get help, and it's difficult enough. She's in a tough spot now."
Britney Spears Nude – And Rude!
Britney Spears' shameless behavior hasn't impressed anyone lately - especially not the employees at the Betsey Johnson store in Sherman Oaks California where she stripped nude and was a huge you-know-what to the salespeople.
Life & Style magazine is reporting that Brit-Brit and her new beau, Adnan Ghalib, went shopping at the Betsey Johnson store on Sunday, where the pop wreck came out of the change room buck naked.
Life & Style magazine is reporting that Brit-Brit and her new beau, Adnan Ghalib, went shopping at the Betsey Johnson store on Sunday, where the pop wreck came out of the change room buck naked.
One employee tried to cover the exposed diva with a dress but was quickly put their place when the pop princess screamed "Get away from me! Don't you f------ come near me!"
And as though that wasn't disrespectful enough, the salesclerk goes onto say that Brit and Adnan spent an awful lot of time behind the closed change room doors. Eww.
"She disappeared in the dressing room with Adnan for 45 minutes. They were making weird noises. It was disgusting."
And then Britney exited in true Spears style.
"I couldn't understand a word she was saying," says the employee. "She was slurring and spitting, and talking with a British accent.
"Her face was covered with cold sores and acne, and her scalp was patchy. I wanted to help her, but she was so mean that I left her alone.
"Then she muttered, 'F--- you!' and left the store."
If the story is true (which wouldn't surprise us at this point), Britney's even more delusional than we originally thought.
There's never a dull moment in the life of Britney Spears, that's for sure.
And as though that wasn't disrespectful enough, the salesclerk goes onto say that Brit and Adnan spent an awful lot of time behind the closed change room doors. Eww.
"She disappeared in the dressing room with Adnan for 45 minutes. They were making weird noises. It was disgusting."
And then Britney exited in true Spears style.
"I couldn't understand a word she was saying," says the employee. "She was slurring and spitting, and talking with a British accent.
"Her face was covered with cold sores and acne, and her scalp was patchy. I wanted to help her, but she was so mean that I left her alone.
"Then she muttered, 'F--- you!' and left the store."
If the story is true (which wouldn't surprise us at this point), Britney's even more delusional than we originally thought.
There's never a dull moment in the life of Britney Spears, that's for sure.
Jamie Lynn Spears Seeks Pregnancy Advice From Beyonce Knowles Sis
Jamie Lynn Spears is reportedly seeking pregnancy advice from the little sister of Beyonce Knowles. Jamie Lynn, 16, recently announced she is pregnant by her 19-year-old boyfriend Casey Aldridge.
Solange Knowles, now 21, gave birth to a son when she was only 17. Sources say Jamie Lynn is impressed with the way Solange became a good mother and wants her to help her through her pregnancy.
“Speaking from experience, I can tell you that she’ll be an amazing mum. I have been so blessed that my son is the coolest kid ever,” says Solange. “Of course, that first year of not sleeping and just being dedicated to him had tough parts, but that’s fine. It’s been a blast for me.”
Meanwhile, Jamie Lynn’s family is facing problems with her older sister Britney Spears. The troubled singer was not awarded visitation rights in a hearing on Monday. Her ex-husband Kevin Federline currently has sole legal and physical custody of the children. Spears lost her visitation rights following a standoff with police on January 3.
The 26-year-old refused to return the children to Federline. She was rushed to the hospital and put on lockdown for mental evaluation.
Solange Knowles, now 21, gave birth to a son when she was only 17. Sources say Jamie Lynn is impressed with the way Solange became a good mother and wants her to help her through her pregnancy.
“Speaking from experience, I can tell you that she’ll be an amazing mum. I have been so blessed that my son is the coolest kid ever,” says Solange. “Of course, that first year of not sleeping and just being dedicated to him had tough parts, but that’s fine. It’s been a blast for me.”
Meanwhile, Jamie Lynn’s family is facing problems with her older sister Britney Spears. The troubled singer was not awarded visitation rights in a hearing on Monday. Her ex-husband Kevin Federline currently has sole legal and physical custody of the children. Spears lost her visitation rights following a standoff with police on January 3.
The 26-year-old refused to return the children to Federline. She was rushed to the hospital and put on lockdown for mental evaluation.
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Dr. Drew: Britney Is Dying Before Our Eyes
(CBS) Celebrity addiction expert Dr. Drew Pinsky is weighing in on Britney Spears' problems, saying that the pop star could die if she doesn't get the help she needs. Although the doctor has never treated Spears personally, he told Ellen DeGeneres on her talk show Tuesday, "We are watching somebody who is following the Anna Nicole Smith blueprint to the letter. She's keeping people around her that allow her to keep using and that supports her denial. "She leaves the country, like Anna Nicole, she keeps using; she doesn't follow directions of people."
Spears was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center by paramedics Jan. 10, after police were called to her home because of a custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline over their two young sons. She checked herself out of the hospital two days later.
According to Pinsky, California law does not force drug and alcohol users to remain in treatment long enough to get the help they need.
"You can also only be held against your will for a very short period of time and if you refuse to follow up and take treatment, you're within your right to do that - even if it's killing you. This is a serious medical problem," he said. "This young lady - she is dying in front of our eyes. She needs physician care regularly for a sustained period of time." Pinsky, who's head of the Department of Chemical Dependency Services at Pasadena's Las Encinas Hospital and star of the VH1 reality show "Celebrity Rehab," says he would use a treatment plan similar to one that may be helping another troubled star.
"If I were to treat her, I'd put her in 4-6 weeks of an intensive program in a psychiatric hospital and a year of a residential program very much like what Lindsay Lohan did," he said.
On Monday, a Superior Court commissioner decided to uphold an earlier order suspending Spears' visitation rights to her two sons. Spears was at the courthouse for the hearing, but left before even entering the building. Another hearing is scheduled for Feb. 19. Spears was "trembling," according to the head of a paparazzi agency who says he spoke with the pop star's new boyfriend. Sheeraz Hasan, founder and CEO of Hollywood.TV, told Early Show co-anchor Julie Chen Tuesday that he'd spoken with Spears' new beau, photographer Adnan Ghalib, as the media crush was unfolding Monday. Hasan says Ghalib told him Spears was "really nervous" and "really panicking" when she was being mobbed by the media at the courthouse, and opted to skip the hearing and go to church, feeling she had, at that instant, "no one to turn to, except God."
Spears was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center by paramedics Jan. 10, after police were called to her home because of a custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline over their two young sons. She checked herself out of the hospital two days later.
According to Pinsky, California law does not force drug and alcohol users to remain in treatment long enough to get the help they need.
"You can also only be held against your will for a very short period of time and if you refuse to follow up and take treatment, you're within your right to do that - even if it's killing you. This is a serious medical problem," he said. "This young lady - she is dying in front of our eyes. She needs physician care regularly for a sustained period of time." Pinsky, who's head of the Department of Chemical Dependency Services at Pasadena's Las Encinas Hospital and star of the VH1 reality show "Celebrity Rehab," says he would use a treatment plan similar to one that may be helping another troubled star.
"If I were to treat her, I'd put her in 4-6 weeks of an intensive program in a psychiatric hospital and a year of a residential program very much like what Lindsay Lohan did," he said.
On Monday, a Superior Court commissioner decided to uphold an earlier order suspending Spears' visitation rights to her two sons. Spears was at the courthouse for the hearing, but left before even entering the building. Another hearing is scheduled for Feb. 19. Spears was "trembling," according to the head of a paparazzi agency who says he spoke with the pop star's new boyfriend. Sheeraz Hasan, founder and CEO of Hollywood.TV, told Early Show co-anchor Julie Chen Tuesday that he'd spoken with Spears' new beau, photographer Adnan Ghalib, as the media crush was unfolding Monday. Hasan says Ghalib told him Spears was "really nervous" and "really panicking" when she was being mobbed by the media at the courthouse, and opted to skip the hearing and go to church, feeling she had, at that instant, "no one to turn to, except God."
Monday, January 14, 2008
Spears must go to court for custody of kids
BEIJING, Jan. 14 (Xinhuanet)-- U.S. pop singer Britney Spears would have to appear in court in person on Monday if she wants to restore the right to see her children, media reported.
"I don't know if she will be there," Federline's attorney Mark Vincent Kaplan was quoted as saying.
If she comes to court, she "will have the opportunity to persuade the court that she can have some visitation under monitored conditions," said Kaplan, adding that it will be "the most significant hearing in the case so far."
Police were preparing for possible media frenzy in the downtown civic center if Spears appears. They issued warnings on Sunday that vehicle and pedestrian violations would lead to summons.
On Jan. 3, Spears refused to return the boys to her ex-husband Kevin Federline at her home. Later there was a standoff, and Spears was sent to hospital in an ambulance.
On Jan. 4, her former husband Federline was awarded sole legal and physical custody of their two boys and Spears' visitation rights were suspended.
"I don't know if she will be there," Federline's attorney Mark Vincent Kaplan was quoted as saying.
If she comes to court, she "will have the opportunity to persuade the court that she can have some visitation under monitored conditions," said Kaplan, adding that it will be "the most significant hearing in the case so far."
Police were preparing for possible media frenzy in the downtown civic center if Spears appears. They issued warnings on Sunday that vehicle and pedestrian violations would lead to summons.
On Jan. 3, Spears refused to return the boys to her ex-husband Kevin Federline at her home. Later there was a standoff, and Spears was sent to hospital in an ambulance.
On Jan. 4, her former husband Federline was awarded sole legal and physical custody of their two boys and Spears' visitation rights were suspended.
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Basshunter pips Britney to top chart
LONDON (Reuters) - Basshunter's Euro dance track "Now You're Gone" fought off troubled pop star Britney Spears to become Britain's new number one single.
Spears's single "Piece of Me" climbed 17 places to two, but Basshunter -- the pseudonym used by Swedish DJ Jonas Altberg -- went one better as "Now You're Gone" rose 13 places to take top spot, the Official UK Charts Company said on Sunday.
Earlier this month Spears spent almost two days in a Los Angeles hospital after being taken from her home on a stretcher follow a standoff with police after hysterically refusing to hand back her two children to ex-husband Kevin Federline.
Spears's life has careered out of control since she divorced Federline in 2006. She lost custody of the boys last year.
Soulja Boy's "Crank That (Soulja Boy)" dropped one place to three, with Canadian rock band Nickelback's "Rockstar" at four, while former X-Factor winner Leon Jackson -- last week's number one -- slipped to number five with "When You Believe".
There was just one new entry in the singles chart's top 10 with U.S. rapper Lupe Fiasco and "Superstar" coming in at number seven.
The album charts also had a new number one with Scottish singer-songwriter Amy MacDonald's debut long player -- "This is The Life" -- pushing rock band Radiohead's "In Rainbows" down to two.
The success of MacDonald, whose record first entered the charts in August, ensured the Oxford-based quintet's seventh studio album held top spot for just one week.
There were no new entries in the album chart's top 10, though Led Zeppelin singer Robert Plant's collaboration with bluegrass singer Alison Krauss -- "Raising Sand" -- made a strong showing, rising 16 places to number six.
Spears's single "Piece of Me" climbed 17 places to two, but Basshunter -- the pseudonym used by Swedish DJ Jonas Altberg -- went one better as "Now You're Gone" rose 13 places to take top spot, the Official UK Charts Company said on Sunday.
Earlier this month Spears spent almost two days in a Los Angeles hospital after being taken from her home on a stretcher follow a standoff with police after hysterically refusing to hand back her two children to ex-husband Kevin Federline.
Spears's life has careered out of control since she divorced Federline in 2006. She lost custody of the boys last year.
Soulja Boy's "Crank That (Soulja Boy)" dropped one place to three, with Canadian rock band Nickelback's "Rockstar" at four, while former X-Factor winner Leon Jackson -- last week's number one -- slipped to number five with "When You Believe".
There was just one new entry in the singles chart's top 10 with U.S. rapper Lupe Fiasco and "Superstar" coming in at number seven.
The album charts also had a new number one with Scottish singer-songwriter Amy MacDonald's debut long player -- "This is The Life" -- pushing rock band Radiohead's "In Rainbows" down to two.
The success of MacDonald, whose record first entered the charts in August, ensured the Oxford-based quintet's seventh studio album held top spot for just one week.
There were no new entries in the album chart's top 10, though Led Zeppelin singer Robert Plant's collaboration with bluegrass singer Alison Krauss -- "Raising Sand" -- made a strong showing, rising 16 places to number six.
Labels:
basshunter pips,
Britney Spears,
custody,
divorce,
hospital,
Kevin Federline,
piece of me,
record,
top chart
Police Brace For Spears Media Blitz At Civic Center
LOS ANGELES -- Police will be on hand to deal with the crowds likely to swarm the Civic Center Monday when troubled pop star Britney Spears has a divorce court date, the LAPD announced Sunday.
The gossip web site and TV show TMZ.com, quoting sources within the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office, said that negotiations have broken down on arranging secure parking and crowd control around Spears as she arrives and departs the County Courthouse.
Recent court and public appearances by Spears have resulted in chaotic jostling. Dozens of freelance photographers, passersby with cellphone cameras, and tourists interfered with police and fire crews at the star's hillside home a week ago, when she was taken in a city ambulance to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, reportedly for a mental health check.
The 26-year-old singer is expected to appear in Los Angeles Superior Court at 9:30 a.m. Monday for a custody hearing concerning her two sons with ex-husband Kevin Federline, 29.
Uniformed Los Angeles Police Department and Department of Transportation personnel will be on hand to "facilitate the flow of vehicle and pedestrian traffic" outside the Los Angeles Superior Courthouse at Hill and Temple streets, the LAPD said Sunday.
"We want to let the media know that we will do all we can to facilitate their coverage. But in the event that the coverage of Ms. Spears causes traffic issues, pedestrian issues, etc. and violations are occurring, the Department is prepared to cite those committing infractions," a written statement issued by the LAPD said.
Officers will be cracking down on illegal parking, pedestrian violations, blocking of crosswalks and/or entrances, obstructing vehicle traffic and other rules of the California Vehicle Code and the Los Angeles Municipal Code, authorities said.
TMZ.com also said that Spears' lawyers are telling her she must appear, at jeopardy of losing all rights to see her two sons.
Just last week, police were called when paparazzi trailing Spears allegedly assaulted a security guard at the Four Seasons Hotel.
Spears apparently went to the Four Seasons Hotel on Doheny Drive and Burton Way, where she was escorted out by hotel security, the Daily News reported.
Paparazzi were in tow, and one of them kicked a security guard, who called police, the newspaper reported.
"LAPD took a battery report from the security guard but the paparazzi wasn't there," said LAPD spokesman Mike Lopez. "We're looking for a male, with a camera."
The gossip web site and TV show TMZ.com, quoting sources within the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office, said that negotiations have broken down on arranging secure parking and crowd control around Spears as she arrives and departs the County Courthouse.
Recent court and public appearances by Spears have resulted in chaotic jostling. Dozens of freelance photographers, passersby with cellphone cameras, and tourists interfered with police and fire crews at the star's hillside home a week ago, when she was taken in a city ambulance to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, reportedly for a mental health check.
The 26-year-old singer is expected to appear in Los Angeles Superior Court at 9:30 a.m. Monday for a custody hearing concerning her two sons with ex-husband Kevin Federline, 29.
Uniformed Los Angeles Police Department and Department of Transportation personnel will be on hand to "facilitate the flow of vehicle and pedestrian traffic" outside the Los Angeles Superior Courthouse at Hill and Temple streets, the LAPD said Sunday.
"We want to let the media know that we will do all we can to facilitate their coverage. But in the event that the coverage of Ms. Spears causes traffic issues, pedestrian issues, etc. and violations are occurring, the Department is prepared to cite those committing infractions," a written statement issued by the LAPD said.
Officers will be cracking down on illegal parking, pedestrian violations, blocking of crosswalks and/or entrances, obstructing vehicle traffic and other rules of the California Vehicle Code and the Los Angeles Municipal Code, authorities said.
TMZ.com also said that Spears' lawyers are telling her she must appear, at jeopardy of losing all rights to see her two sons.
Just last week, police were called when paparazzi trailing Spears allegedly assaulted a security guard at the Four Seasons Hotel.
Spears apparently went to the Four Seasons Hotel on Doheny Drive and Burton Way, where she was escorted out by hotel security, the Daily News reported.
Paparazzi were in tow, and one of them kicked a security guard, who called police, the newspaper reported.
"LAPD took a battery report from the security guard but the paparazzi wasn't there," said LAPD spokesman Mike Lopez. "We're looking for a male, with a camera."
Labels:
Britney Spears,
civic center,
court,
divorce,
gossip web site,
los angeles,
police
Janice Dickinson on Britney: ‘I’d slap her silly!’
Self-proclaimed original supermodel also says Lynne Spears should be jailed
The always outspoken Janice Dickinson sat down with Access Hollywood's Tony Potts and unleashed her thoughts on Britney Spears, Spears' mom and Dr. Phil.
Dickinson feels in order to get to the root of Spears' problems, Lynne Spears should be held responsible.
"My opinion on Britney Spears, is Mrs. [Lynne] Spears should be jailed. Britney's mom is responsible for all this stuff going on."
As for how Dickinson would handle Spears?
"I'd slap her silly! I'd slap the living s**t out of her!" Dickinson told Potts.
After taking a moment to seriously consider the question, Dickinson told Potts, "I would beg Britney just to give it all up. I would say. 'You're rich enough! Give it up and try to focus on the two boys.' I seriously hope that Britney doesn't kill herself. I seriously hope that she doesn't damage herself."
But Spears and her mother were not the only ones Dickinson was taking on. As for her thoughts on Dr. Phil, the former model said, "I think Dr. Phil is pathetic. Pathetic sensationalism."
Dickinson has faced her own set of demons. Now in recovery, Dickinson has had multiple stints in rehab. She credits the Alcoholic Anonymous Twelve Step program with saving her life.
"I am an alcoholic and a chemically dependent person, said Dickinson. "I would just beg Britney to try to find a twelve-step program for her that works, because, like [with] myself, it can happen again and again until you finally find it. Thank God I found it."
Dickinson and all her antics can be seen Tuesdays on Oxygen on "The Janice Dickinson Modeling Agency."
The always outspoken Janice Dickinson sat down with Access Hollywood's Tony Potts and unleashed her thoughts on Britney Spears, Spears' mom and Dr. Phil.
Dickinson feels in order to get to the root of Spears' problems, Lynne Spears should be held responsible.
"My opinion on Britney Spears, is Mrs. [Lynne] Spears should be jailed. Britney's mom is responsible for all this stuff going on."
As for how Dickinson would handle Spears?
"I'd slap her silly! I'd slap the living s**t out of her!" Dickinson told Potts.
After taking a moment to seriously consider the question, Dickinson told Potts, "I would beg Britney just to give it all up. I would say. 'You're rich enough! Give it up and try to focus on the two boys.' I seriously hope that Britney doesn't kill herself. I seriously hope that she doesn't damage herself."
But Spears and her mother were not the only ones Dickinson was taking on. As for her thoughts on Dr. Phil, the former model said, "I think Dr. Phil is pathetic. Pathetic sensationalism."
Dickinson has faced her own set of demons. Now in recovery, Dickinson has had multiple stints in rehab. She credits the Alcoholic Anonymous Twelve Step program with saving her life.
"I am an alcoholic and a chemically dependent person, said Dickinson. "I would just beg Britney to try to find a twelve-step program for her that works, because, like [with] myself, it can happen again and again until you finally find it. Thank God I found it."
Dickinson and all her antics can be seen Tuesdays on Oxygen on "The Janice Dickinson Modeling Agency."
Labels:
Britney Spears,
jailed,
janice dickinson,
lynne spears,
silly,
slap
Baying for blood at the Britney Spears rodeo
The gossip rags are hoping it gets worse (for Britney) so they can make a bigger profit
I HAVE long dreamed of getting ringside seats at Madison Square Garden, but my nocturnal fantasies usually centre around rock concerts or basketball games.
They certainly don’t include cowboys and bulls.
Last Saturday night, I accompanied my friend Lauren Glassberg to the Professional Bull Riders’ Invitational. Whoa, I hear you say. And whoa would be right. The PBR Invitational is a rodeo with wild bulls instead of horses.
Glassberg, a TV News reporter for WABC’s Channel 7 and a native New Yorker who should have been the fifth woman on Sex and the City, was covering the event, and, after flirting with the cowboys, we were given the best seats in the house, so close to the action that a bull kicked gravel down my cleavage.
Professional bull riding is billed as “the toughest sport on dirt”. The concept behind holding this event in New York?
The toughest sport meets the toughest city, though that didn’t seem to stop the MC from asking the crowd for “a little New York hospitality”.
Whatever that is. I felt like I had walked off the streets of true blue Manhattan into red-hot Bush country.
There were adverts for the US army and billboards for chewing tobacco, Jack Daniel’s, Wrangler jeans and pick-up trucks. Men wore Stetsons and T-shirts that read: “Real men last eight seconds.”
Everybody seemed to walk a little funny, and there was a whole lot of spitting going on.
When Jewel trotted by us to go backstage before re-emerging in the ring to sing the national anthem, we mistook her for Pamela Anderson. Big blonde hair and boobs was a definite theme.
The whole idea behind this testosterone-laced happening is that bull-riding superstars from the US, Brazil, Mexico, Australia and Canada gather to see who can stay on the bull for at least eight seconds. These guys can earn more than $4-million for their pain. And it has to hurt.
When the three-time champion of the PBR Invitational, a Brazilian named Adriano Moraes, took to the stage, Glassberg leaned over and whispered:
“Isn’t he cute?” (He is). And then: “His face is reconstructed from titanium plates.” As Moraes mounted his bull and the animal begun to buck furiously under him,
she whispered: “I wonder if they can have kids?” Good question.
Moments later, a bull named Scaredy Cat threw his rider to the ground and stomped on his ear, drawing blood. The crowd groaned. After a bull called Carlito’s Way had had his way with another cowboy, a clown began to do a rendition of Britney Spears’s Baby One More Time, which brings me to the subject of the world’s most maligned pop diva, and the bloodthirstiness that we have developed for her downfall. Before I went to the PBR Invitational, I was planning to dedicate this column to her latest meltdown. But having a mental breakdown is not a spectator sport and neither should having a hard time be one. I don’t know if she has an undiagnosed bipolar condition or if she is just highly manipulative, selfish and addicted to drugs and the media attention that she seems to court, but the vitriolic attention and the paparazzi baying for her blood even when she’s being wheeled away on a gurney cannot lead to anything but further harm for her and her children.
Make no mistake: the gossip rags who pay for the pictures are hoping it gets worse so they can make a bigger profit.
And then there are the bandwagon riders. From Dr Phil, who tried to film a special show from her hospital room (he swears the Spears family asked him to intervene), to a rock group called Bandarazzi who performed in front of the ambulance that was removing her from her home so they can include it in their music video. When she was admitted to hospital, we heard howls of outrage on newspaper websites and blogs demanding that the media stop goring her due to her apparent fragility. What needs to stop is our demand for this kind of news. If you are buying into the frenzy, obsessively refreshing TMZ.com for the latest update, know that you will have blood on your hands too should she end up like Anna Nicole Smith.
The bulls have animal-rights supporters picketing for them outside Madison Square Garden. Who does Spears have?
I HAVE long dreamed of getting ringside seats at Madison Square Garden, but my nocturnal fantasies usually centre around rock concerts or basketball games.
They certainly don’t include cowboys and bulls.
Last Saturday night, I accompanied my friend Lauren Glassberg to the Professional Bull Riders’ Invitational. Whoa, I hear you say. And whoa would be right. The PBR Invitational is a rodeo with wild bulls instead of horses.
Glassberg, a TV News reporter for WABC’s Channel 7 and a native New Yorker who should have been the fifth woman on Sex and the City, was covering the event, and, after flirting with the cowboys, we were given the best seats in the house, so close to the action that a bull kicked gravel down my cleavage.
Professional bull riding is billed as “the toughest sport on dirt”. The concept behind holding this event in New York?
The toughest sport meets the toughest city, though that didn’t seem to stop the MC from asking the crowd for “a little New York hospitality”.
Whatever that is. I felt like I had walked off the streets of true blue Manhattan into red-hot Bush country.
There were adverts for the US army and billboards for chewing tobacco, Jack Daniel’s, Wrangler jeans and pick-up trucks. Men wore Stetsons and T-shirts that read: “Real men last eight seconds.”
Everybody seemed to walk a little funny, and there was a whole lot of spitting going on.
When Jewel trotted by us to go backstage before re-emerging in the ring to sing the national anthem, we mistook her for Pamela Anderson. Big blonde hair and boobs was a definite theme.
The whole idea behind this testosterone-laced happening is that bull-riding superstars from the US, Brazil, Mexico, Australia and Canada gather to see who can stay on the bull for at least eight seconds. These guys can earn more than $4-million for their pain. And it has to hurt.
When the three-time champion of the PBR Invitational, a Brazilian named Adriano Moraes, took to the stage, Glassberg leaned over and whispered:
“Isn’t he cute?” (He is). And then: “His face is reconstructed from titanium plates.” As Moraes mounted his bull and the animal begun to buck furiously under him,
she whispered: “I wonder if they can have kids?” Good question.
Moments later, a bull named Scaredy Cat threw his rider to the ground and stomped on his ear, drawing blood. The crowd groaned. After a bull called Carlito’s Way had had his way with another cowboy, a clown began to do a rendition of Britney Spears’s Baby One More Time, which brings me to the subject of the world’s most maligned pop diva, and the bloodthirstiness that we have developed for her downfall. Before I went to the PBR Invitational, I was planning to dedicate this column to her latest meltdown. But having a mental breakdown is not a spectator sport and neither should having a hard time be one. I don’t know if she has an undiagnosed bipolar condition or if she is just highly manipulative, selfish and addicted to drugs and the media attention that she seems to court, but the vitriolic attention and the paparazzi baying for her blood even when she’s being wheeled away on a gurney cannot lead to anything but further harm for her and her children.
Make no mistake: the gossip rags who pay for the pictures are hoping it gets worse so they can make a bigger profit.
And then there are the bandwagon riders. From Dr Phil, who tried to film a special show from her hospital room (he swears the Spears family asked him to intervene), to a rock group called Bandarazzi who performed in front of the ambulance that was removing her from her home so they can include it in their music video. When she was admitted to hospital, we heard howls of outrage on newspaper websites and blogs demanding that the media stop goring her due to her apparent fragility. What needs to stop is our demand for this kind of news. If you are buying into the frenzy, obsessively refreshing TMZ.com for the latest update, know that you will have blood on your hands too should she end up like Anna Nicole Smith.
The bulls have animal-rights supporters picketing for them outside Madison Square Garden. Who does Spears have?
Labels:
baying for,
blood,
Britney Spears,
gossip rags,
profit,
rodeo
Britney Spears To Become A Muslim?
Britney Spears is supposedly so in love with her new man she's considering converting to Islam to marry him.
In other plans demonstrating how fragile her mental state is at the moment, friends report the troubled popstar has also considered faking her own death in order to reinvent herself.
A pal tells the News Of The World, "She's been discussing all these wacky plans to reinvent her life. She has discussed in depth a fake death, moving abroad and even plastic surgery. It is scary to hear her romanticise about these insane plans.
"She believes she could spend six months away and make a comeback as Britney the world's best mother."
Britney has also talked about how important her new man, paparazzi boss Adnan Ghalib, is to her now.
She reportedly told a doubting relative of his over the phone, "We're taking care of each other. He's the only one who understands me. It's serious."
In other plans demonstrating how fragile her mental state is at the moment, friends report the troubled popstar has also considered faking her own death in order to reinvent herself.
A pal tells the News Of The World, "She's been discussing all these wacky plans to reinvent her life. She has discussed in depth a fake death, moving abroad and even plastic surgery. It is scary to hear her romanticise about these insane plans.
"She believes she could spend six months away and make a comeback as Britney the world's best mother."
Britney has also talked about how important her new man, paparazzi boss Adnan Ghalib, is to her now.
She reportedly told a doubting relative of his over the phone, "We're taking care of each other. He's the only one who understands me. It's serious."
Labels:
britney spears,
converting to,
islam,
marry,
mental state,
mother
Spears Family 'Not Nervous' Over Britney's Latest Hearing
Though a custody issue is before the court tomorrow, Access Hollywood has learned that Lynne Spears is not nervous. Lynne Spears’ “fears are the same now as they were [before],” said a source close to the family. She doesn’t believe that it “going one way or the other being ideal for the children,” added the source. The issues are “deeper than a court decision for the kids.”
Lynne Spears and her family have been discussing options to help Britney, but going to court to have her committed doesn’t seem likely. The family feels they are “up against a brick wall because [Britney] is an adult and unless [she poses] danger against herself or others,” there is little they can do. And they “don’t think there’s a loophole,” relates the source.
Lynne and Britney have been in contact a couple of times during the past two turbulent weeks. “It’s always Britney who initiates the contact,” said the family source, who explained that it’s never verbal. Instead, Britney text messages Lynne, and often does not respond to her mother’s replies. “Britney’s in more control that way. She’s more comfortable texting because she doesn’t have to listen to her mother. She doesn’t have to listen to anything she doesn’t want to.”
On the subject of control, the family feels Sam Lufti has “an awful lot of control” over Britney. The Spears don't understand what control Lufti has over Britney or why, but they realize he “can get Britney to listen.” Very few people who know the Spears clan feel they “have any confidence in what [Lufti] says to her” and whether he has her best interests at heart. Nor do the Spears know “anything” about her new love interest, paparazzo Adnan Ghalib.
Right now, Lynne Spears is staying out of the public spotlight in Kentwood, Louisiana, with her 16-year-old daughter Jamie Lynn. Lynne "can’t be focusing just on Britney. Jamie Lynn needs some attention,” says the inside source, who noted that for a bit, the young pregnant “Zoe 101” star was “resentful” that all the attention was on her big sister. Lynne Spears is “trying to find some balance,” said the source.
Friends in Kentwood are now proud of Jamie Lynn, who said no when others questioned whether she should keep her baby or not. “She’s trying to be a good momma” and plans to “raise [the baby] in Kentwood, in a community,” said the Spears confidante. And though Jamie Lynn and Casey Aldridge, the father of her child, are on good terms, they are “not allowed to see each other [all the time]. There are strict rules about how often they can see each other,” explained the source, who added that the restrictions were placed on them by both the children’s parents. Still, Jamie Lynne and Casey speak regularly on their cell phones.
Jamie Lynne also speaks to her older sister. "Britney’s more accepting of Jamie Lynn than of parental advice and authority,” said the source, adding, “[Jamie Lynn’s] no threat to her.”
For the time being, the family remains hopeful, but feel their "hands are tied."
Lynne Spears and her family have been discussing options to help Britney, but going to court to have her committed doesn’t seem likely. The family feels they are “up against a brick wall because [Britney] is an adult and unless [she poses] danger against herself or others,” there is little they can do. And they “don’t think there’s a loophole,” relates the source.
Lynne and Britney have been in contact a couple of times during the past two turbulent weeks. “It’s always Britney who initiates the contact,” said the family source, who explained that it’s never verbal. Instead, Britney text messages Lynne, and often does not respond to her mother’s replies. “Britney’s in more control that way. She’s more comfortable texting because she doesn’t have to listen to her mother. She doesn’t have to listen to anything she doesn’t want to.”
On the subject of control, the family feels Sam Lufti has “an awful lot of control” over Britney. The Spears don't understand what control Lufti has over Britney or why, but they realize he “can get Britney to listen.” Very few people who know the Spears clan feel they “have any confidence in what [Lufti] says to her” and whether he has her best interests at heart. Nor do the Spears know “anything” about her new love interest, paparazzo Adnan Ghalib.
Right now, Lynne Spears is staying out of the public spotlight in Kentwood, Louisiana, with her 16-year-old daughter Jamie Lynn. Lynne "can’t be focusing just on Britney. Jamie Lynn needs some attention,” says the inside source, who noted that for a bit, the young pregnant “Zoe 101” star was “resentful” that all the attention was on her big sister. Lynne Spears is “trying to find some balance,” said the source.
Friends in Kentwood are now proud of Jamie Lynn, who said no when others questioned whether she should keep her baby or not. “She’s trying to be a good momma” and plans to “raise [the baby] in Kentwood, in a community,” said the Spears confidante. And though Jamie Lynn and Casey Aldridge, the father of her child, are on good terms, they are “not allowed to see each other [all the time]. There are strict rules about how often they can see each other,” explained the source, who added that the restrictions were placed on them by both the children’s parents. Still, Jamie Lynne and Casey speak regularly on their cell phones.
Jamie Lynne also speaks to her older sister. "Britney’s more accepting of Jamie Lynn than of parental advice and authority,” said the source, adding, “[Jamie Lynn’s] no threat to her.”
For the time being, the family remains hopeful, but feel their "hands are tied."
Labels:
Britney Spears,
britney's family,
children,
court,
lynne spears
Britney Spears and Adnan Grahib: now they're starting to look alike!
Yikes! When did this happen?! Were we just not paying enough attention (surely not?)? Or is it just that we hadn't seen enough pictures of them actually, erm, standing next to each other?
Whatever the reason, Britney Spears and her boyfriend (and I use the term in its loosest, celebrity sense) Adnan Grahib seem to be morphing into one another.
Dark hair - check. Big dark sunglasses - check. Summery cotton clothes - check. Strange facial hair - erm, not quite check. But you get the point.
Stop this madness now!
Whatever the reason, Britney Spears and her boyfriend (and I use the term in its loosest, celebrity sense) Adnan Grahib seem to be morphing into one another.
Dark hair - check. Big dark sunglasses - check. Summery cotton clothes - check. Strange facial hair - erm, not quite check. But you get the point.
Stop this madness now!
Labels:
adnan grahib,
boyfriend,
Britney Spears,
look alike.
Britney Spears: "I´m Too Hot For Clothes"
Britney Spears reportedly told police she is 'too hot' for clothes during an emotional stand off at her LA home last week.
The troubled pop star refused to get dressed when the authorities stepped in after she refused to hand back her children to their father after they visited her last Thursday.
Insiders say Britney spent three hours locked in the master bathroom of her home with her youngest son Jayden James according to tmz.
The troubled pop star refused to get dressed when the authorities stepped in after she refused to hand back her children to their father after they visited her last Thursday.
Insiders say Britney spent three hours locked in the master bathroom of her home with her youngest son Jayden James according to tmz.
Britney Spears wears dress from wedding to Kevin Federline
BRITNEY Spears' latest fashion faux pas was spotted by paparazzi who caught her wearing her old wedding dress while out with her new boyfriend Adnan Ghalib.Reports in British newspapers report today that Spears' new man has shacked up with the fallen pop princess and concocted a plan to marry the star in an attempt to secure her fortune and lucrative exclusive picture deals. Spears is reportedly convinced a new marriage will help her win back her children who are in the custody of her ex Kevin Federline. The fallen star was snapped while wearing the tiny, white lace wedding dress she wore for her second wedding with K-Fed.
Britney gave the dress its first outing at her wedding reception with father of her two sons. After a whirlwind two-week romance with Ghalib, the pop star has apparently told friends she wants to marry the photographer and convert to Islam. The two recently feld LA for a romantic getaway after she had a flat tyre on Sunset Boulevard. Spears, 26, has been in hiding in Los Angeles with Ghalib since her public meltdown last week which saw her lose custody of her two sons to Federline. Her latest public appearance also comes after Spears' family criticised TV host Dr Phil McGraw for speaknig to the media about her fragile mental condition. It was claimed that during a phone call to a relative, the photographer said he had deep feelings for the star, insisting they had discussed marriage. Britney also apparently chipped during the phone call and said: "We're taking care of each other. He's the only one who understands me. It's serious." The mixed-up pop princess then extended an invitation to her lover's family to visit them in the US when she has got over her problems. The biggest of which is probably tomorrow's custody hearing which will decide whether she will be able to see children Sean Preston, two, and one-year-old Jayden James. Reports in the Daily Mail and TMZ.com state the court hearing Last night a source close to Britney said: "Monday's court hearing is D-Day for her and the kids." "While she's been swanning around with Adnan, Kevin's been preparing for the court showdown to end them all. "He has no confidence in her ability to look after either herself or the children." However, a source close to Birmingham-born photographer painted a different picture and revealed how Ghalib has boasted to friends about their wild relationship and drug-fuelled romps. "He said he'd 'struck gold' in all ways and was going to keep hold of her for as long as he could." One of his relatives has also stepped in and commented on the relationship. "All he wanted to do was get close enough for some special pictures. "But now he daren't lift a camera when he's with heror she'll rumble him and kick him out. "So instead he's cleverly changed tack, says he's planning a long-term relationship with Britney and that they have discussed marriage. "He is still wed so he knows he can't do anything until there's a divorce from his wife. He's probably working on that already." A close friend of Spears has also revealed how fragile the star is at the moment. "She's been discussing all these wacky plans to reinvent her life and convince the courts she is a good mother. "She has discussed in depth a fake death, moving abroad and even plastic surgery. "It is scary to hear her romanticise about these insane plans. "She believes she could spend six months away and make a comeback as Britney the world's best mother." It has been claimed that Ghalib is planning to make a fortune out his relationship with Britney and that he has been plotting to steal the singer's heart since 2006. A woman who Ghalib tried to pursue in the past, Jennifer Dwyer has come out and publicly warned Spears to stay away from the paparazzo, saying: "It is no exaggeration to say he is the most dangerous, evil man I have ever met. He makes women fall in love with him and when they are no longer any use to him he tosses them aside." Dwyer fell for Ghalib when he approached her in her home town New Orleans in November 2006. Things came to an end when she realised just how obesessed Ghalib had become with Spears when she went to see him in LA "I flew all that way to visit but did not see him once in two weeks. He said he was working too hard following Britney and that she was the person who was going to make him millions so had to come before me. "He kept saying, 'Oh my God she is so hot, she has an amazing a*** and she is going to make me rich. I wanted to die. I couldn't believe the man I'd fallen for could be so cruel. "I could just about stomach the fact he had a wife, but when there became four of us in our relationship I had to dump him." Dwyer warned: "Britney is welcome to him. If I could say one thing to her it would be, 'Get out now.'" Adnan, 35, grew up in Small Heath, Birmingham, where his mum Saghar and dad Hussain are strict Muslims who attend their local mosque daily. Now family friends of Adnan reckon his family would only accept Britney if she changed religion. A friend said: "Adnan's mother and father are very religious and go to the mosque every day. "They are strict when it comes to their religion and would never accept a non-Muslim into the family, let alone a white girl. "If Britney and Adnan were serious about each other, then she would have to change her religion, and even then they may have difficulty accepting her. "Some Muslims do not insist on conversion, but I know Adnan's family well and they would want Britney to change." He added: "The Ghalibs are very good people and well respected in the area. I don't think they would be very happy about this relationship. "They lead a very quiet and respectable lifestyle. They have two daughters in this country and they have both had arranged marriages to fellow Muslims." Reports on Friday suggested that the pop star may even be looking to move to Birmingham with her boyfriend to escape the "madness" in Los Angeles. It is not known if Adnan has another home in Birmingham, or if the celebrity couple would live with his parents. Mr and Mrs Ghalib are believed to have fled to a secret address in London to escape the media frenzy after news of the relationship first broke. "Britney is on the edge and it's ironic that the only person she feels she can turn to is a paparazzo," one US source said. "It's like the lamb going to stay with the wolf pack." Meanwhile in other breaking news, Amy Winehouse has been spotted getting cosy with her record producer Mark Ronson. The other troubled music star who recently dye her hair blonde was seen leaving her flat late at night and then spent part of the evening in the studio before finally arriving at a hotel at 5.30am where they continued to party. Ronson collaborated with Winehouse, 24, on the single Valerie and has been credited for some of the success of her album Back to Black.
Britney gave the dress its first outing at her wedding reception with father of her two sons. After a whirlwind two-week romance with Ghalib, the pop star has apparently told friends she wants to marry the photographer and convert to Islam. The two recently feld LA for a romantic getaway after she had a flat tyre on Sunset Boulevard. Spears, 26, has been in hiding in Los Angeles with Ghalib since her public meltdown last week which saw her lose custody of her two sons to Federline. Her latest public appearance also comes after Spears' family criticised TV host Dr Phil McGraw for speaknig to the media about her fragile mental condition. It was claimed that during a phone call to a relative, the photographer said he had deep feelings for the star, insisting they had discussed marriage. Britney also apparently chipped during the phone call and said: "We're taking care of each other. He's the only one who understands me. It's serious." The mixed-up pop princess then extended an invitation to her lover's family to visit them in the US when she has got over her problems. The biggest of which is probably tomorrow's custody hearing which will decide whether she will be able to see children Sean Preston, two, and one-year-old Jayden James. Reports in the Daily Mail and TMZ.com state the court hearing Last night a source close to Britney said: "Monday's court hearing is D-Day for her and the kids." "While she's been swanning around with Adnan, Kevin's been preparing for the court showdown to end them all. "He has no confidence in her ability to look after either herself or the children." However, a source close to Birmingham-born photographer painted a different picture and revealed how Ghalib has boasted to friends about their wild relationship and drug-fuelled romps. "He said he'd 'struck gold' in all ways and was going to keep hold of her for as long as he could." One of his relatives has also stepped in and commented on the relationship. "All he wanted to do was get close enough for some special pictures. "But now he daren't lift a camera when he's with heror she'll rumble him and kick him out. "So instead he's cleverly changed tack, says he's planning a long-term relationship with Britney and that they have discussed marriage. "He is still wed so he knows he can't do anything until there's a divorce from his wife. He's probably working on that already." A close friend of Spears has also revealed how fragile the star is at the moment. "She's been discussing all these wacky plans to reinvent her life and convince the courts she is a good mother. "She has discussed in depth a fake death, moving abroad and even plastic surgery. "It is scary to hear her romanticise about these insane plans. "She believes she could spend six months away and make a comeback as Britney the world's best mother." It has been claimed that Ghalib is planning to make a fortune out his relationship with Britney and that he has been plotting to steal the singer's heart since 2006. A woman who Ghalib tried to pursue in the past, Jennifer Dwyer has come out and publicly warned Spears to stay away from the paparazzo, saying: "It is no exaggeration to say he is the most dangerous, evil man I have ever met. He makes women fall in love with him and when they are no longer any use to him he tosses them aside." Dwyer fell for Ghalib when he approached her in her home town New Orleans in November 2006. Things came to an end when she realised just how obesessed Ghalib had become with Spears when she went to see him in LA "I flew all that way to visit but did not see him once in two weeks. He said he was working too hard following Britney and that she was the person who was going to make him millions so had to come before me. "He kept saying, 'Oh my God she is so hot, she has an amazing a*** and she is going to make me rich. I wanted to die. I couldn't believe the man I'd fallen for could be so cruel. "I could just about stomach the fact he had a wife, but when there became four of us in our relationship I had to dump him." Dwyer warned: "Britney is welcome to him. If I could say one thing to her it would be, 'Get out now.'" Adnan, 35, grew up in Small Heath, Birmingham, where his mum Saghar and dad Hussain are strict Muslims who attend their local mosque daily. Now family friends of Adnan reckon his family would only accept Britney if she changed religion. A friend said: "Adnan's mother and father are very religious and go to the mosque every day. "They are strict when it comes to their religion and would never accept a non-Muslim into the family, let alone a white girl. "If Britney and Adnan were serious about each other, then she would have to change her religion, and even then they may have difficulty accepting her. "Some Muslims do not insist on conversion, but I know Adnan's family well and they would want Britney to change." He added: "The Ghalibs are very good people and well respected in the area. I don't think they would be very happy about this relationship. "They lead a very quiet and respectable lifestyle. They have two daughters in this country and they have both had arranged marriages to fellow Muslims." Reports on Friday suggested that the pop star may even be looking to move to Birmingham with her boyfriend to escape the "madness" in Los Angeles. It is not known if Adnan has another home in Birmingham, or if the celebrity couple would live with his parents. Mr and Mrs Ghalib are believed to have fled to a secret address in London to escape the media frenzy after news of the relationship first broke. "Britney is on the edge and it's ironic that the only person she feels she can turn to is a paparazzo," one US source said. "It's like the lamb going to stay with the wolf pack." Meanwhile in other breaking news, Amy Winehouse has been spotted getting cosy with her record producer Mark Ronson. The other troubled music star who recently dye her hair blonde was seen leaving her flat late at night and then spent part of the evening in the studio before finally arriving at a hotel at 5.30am where they continued to party. Ronson collaborated with Winehouse, 24, on the single Valerie and has been credited for some of the success of her album Back to Black.
Spears Due in Court for Major Hearing
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Britney Spears' effort to regain visitation rights with her two small children is back on the court docket for what an attorney described Sunday as "the most significant hearing in the case so far."
Police and emergency medical technicians who were summoned to her home Jan. 3 in a standoff involving her refusal to return the boys to her ex-husband, Kevin Federline, will testify Monday, probably behind closed doors, his lawyer said.
"I don't know if she will be there," Mark Vincent Kaplan told The Associated Press, but he suggested she would have to appear in person if she wants to press her request to see her children. "You can't phone this one in."
If Spears comes to court, Kaplan said she would be expected to testify. "She will have the opportunity to persuade the court that she can have some visitation under monitored conditions," he said.
Phone and e-mail messages requesting comment from Spears' attorneys Sunday afternoon were not immediately returned.
Kaplan said he knew it was only a temporary measure when he obtained emergency court orders two weeks ago granting sole physical and legal custody to Federline.
"These are very, very draconian orders," Kaplan said. "Because of that the court wanted to have a hearing to give her and her attorneys the opportunity to refute some of the declarations."
"No judge likes making orders terminating a person's involvement with their kids," Kaplan said.
Meanwhile, police were preparing for a media frenzy in the downtown civic center if Spears appears, issuing warnings Sunday that vehicle and pedestrian violations would lead to citations.
Kaplan said that if Spears comes to court, he would like to cross-examine her on the events of Jan. 3.
Police were called by a court appointed monitor when Spears refused to hand over Jayden James, 1, and Sean Preston, 2, to Federline's security guard and locked herself in a room with one of the boys.
Spears was taken to a hospital in an ambulance chased by photographers and was placed on an involuntary hold on grounds she was a danger to herself or others. Spears left Cedars-Sinai Medical Center a day and half later.
The day after the incident, Kaplan presented papers to Commissioner Scott Gordon who awarded sole legal and physical custody of the boys to Federline and suspended Spears' visitation rights.
Kaplan said if visitation is restored, it would be under more restrictions than those originally imposed by Gordon.
One expert in family law agreed that the hearing provides Spears her only hope of resuming visits with her children before a custody trial scheduled for April.
"Usually, when someone has the threat of losing their children, they'll do anything to get their children back," said Lynn Soodik, who predicted visitation rights could be restored if Spears appears and offers an explanation.
"This is not a punishment for her," Soodik said. "It's what's in the best interest of the children. The judge has to carefully weigh their safety versus not seeing their mother. It's drastic to have no contact with their mother."
Soodik said Gordon could order monitored visitation in a location away from Spears' home "in some kind of setting where the judge can assure that she wouldn't be able to lock the kids in a room with her."
Police and emergency medical technicians who were summoned to her home Jan. 3 in a standoff involving her refusal to return the boys to her ex-husband, Kevin Federline, will testify Monday, probably behind closed doors, his lawyer said.
"I don't know if she will be there," Mark Vincent Kaplan told The Associated Press, but he suggested she would have to appear in person if she wants to press her request to see her children. "You can't phone this one in."
If Spears comes to court, Kaplan said she would be expected to testify. "She will have the opportunity to persuade the court that she can have some visitation under monitored conditions," he said.
Phone and e-mail messages requesting comment from Spears' attorneys Sunday afternoon were not immediately returned.
Kaplan said he knew it was only a temporary measure when he obtained emergency court orders two weeks ago granting sole physical and legal custody to Federline.
"These are very, very draconian orders," Kaplan said. "Because of that the court wanted to have a hearing to give her and her attorneys the opportunity to refute some of the declarations."
"No judge likes making orders terminating a person's involvement with their kids," Kaplan said.
Meanwhile, police were preparing for a media frenzy in the downtown civic center if Spears appears, issuing warnings Sunday that vehicle and pedestrian violations would lead to citations.
Kaplan said that if Spears comes to court, he would like to cross-examine her on the events of Jan. 3.
Police were called by a court appointed monitor when Spears refused to hand over Jayden James, 1, and Sean Preston, 2, to Federline's security guard and locked herself in a room with one of the boys.
Spears was taken to a hospital in an ambulance chased by photographers and was placed on an involuntary hold on grounds she was a danger to herself or others. Spears left Cedars-Sinai Medical Center a day and half later.
The day after the incident, Kaplan presented papers to Commissioner Scott Gordon who awarded sole legal and physical custody of the boys to Federline and suspended Spears' visitation rights.
Kaplan said if visitation is restored, it would be under more restrictions than those originally imposed by Gordon.
One expert in family law agreed that the hearing provides Spears her only hope of resuming visits with her children before a custody trial scheduled for April.
"Usually, when someone has the threat of losing their children, they'll do anything to get their children back," said Lynn Soodik, who predicted visitation rights could be restored if Spears appears and offers an explanation.
"This is not a punishment for her," Soodik said. "It's what's in the best interest of the children. The judge has to carefully weigh their safety versus not seeing their mother. It's drastic to have no contact with their mother."
Soodik said Gordon could order monitored visitation in a location away from Spears' home "in some kind of setting where the judge can assure that she wouldn't be able to lock the kids in a room with her."
Britney Spears to get one more chance at visitation rights on Monday
Lawyers, cops, emergency workers, and such will go before Commissioner Scott Gordon on Monday to dicuss whether or not Britney Spears is sane enough to ever visit with her two sons again. The big question is: will Britney show up for the hearing?
Spears isn't required to attend, but according to TMZ the trainwreck's attorney wants her there. Britney's legal team knows that someone will have to defend her actions following the televised breakdown and standoff at her house the week before last.
Britney's attorney seems sick of having to stand up for Spears when she won't even show up to defend herself. TMZ is also reporting that the LAPD refuses to help Britney get in and out of the courtroom if she shows up. I guess they too are tired of dealing with her too.
The former pop star needs to put together a solid plan tomorrow or she may not even get a chance at visitation rights with her children between now and her next trial in April.
Monday's hearing is guaranteed to be juicy whether Britney shows or not.
Spears isn't required to attend, but according to TMZ the trainwreck's attorney wants her there. Britney's legal team knows that someone will have to defend her actions following the televised breakdown and standoff at her house the week before last.
Britney's attorney seems sick of having to stand up for Spears when she won't even show up to defend herself. TMZ is also reporting that the LAPD refuses to help Britney get in and out of the courtroom if she shows up. I guess they too are tired of dealing with her too.
The former pop star needs to put together a solid plan tomorrow or she may not even get a chance at visitation rights with her children between now and her next trial in April.
Monday's hearing is guaranteed to be juicy whether Britney shows or not.
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A.P. Says It Wants to Know Everything About Britney Spears
The Associated Press is bolstering its entertainment news coverage — and for many readers and viewers, Britney Spears is nothing if not entertaining.
An internal memorandum from The A.P.’s Los Angeles bureau dictating coverage of the troubled pop star was published by several media blogs on Tuesday, prompting some punch lines at the news service’s expense.
“Now and for the foreseeable future, virtually everything involving Britney is a big deal,” Frank Baker, the Los Angeles assistant bureau chief, wrote on Tuesday morning, three days after Ms. Spears was released from the hospital where she had been admitted in the wake of a custody dispute.
“Boy, that qualifies as an understatement,” Tirdad Derakhshani, a Philadelphia Inquirer writer remarked in the online column SideShow. On Romenesko, a popular online media site owned by the Poynter Institute, a commenter added, “Not a good day for journalism as a discipline.”
In the memo, Mr. Baker said that not every rumor should be published by The Associated Press. But “we want to pay attention to what others are reporting and seek to confirm those stories that WE feel warrant the wire,” he wrote, adding, “And when we determine that we’ll write something, we must expedite it.”
In an interview last week, Lou Ferrera, the managing editor for sports, entertainment and multimedia, defended Mr. Baker’s message.
“If you’re an editor in L.A. and Britney Spears is in your backyard,” he said, “you want to know everything about that story.”
While not directly related, the renewed interest in Ms. Spears comes as The Associated Press is putting new emphasis on entertainment coverage. Mr. Ferrera said the news service’s clients — more than 1,500 daily papers and thousands of other media outlets — were yearning for more photos and videos of celebrities.
Alluding to the memo, Mr. Ferrera said: “You can exchange Britney’s name with writers’ strike, with Paris Hilton, with the Dennis Quaid hospital problems. You can name any story — we can do a better job in breaking entertainment news.”
Last week The Associated Press announced a new position, director for entertainment content, to direct its multimedia efforts. Mr. Ferrera said The A.P. planned to add 22 positions to expand entertainment coverage, mainly in Los Angeles, New York and London, in the coming year. Some staff members will be moved from other areas to fill the jobs.
“We’re investing in a lot of areas,” Mr. Ferrera said, citing sports and business and financial news as other examples. “It’s really part of a larger strategy for The A.P. to do what it’s always done well.”
An internal memorandum from The A.P.’s Los Angeles bureau dictating coverage of the troubled pop star was published by several media blogs on Tuesday, prompting some punch lines at the news service’s expense.
“Now and for the foreseeable future, virtually everything involving Britney is a big deal,” Frank Baker, the Los Angeles assistant bureau chief, wrote on Tuesday morning, three days after Ms. Spears was released from the hospital where she had been admitted in the wake of a custody dispute.
“Boy, that qualifies as an understatement,” Tirdad Derakhshani, a Philadelphia Inquirer writer remarked in the online column SideShow. On Romenesko, a popular online media site owned by the Poynter Institute, a commenter added, “Not a good day for journalism as a discipline.”
In the memo, Mr. Baker said that not every rumor should be published by The Associated Press. But “we want to pay attention to what others are reporting and seek to confirm those stories that WE feel warrant the wire,” he wrote, adding, “And when we determine that we’ll write something, we must expedite it.”
In an interview last week, Lou Ferrera, the managing editor for sports, entertainment and multimedia, defended Mr. Baker’s message.
“If you’re an editor in L.A. and Britney Spears is in your backyard,” he said, “you want to know everything about that story.”
While not directly related, the renewed interest in Ms. Spears comes as The Associated Press is putting new emphasis on entertainment coverage. Mr. Ferrera said the news service’s clients — more than 1,500 daily papers and thousands of other media outlets — were yearning for more photos and videos of celebrities.
Alluding to the memo, Mr. Ferrera said: “You can exchange Britney’s name with writers’ strike, with Paris Hilton, with the Dennis Quaid hospital problems. You can name any story — we can do a better job in breaking entertainment news.”
Last week The Associated Press announced a new position, director for entertainment content, to direct its multimedia efforts. Mr. Ferrera said The A.P. planned to add 22 positions to expand entertainment coverage, mainly in Los Angeles, New York and London, in the coming year. Some staff members will be moved from other areas to fill the jobs.
“We’re investing in a lot of areas,” Mr. Ferrera said, citing sports and business and financial news as other examples. “It’s really part of a larger strategy for The A.P. to do what it’s always done well.”
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Spears in touch with mother, says lawyer
Although Britney Spears and her mother, Lynne, have been regularly feuding, they remain in touch through the troubled singer's lawyers.
PageSix.com quoted Michael Flanagan, Spears attorney in her driving without a license case, as saying: "I talk quite frequently with Britney's mom, and her manager Sam Lutfi."
Flanagan refused to reveal the details of the conversations, but said they cover updates on the case's progress.
"Lynne is a great lady and loves her daughter dearly," he added.
Meanwhile, sources close to the Spears' custody lawyer, Anne Kiley, said that she is in touch with Lynne as well.
Although the mother and daughter's relationship is far from ideal, "there is a lot of love between Britney and her mom, and they have a very complex relationship", said the source
PageSix.com quoted Michael Flanagan, Spears attorney in her driving without a license case, as saying: "I talk quite frequently with Britney's mom, and her manager Sam Lutfi."
Flanagan refused to reveal the details of the conversations, but said they cover updates on the case's progress.
"Lynne is a great lady and loves her daughter dearly," he added.
Meanwhile, sources close to the Spears' custody lawyer, Anne Kiley, said that she is in touch with Lynne as well.
Although the mother and daughter's relationship is far from ideal, "there is a lot of love between Britney and her mom, and they have a very complex relationship", said the source
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Thursday, January 10, 2008
Access Investigates: Mental Illness In Hollywood
The shocking photos of Britney Spears, being strapped to a gurney and taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center last week, showed the world that the pop star’s condition has taken a tragic turn.Sources close to the family believe Britney is suffering from mental illness. If that is the case, then Britney is not alone among Hollywood stars. Being a star doesn’t offer a free pass from mental disorders and humor may be a way to hide. Funnyman Owen Wilson made headlines last year when he tried to take his own life by cutting his wrists, while another well-known comedian, Drew Carrey, attempted suicide twice before the age of 21, eventually finding solace in self-help books.“Living in Hollywood, you can get disconnected from everybody. You can feel like you are the only one,” Drew previously told Access Hollywood. Margot Kidder, who once played Lois Lane, gave up the Hollywood life for a quiet Montana mountain town. “You couldn’t pay me a million bucks a day to move back there,” she said.A lifelong manic-depressive who had struggled to hide her disease, she was exposed after a 1996 episode when she was found in disarray in a stranger’s backyard.“It made me do my homework and do something about it as opposed to shoving it back into the closet as I’d done for so many years,” Margot once told Access.Anne Heche’s neurosis was similarly revealed after a very public meltdown.In 2000, shortly after her break-up with Ellen DeGeneres, Anne was found wandering the streets of Fresno, California, rambling about aliens and calling herself Celestia, an episode she blamed on childhood abuse.But perhaps no one has spoken as honestly and as openly as former “Terminator” star Linda Hamilton, who suffers from being bi-polar. The condition is one, which many think Britney suffers from. It has also plagued “Star Wars” siren Carrie Fisher, media mogul Ted Turner and child star Patti Duke.As for Brooke Shields, she suffered severe post-partum depression after the birth of her first child, Rowan.“She was ruining my plans. Because of her, I couldn't do what I wanted,” Brooke explained of some of her thoughts at the time.Through medication, therapy and exercise, Brooke overcame her depression and fell in love with her daughter. But rather than let other women face the condition alone, she chose to write a book, sharing her experience.“It was important for me,” Brooke said.
Dr. Phil Criticized for Britney Brouhaha
Dr. Phil McGraw arrives at the Museum of Television and Radio's annual gala in Beverly Hills, Calif., in this Oct. 30, 2006, file photo. McGraw has pulled the plug on plans for a one-hour show that was to examine Britney Spears' latest public meltdown. In a statement posted Monday, Jan. 7, 2008, on his Web site, McGraw said the 26-year-old pop star's situation was "too intense" for him to go forward with the show. He didn't say whether he planned to reschedule. Spears was hospitalized Thursday night after a child custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline resulted in an hours-long standoff with police. On Friday, a court commissioner gave sole physical and legal custody of 1-year-old Jayden James and 2-year-old Sean Preston to Federline. McGraw said he met with Spears for an hour Saturday before she left the hospital. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles, file)
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Dr. Phil's public brand of tough love sometimes makes him tough to love, particularly among mental health professionals who are accusing television's self-help guru of making an uncalled-for house call on Britney Spears this week.
Although Dr. Phil — whose full name is Phillip McGraw — announced Monday that he is shelving plans for a show on Spears' latest breakdown, some in the mental health community say just showing up at her hospital room last week was going too far.
"It's true people sometimes need to be placed under involuntary mental health treatment because they can't take care of themselves," veteran psychiatrist Dr. Jeffrey Sugar said of the 26-year-old Spears. "But there's a difference between being detained involuntarily for psychological treatment and being forced to endure Dr. Phil involuntarily."
Spears, who appeared to have enough trouble already, saw McGraw barge into her life Saturday when he showed up at her room at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center as she was about to be discharged. She had been taken there Thursday after an hours-long standoff with police that was triggered by her custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline.
A court commissioner on Friday gave Federline full custody of sons, 1-year-old Jayden James and 2-year-old Sean Preston.
McGraw said he was invited to the hospital by Spears' family.
Sugar, chief of child and adolescent psychiatry, crisis and emergency service for the University of Southern California, said that isn't good enough. Late adolescent or not, he said, Spears is still an adult who has the right to decide who she lets into her hospital room.
In a statement posted on his Web site Monday, McGraw said he had hoped to film a show this week that might help other families facing the same troubles as Spears.
That's assuming, of course, they have been in and out of rehab in recent months, arrived in public in short skirts and no underwear, shaved their heads bald, run over a photographer's foot, banged up a car in a parking lot and left without notifying the owner, and attacked another car with an umbrella.
But in the end even McGraw, never too shy to blurt "What were you thinking?" to a troubled guest, seemed to agree that putting Spears or her family and friends in front of the cameras wasn't wise.
"Because the Spears situation is too intense at this time, and out of consideration to the family, I have made the decision not to move forward with the taping," he said on his Web site. He didn't say whether he planned to do a show later, and a spokeswoman for the show declined to elaborate.
"Certainly I think it's a good idea to stop that show dead," said Dr. Richard Harding, professor of neuropsychiatry at the University of South Carolina. "This isn't the time to be exploiting anybody and making examples out of anybody."
Sociologist Julie Albright, an expert in family therapy at USC, agreed with Harding that while McGraw's sometimes bellicose approach can be helpful under the right circumstances, Spears is in perhaps too fragile an emotional state for it.
"It looks as though her behavior has been unraveling for some time now. Frankly, it's reached a point of being pretty frightening," she said.
"People may have thought it was entertaining or funny, but really it's a cry for help, and I hope people around her will respond and get her the help she needs," Albright said.
Also, Albright said, the tough-love therapy that McGraw practices is really only the first of many steps therapists must take to change destructive behavior. What's more, she said, it really only works when the recipient is receptive.
"It's hard to do therapy or intervention in a half-hour or one hour-spot," she said. "They have these longer interventions that they follow up with. That's where important change will occur, not necessarily in the one-hour sound bite of a show."
Still, at least one pop psychologist couldn't fault McGraw for trying.
"I'm sure Dr. Phil does not want to exploit her. He has all this experience in helping people get over problems," said Dr. Joyce Brothers, who herself has been dispensing psychological advice to TV viewers for more than 30 years.
But Brothers, who like McGraw has a Ph.D. in psychology, acknowledged that key for any therapist is getting the person to listen to them.
"He has a lot to offer," Brothers said of McGraw. "But only to the person who wants it."
Although Dr. Phil — whose full name is Phillip McGraw — announced Monday that he is shelving plans for a show on Spears' latest breakdown, some in the mental health community say just showing up at her hospital room last week was going too far.
"It's true people sometimes need to be placed under involuntary mental health treatment because they can't take care of themselves," veteran psychiatrist Dr. Jeffrey Sugar said of the 26-year-old Spears. "But there's a difference between being detained involuntarily for psychological treatment and being forced to endure Dr. Phil involuntarily."
Spears, who appeared to have enough trouble already, saw McGraw barge into her life Saturday when he showed up at her room at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center as she was about to be discharged. She had been taken there Thursday after an hours-long standoff with police that was triggered by her custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline.
A court commissioner on Friday gave Federline full custody of sons, 1-year-old Jayden James and 2-year-old Sean Preston.
McGraw said he was invited to the hospital by Spears' family.
Sugar, chief of child and adolescent psychiatry, crisis and emergency service for the University of Southern California, said that isn't good enough. Late adolescent or not, he said, Spears is still an adult who has the right to decide who she lets into her hospital room.
In a statement posted on his Web site Monday, McGraw said he had hoped to film a show this week that might help other families facing the same troubles as Spears.
That's assuming, of course, they have been in and out of rehab in recent months, arrived in public in short skirts and no underwear, shaved their heads bald, run over a photographer's foot, banged up a car in a parking lot and left without notifying the owner, and attacked another car with an umbrella.
But in the end even McGraw, never too shy to blurt "What were you thinking?" to a troubled guest, seemed to agree that putting Spears or her family and friends in front of the cameras wasn't wise.
"Because the Spears situation is too intense at this time, and out of consideration to the family, I have made the decision not to move forward with the taping," he said on his Web site. He didn't say whether he planned to do a show later, and a spokeswoman for the show declined to elaborate.
"Certainly I think it's a good idea to stop that show dead," said Dr. Richard Harding, professor of neuropsychiatry at the University of South Carolina. "This isn't the time to be exploiting anybody and making examples out of anybody."
Sociologist Julie Albright, an expert in family therapy at USC, agreed with Harding that while McGraw's sometimes bellicose approach can be helpful under the right circumstances, Spears is in perhaps too fragile an emotional state for it.
"It looks as though her behavior has been unraveling for some time now. Frankly, it's reached a point of being pretty frightening," she said.
"People may have thought it was entertaining or funny, but really it's a cry for help, and I hope people around her will respond and get her the help she needs," Albright said.
Also, Albright said, the tough-love therapy that McGraw practices is really only the first of many steps therapists must take to change destructive behavior. What's more, she said, it really only works when the recipient is receptive.
"It's hard to do therapy or intervention in a half-hour or one hour-spot," she said. "They have these longer interventions that they follow up with. That's where important change will occur, not necessarily in the one-hour sound bite of a show."
Still, at least one pop psychologist couldn't fault McGraw for trying.
"I'm sure Dr. Phil does not want to exploit her. He has all this experience in helping people get over problems," said Dr. Joyce Brothers, who herself has been dispensing psychological advice to TV viewers for more than 30 years.
But Brothers, who like McGraw has a Ph.D. in psychology, acknowledged that key for any therapist is getting the person to listen to them.
"He has a lot to offer," Brothers said of McGraw. "But only to the person who wants it."
Britney's car 'abandoned in street'
Troubled Britney Spears' car was impounded after police found it abandoned in the street.
Police said Spears was driving on Monday night when she had a flat tyre on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles.
Police spokesman Karen Smith said Spears left the car unattended and as it was blocking traffic it was towed away.
Police said it was unlikely the 26-year-old pop star will be given a parking ticket because the car was disabled when it was left in the street.
"She probably will have to pay to get her car out of the impound," Ms Smith said.
It emerged later that there was a scuffle between a photographer and a security guard as Spears entered an LA hotel two hours after her car was towed away.
The pop star was not to blame for the fight at the Four Seasons Hotel, the police spokeswoman said.
"She was leaving the hotel when one of the paparazzi and a security guard at the hotel had a scuffle," Ms Smith said.
Spears was admitted to hospital last week after a stand-off at her home that was triggered by a custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline over the couple's two young sons. A court commissioner took custody of her children from Spears the next day.
The singer has had a series of problems involving her car in recent months. In October, she ran over a photographer's foot.
Police said Spears was driving on Monday night when she had a flat tyre on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles.
Police spokesman Karen Smith said Spears left the car unattended and as it was blocking traffic it was towed away.
Police said it was unlikely the 26-year-old pop star will be given a parking ticket because the car was disabled when it was left in the street.
"She probably will have to pay to get her car out of the impound," Ms Smith said.
It emerged later that there was a scuffle between a photographer and a security guard as Spears entered an LA hotel two hours after her car was towed away.
The pop star was not to blame for the fight at the Four Seasons Hotel, the police spokeswoman said.
"She was leaving the hotel when one of the paparazzi and a security guard at the hotel had a scuffle," Ms Smith said.
Spears was admitted to hospital last week after a stand-off at her home that was triggered by a custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline over the couple's two young sons. A court commissioner took custody of her children from Spears the next day.
The singer has had a series of problems involving her car in recent months. In October, she ran over a photographer's foot.
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Blog: Spears clan want Britney 'committed', blast Dr Phil's 'betrayal'
Former American sweetheart Britney Spears graces the front cover of the latest issue of Ok! Magazine with her two boys.
It's a heartwarming portrait that belies the truth about a troubled young woman whose sanity is hanging by a thread.
Eerily, Spears declares in the magazine interview that she'd "die for her boys" - a sentiment that's all the more chilling given her seemingly disposable attitude towards life.
What makes the mag's cover photo all the more poignant is the fact that it was Spears' last photo taken with her boys before they were handed over to K-Fed for full custody.
Intervention
Britney Spears is a mess and needs help - quickly - before she burns out and fades away completely.
Mercifully, her family is reportedly now of the same opinion.
TMZ claims that Britney's parents - her dad in particular - has been earnestly trying to get his daughter committed to a mental hospital, for what he thinks is a bipolar disorder, for months.Dad Jamie Spears has been vocal about his opinion that Britney is suffering from a mental disorder and not a drug abuse problem for a while, and now we know why.
He's reportedly been crafting various plots to get her committed, but that Spears has flatly refused to undergo any tests which could confirm her supposed bipolar condition.
TMZ also states that Spears' parents believe that their daughter's best mate Sam Lutfi has been instrumental in her refusal to seek help.
The parents are so furious with Lutfi, they allegedly threw him out of the Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre last Friday when Spears was admitted for medical intervention.
Britney Spears will be getting professional help - whether she likes it or not.
Her family members are said to now be working together to hatch a series of crafty plans to get Brit Brit some mental help.
TMZ says the family's intervention will be swift, and that it will definitely happen.
Spears has so far declined any help and is on a rampage of self destruction.
Sources say that the Spears clan is considering a "series of options", some of which are "creative".
One of least likely options is that they will go to court and gain an order which will force Spears to seek in-patient treatment.
A more credible option could be that Spears would be collared by cops again under a "5150", which basically means she'd be whisked off to hospital (a la Freaky Friday), and admitted to a psych unit.
Meanwhile, the folk in white suits would meet with the County Public Guardian, who could go to court and seek a "conservatorship."
That conservator would basically take control of Spears' life.
Stay tuned for updates...
In other Britney news&LAPD officers are said to have issued a restraining order against Spears last week after her spectacular stand-off with the law.
Called an "emergency protective order," the officers issued the order to "stabilize the situation," says Kevin Federline's attorney, Mark Vincent Kaplan.
LAPD spokesman Mike Lopez says: "The person it's placed upon would have to stay approximately 100 feet from the other person, or face arrest.
"In most cases, it's issued by officers when there's the possibility of imminent and immediate danger to the victim."
K-Fed's lawyer adds: "Kevin doesn't want to keep his kids from being involved in [Spears's] life. But foremost is that the kids be in an environment of structure [and] stability. The next goal is to get things to a point where both parents are able to participate fully in their [children's] lives."Spears family slam Dr. Phil
Britney Spears' family is gunning for TV psych Dr. Phil after he breached their trust and spoke to the media about his visit to see Spears in hospital last week.
Speaking via their representative Lou Taylor on US Television, the Spears clan feel betrayed by "self-serving" Dr. Phil, after he spoke out publicly about the troubled pop princess.
Taylor told the Today show that Dr. Phil had breached their trust by blabbing about his visit, and that they never agreed to appear on his television show either.
"He was not invited to make this a public display," says Taylor.
"What's wrong with Dr. Phil's statement is that he made a statement.
"The family, basically, extended an invitation of trust for him to come in as a resource to support them, not to go out and make public statements."
Click here if you dare to watch the TV segment in full.
Meanwhile, the photo agency embroiled in a scandal for supposedly touting candid pictures of Spears to the press, is claiming Brit Brit and paparazzo boytoy Adnan Ghalib are an item.
"Britney Spears and Adnan Ghalib ARE happily dating," says agency Finalpixx in a statement posted on their website.
Adding that 35-year-old married Ghalib "is absolutely NOT shopping his story."
Stay tuned to this blog for Britney updates as they unfold.
It's a heartwarming portrait that belies the truth about a troubled young woman whose sanity is hanging by a thread.
Eerily, Spears declares in the magazine interview that she'd "die for her boys" - a sentiment that's all the more chilling given her seemingly disposable attitude towards life.
What makes the mag's cover photo all the more poignant is the fact that it was Spears' last photo taken with her boys before they were handed over to K-Fed for full custody.
Intervention
Britney Spears is a mess and needs help - quickly - before she burns out and fades away completely.
Mercifully, her family is reportedly now of the same opinion.
TMZ claims that Britney's parents - her dad in particular - has been earnestly trying to get his daughter committed to a mental hospital, for what he thinks is a bipolar disorder, for months.Dad Jamie Spears has been vocal about his opinion that Britney is suffering from a mental disorder and not a drug abuse problem for a while, and now we know why.
He's reportedly been crafting various plots to get her committed, but that Spears has flatly refused to undergo any tests which could confirm her supposed bipolar condition.
TMZ also states that Spears' parents believe that their daughter's best mate Sam Lutfi has been instrumental in her refusal to seek help.
The parents are so furious with Lutfi, they allegedly threw him out of the Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre last Friday when Spears was admitted for medical intervention.
Britney Spears will be getting professional help - whether she likes it or not.
Her family members are said to now be working together to hatch a series of crafty plans to get Brit Brit some mental help.
TMZ says the family's intervention will be swift, and that it will definitely happen.
Spears has so far declined any help and is on a rampage of self destruction.
Sources say that the Spears clan is considering a "series of options", some of which are "creative".
One of least likely options is that they will go to court and gain an order which will force Spears to seek in-patient treatment.
A more credible option could be that Spears would be collared by cops again under a "5150", which basically means she'd be whisked off to hospital (a la Freaky Friday), and admitted to a psych unit.
Meanwhile, the folk in white suits would meet with the County Public Guardian, who could go to court and seek a "conservatorship."
That conservator would basically take control of Spears' life.
Stay tuned for updates...
In other Britney news&LAPD officers are said to have issued a restraining order against Spears last week after her spectacular stand-off with the law.
Called an "emergency protective order," the officers issued the order to "stabilize the situation," says Kevin Federline's attorney, Mark Vincent Kaplan.
LAPD spokesman Mike Lopez says: "The person it's placed upon would have to stay approximately 100 feet from the other person, or face arrest.
"In most cases, it's issued by officers when there's the possibility of imminent and immediate danger to the victim."
K-Fed's lawyer adds: "Kevin doesn't want to keep his kids from being involved in [Spears's] life. But foremost is that the kids be in an environment of structure [and] stability. The next goal is to get things to a point where both parents are able to participate fully in their [children's] lives."Spears family slam Dr. Phil
Britney Spears' family is gunning for TV psych Dr. Phil after he breached their trust and spoke to the media about his visit to see Spears in hospital last week.
Speaking via their representative Lou Taylor on US Television, the Spears clan feel betrayed by "self-serving" Dr. Phil, after he spoke out publicly about the troubled pop princess.
Taylor told the Today show that Dr. Phil had breached their trust by blabbing about his visit, and that they never agreed to appear on his television show either.
"He was not invited to make this a public display," says Taylor.
"What's wrong with Dr. Phil's statement is that he made a statement.
"The family, basically, extended an invitation of trust for him to come in as a resource to support them, not to go out and make public statements."
Click here if you dare to watch the TV segment in full.
Meanwhile, the photo agency embroiled in a scandal for supposedly touting candid pictures of Spears to the press, is claiming Brit Brit and paparazzo boytoy Adnan Ghalib are an item.
"Britney Spears and Adnan Ghalib ARE happily dating," says agency Finalpixx in a statement posted on their website.
Adding that 35-year-old married Ghalib "is absolutely NOT shopping his story."
Stay tuned to this blog for Britney updates as they unfold.
Britney spared from 'fur hag' list
She may not have much to look forward to in 2008, but one thing Britney can count on is that she won't be named the worst dressed celebrity.Just as the troubled songstress was omitted from the annual worst-dressed list, PETA have also taken her off their 'fur hag' list, after her admission to hospital last weekend. -->
"At this point, Britney needs a break - from everybody," said PETA US Senior Vice President Dan Mathews in a statement."Maybe when her head is clear, she'll have a change of heart about wearing fur. If not, we'll be back biting at her heels."Now that Britney's out of the running, Croydon's own Kate Moss is in the lead as voting continues."Nothing completes the transition from supermodel to super tramp like a fur coat," added Dan.Other fur-wearing stars who made PETA's list include Lindsay Lohan, Kate Bosworth, Jamie Foxx, Kid Rock, Mary J Blige, Eva Longoria, the Olsen twins and Vanessa Williams.Results of the poll will be revealed on February 4.
"At this point, Britney needs a break - from everybody," said PETA US Senior Vice President Dan Mathews in a statement."Maybe when her head is clear, she'll have a change of heart about wearing fur. If not, we'll be back biting at her heels."Now that Britney's out of the running, Croydon's own Kate Moss is in the lead as voting continues."Nothing completes the transition from supermodel to super tramp like a fur coat," added Dan.Other fur-wearing stars who made PETA's list include Lindsay Lohan, Kate Bosworth, Jamie Foxx, Kid Rock, Mary J Blige, Eva Longoria, the Olsen twins and Vanessa Williams.Results of the poll will be revealed on February 4.
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Magazines Take a Hint, Ease Up on Britney
There's nothing like a breakdown to make people be nice to you.
First, Mr. Blackwell and PETA spared Britney from ridicule, because she's too unstable to be responsible for her fashion choices...and now some celebrity magazines are even easing up on their Brit crit.Rather than splash unflattering paparazzi shots all over their covers (Cough! Us! Cough!), People and OK! are opting to take a more sympathetic approach to the onetime pop topper.
People's glamour shot—which touts the singer as the victim of a mental disease who needs our support—reminds us of the Britney who used to inspire us to dress like a slutty schoolgirl and memorize her music-video dance moves.
OK! wants you to know that she's a loving mother who would die for her boys
First, Mr. Blackwell and PETA spared Britney from ridicule, because she's too unstable to be responsible for her fashion choices...and now some celebrity magazines are even easing up on their Brit crit.Rather than splash unflattering paparazzi shots all over their covers (Cough! Us! Cough!), People and OK! are opting to take a more sympathetic approach to the onetime pop topper.
People's glamour shot—which touts the singer as the victim of a mental disease who needs our support—reminds us of the Britney who used to inspire us to dress like a slutty schoolgirl and memorize her music-video dance moves.
OK! wants you to know that she's a loving mother who would die for her boys
But while it's nice to portray Ms. Spears more sympathetically, the mag certainly went about securing the photos of Brit and the boys in a shady way.
The intimate portraits come from Dani Brubaker, whom Britney hired to snap the happy fam for personal use.
Not being entirely sound of mind, Brit apparently failed to get the photog to sign a confidentiality agreement, and now they're featured in OK!, something we gotta point out we saw coming.
Still, we welcome this public change of heart regarding Britney, now if only she could do some changing for us.
The intimate portraits come from Dani Brubaker, whom Britney hired to snap the happy fam for personal use.
Not being entirely sound of mind, Brit apparently failed to get the photog to sign a confidentiality agreement, and now they're featured in OK!, something we gotta point out we saw coming.
Still, we welcome this public change of heart regarding Britney, now if only she could do some changing for us.
Labels:
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John Turley-Ewart: Did Dr. Phil violate patient confidentiality in the Britney Spears' case?
Following my post criticizing the distasteful opportunism displayed by Dr. Phil — who used a visit to Britney Spears in hospital to promote his own TV show — today's news that Britney's family say Dr. "Tough Love" crossed the line leads me to wonder if Dr. Phil is guilty of more than opportunism. Did he also breach patient confidentiality that medical professionals are expected to uphold?
A spokesman for Britney's mother is quoted today saying "The [Spears] family basically extended an invitation of trust for him to come in as a resource to support them, not to go out and make public statements. Any statement publicly that he made, because he was brought in under this cloak of trust, (is) just inappropriate."
Certainly "inappropriate" is a useful word to describe Dr. Phil's actions. The question that must now be asked of Dr. Phil is whether he is guilty of professional misconduct in this sad affair that has all the appearance of a daytime talk show host putting his own ambitions ahead of the well-being of a troubled 26-year-old woman and her family who turned to him for help.
A spokesman for Britney's mother is quoted today saying "The [Spears] family basically extended an invitation of trust for him to come in as a resource to support them, not to go out and make public statements. Any statement publicly that he made, because he was brought in under this cloak of trust, (is) just inappropriate."
Certainly "inappropriate" is a useful word to describe Dr. Phil's actions. The question that must now be asked of Dr. Phil is whether he is guilty of professional misconduct in this sad affair that has all the appearance of a daytime talk show host putting his own ambitions ahead of the well-being of a troubled 26-year-old woman and her family who turned to him for help.
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Britney's Law? Not so crazy
The pop singer's recent episode could prompt a much-needed critique of California's mental healthcare policies.
Wouldn't it be something if the giants of mental healthcare reform in California turned out to be three men named Lanterman, Petris and Short -- and a pop singer by the name of Britney Spears?
The first three were state legislators. More than 40 years ago, impelled by film and fiction horrors such as "The Snake Pit" and "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," and even more by true-to-life mental hospital outrages, they drafted what they called a Magna Carta for mental patients.For good and ill, treatment of the mentally disturbed in California has not been the same since. And Spears may just turn out to be a sad enough and famous enough Hollywood head case to get some changes going on that Magna Carta's flaws. Last week, Spears barricaded herself in her bathroom for three hours in a custody dispute, until police had her hustled off for physical and psychological evaluations. Now the entire gossip blogosphere knows about California's Welfare and Institutions Code Section 5150, which allows someone who's a danger to herself or others, or both, to be held involuntarily for up to three days. Section 5150 is one piece of a set of mental health laws that make it very hard to commit people against their wishes, if not their needs -- maybe too hard.The tale of modern mental healthcare in California is one of good intentions sometimes one awry, of public money gone elsewhere, of hope too often simply ... gone.In the 1950s and '60s, care for the mentally ill gave off a Dickensian vibe. People were locked away in state hospitals for months, years, for life. Too many times, they weren't insane -- just old and dotty, or inconvenient, or different and difficult. For just acting up and acting out, actress Frances Farmer was locked in the madhouse and subjected to treatment that wouldn't pass muster at Gitmo. Those three legislators decided to stop it. Frank Lanterman, Nick Petris and Alan Short made seminal laws that give mental patients rights and make it much harder to lock them up for long periods against their will. The laws ended the "warehousing" of the mentally ill and encouraged more humane, individual, local care. California's mental health dollars were supposed to follow patients back home, to clinics and board-and-care residences. It didn't always work that way. Gov. Ronald Reagan famously used the new rules to close state hospitals and whack the mental health budget, a combination that turned the streets and sometimes the jails into de facto mental institutions as people, left untreated, crossed the line from irrational to illegal.In 2004, Californians voted for Proposition 63, a 1% tax on millionaires to expand mental health services. Richard Scheffler, a professor at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health, calls it "a kind of Robin Hood tax" for a "starved" mental health system. Spears might be the first person who both pays the tax and benefits from it. But even taxing all of California's millionaires can't remedy the flaws in the well-intentioned Magna Carta for the mentally ill. Before those reforms were passed, Petris was rightly appalled by how casually someone could be locked away after a five-minute hearing before a judge."A guy walking down the street, talking to himself, could be thrown in a hospital," he said years ago. Acting irrationally -- say, whacking a car with your umbrella or shaving your head, as Spears has done -- could have gotten her committed for years. Yet, as Petris himself later found, "we moved from a stage where people were being railroaded and there were no standards to a situation where people [are] not getting treated because [commitment] standards are rigid."Which brings us back to Spears. Did she check herself out of Cedars-Sinai too soon? It's the Catch-22 of California law: Can the mentally ill always know what's best for them? Do the mentally ill have the right to self-destruct? There's a Mad Pride movement among some mental patients who say they have a right to be crazy. And there are heartbroken families begging the courts time and again to intervene on behalf of loved ones who won't take medicine, won't see doctors. Spears' family's frustration, if the tabloids are to be believed, is the same: How can we get help for her if she refuses?Proposition 63, which is generating upward of $2 billion since the law passed, can accomplish a lot -- but it can't change that conundrum. Laura's Law was passed to try to strike a balance. It's named for honor student Laura Wilcox, who was working in a California mental health center when she was killed by a delusional man who couldn't be forced to take medication. Thanks to the law, judges now can order outpatient treatment for people after medical and legal hearings.What, I wonder, would a Britney's Law look like? Would it make it easier to require treatment, especially if the outburst gets 100,000 hits on YouTube?
Wouldn't it be something if the giants of mental healthcare reform in California turned out to be three men named Lanterman, Petris and Short -- and a pop singer by the name of Britney Spears?
The first three were state legislators. More than 40 years ago, impelled by film and fiction horrors such as "The Snake Pit" and "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," and even more by true-to-life mental hospital outrages, they drafted what they called a Magna Carta for mental patients.For good and ill, treatment of the mentally disturbed in California has not been the same since. And Spears may just turn out to be a sad enough and famous enough Hollywood head case to get some changes going on that Magna Carta's flaws. Last week, Spears barricaded herself in her bathroom for three hours in a custody dispute, until police had her hustled off for physical and psychological evaluations. Now the entire gossip blogosphere knows about California's Welfare and Institutions Code Section 5150, which allows someone who's a danger to herself or others, or both, to be held involuntarily for up to three days. Section 5150 is one piece of a set of mental health laws that make it very hard to commit people against their wishes, if not their needs -- maybe too hard.The tale of modern mental healthcare in California is one of good intentions sometimes one awry, of public money gone elsewhere, of hope too often simply ... gone.In the 1950s and '60s, care for the mentally ill gave off a Dickensian vibe. People were locked away in state hospitals for months, years, for life. Too many times, they weren't insane -- just old and dotty, or inconvenient, or different and difficult. For just acting up and acting out, actress Frances Farmer was locked in the madhouse and subjected to treatment that wouldn't pass muster at Gitmo. Those three legislators decided to stop it. Frank Lanterman, Nick Petris and Alan Short made seminal laws that give mental patients rights and make it much harder to lock them up for long periods against their will. The laws ended the "warehousing" of the mentally ill and encouraged more humane, individual, local care. California's mental health dollars were supposed to follow patients back home, to clinics and board-and-care residences. It didn't always work that way. Gov. Ronald Reagan famously used the new rules to close state hospitals and whack the mental health budget, a combination that turned the streets and sometimes the jails into de facto mental institutions as people, left untreated, crossed the line from irrational to illegal.In 2004, Californians voted for Proposition 63, a 1% tax on millionaires to expand mental health services. Richard Scheffler, a professor at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health, calls it "a kind of Robin Hood tax" for a "starved" mental health system. Spears might be the first person who both pays the tax and benefits from it. But even taxing all of California's millionaires can't remedy the flaws in the well-intentioned Magna Carta for the mentally ill. Before those reforms were passed, Petris was rightly appalled by how casually someone could be locked away after a five-minute hearing before a judge."A guy walking down the street, talking to himself, could be thrown in a hospital," he said years ago. Acting irrationally -- say, whacking a car with your umbrella or shaving your head, as Spears has done -- could have gotten her committed for years. Yet, as Petris himself later found, "we moved from a stage where people were being railroaded and there were no standards to a situation where people [are] not getting treated because [commitment] standards are rigid."Which brings us back to Spears. Did she check herself out of Cedars-Sinai too soon? It's the Catch-22 of California law: Can the mentally ill always know what's best for them? Do the mentally ill have the right to self-destruct? There's a Mad Pride movement among some mental patients who say they have a right to be crazy. And there are heartbroken families begging the courts time and again to intervene on behalf of loved ones who won't take medicine, won't see doctors. Spears' family's frustration, if the tabloids are to be believed, is the same: How can we get help for her if she refuses?Proposition 63, which is generating upward of $2 billion since the law passed, can accomplish a lot -- but it can't change that conundrum. Laura's Law was passed to try to strike a balance. It's named for honor student Laura Wilcox, who was working in a California mental health center when she was killed by a delusional man who couldn't be forced to take medication. Thanks to the law, judges now can order outpatient treatment for people after medical and legal hearings.What, I wonder, would a Britney's Law look like? Would it make it easier to require treatment, especially if the outburst gets 100,000 hits on YouTube?
Labels:
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california,
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'American Idol' judge Simon Cowell says Britney needs perspective
TORONTO - Straight-talking "American Idol" judge Simon Cowell has some advice for scandal-plagued starlet Britney Spears: get out of the media glare and try living a normal life for six months.
The caustic Brit, known for delivering the harshest barbs on the reality singing contest, says the troubled pop star needs to be reminded of all the good things in her life, including her kids and her success.
And Cowell says he's willing to help Spears gain some perspective.
"It looks to me at the moment that she's out of control and that she's got to have someone in her life who she's got to listen to," Cowell said Wednesday in a conference call from England.
"She's welcome to call me any time."
The television personality and record mogul says the biggest thing Spears needs is a sense of perspective.
"I'd take her out of where she's living at the moment and ask her to go and live with her family and live normally for six months because if you live normally and do normal things you suddenly find that the paparazzi aren't camped outside your door every day."
Cowell is just the latest celebrity to offer advice on Spears's startling downward spiral.
"Dr. Phil" McGraw visited the singer in hospital last week but later drew the ire of family members by talking to the media about the 26-year-old's mental health.
Spears was taken to hospital Jan. 3 after a child custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline resulted in a standoff with police.
The following day, Federline was given sole physical and legal custody of one-year-old Jayden James and two-year-old Sean Preston.
The seventh season of "American Idol" kicks off Jan. 15 and 16.
The reality series is a ratings juggernaut. Cowell dismissed suggestions, however, that more people will be tuning in this season because of the dearth of programming due to the ongoing writers strike.
He said the quality of "American Idol" is what attracts viewers.
Among the dreadful wannabes vying for a slot this year was the brother of Season 3 winner Fantasia Barrino, Cowell said.
Despite the phenomenal talent of his Grammy-nominated sister, it turns out that 24-year-old Ricco Barrino doesn't have the pipes to match.
"He was terrible. Absolutely dreadful," Cowell said.
"I remember (thinking) 'Oh, great, Fantasia's brother's come in.' And it was all fantastic until he started singing. And then I think we disputed the fact that he really was Fantasia's brother because he hasn't got his sister's talent."
The caustic Brit, known for delivering the harshest barbs on the reality singing contest, says the troubled pop star needs to be reminded of all the good things in her life, including her kids and her success.
And Cowell says he's willing to help Spears gain some perspective.
"It looks to me at the moment that she's out of control and that she's got to have someone in her life who she's got to listen to," Cowell said Wednesday in a conference call from England.
"She's welcome to call me any time."
The television personality and record mogul says the biggest thing Spears needs is a sense of perspective.
"I'd take her out of where she's living at the moment and ask her to go and live with her family and live normally for six months because if you live normally and do normal things you suddenly find that the paparazzi aren't camped outside your door every day."
Cowell is just the latest celebrity to offer advice on Spears's startling downward spiral.
"Dr. Phil" McGraw visited the singer in hospital last week but later drew the ire of family members by talking to the media about the 26-year-old's mental health.
Spears was taken to hospital Jan. 3 after a child custody dispute with ex-husband Kevin Federline resulted in a standoff with police.
The following day, Federline was given sole physical and legal custody of one-year-old Jayden James and two-year-old Sean Preston.
The seventh season of "American Idol" kicks off Jan. 15 and 16.
The reality series is a ratings juggernaut. Cowell dismissed suggestions, however, that more people will be tuning in this season because of the dearth of programming due to the ongoing writers strike.
He said the quality of "American Idol" is what attracts viewers.
Among the dreadful wannabes vying for a slot this year was the brother of Season 3 winner Fantasia Barrino, Cowell said.
Despite the phenomenal talent of his Grammy-nominated sister, it turns out that 24-year-old Ricco Barrino doesn't have the pipes to match.
"He was terrible. Absolutely dreadful," Cowell said.
"I remember (thinking) 'Oh, great, Fantasia's brother's come in.' And it was all fantastic until he started singing. And then I think we disputed the fact that he really was Fantasia's brother because he hasn't got his sister's talent."
Labels:
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Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Dr Phil scraps Britney Spears show
Television psychologist Dr Phil McGraw has scrapped plans to air a show about troubled pop singer Britney Spears after he was criticised for visiting her while she was in hospital.
McGraw visited Spears at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, after she was admitted for an evaluation following a custody dispute at her home.
Several other counsellors later accused the therapist of breaching the singer's privacy by visiting her at the hospital.
McGraw visited Spears at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, after she was admitted for an evaluation following a custody dispute at her home.
Several other counsellors later accused the therapist of breaching the singer's privacy by visiting her at the hospital.
However, McGraw said yesterday, in an interview with 'The Early Show', that he visited Spears "at the request of her family".
He claimed that the singer's mother, sister and brother "were very frustrated that she apparently wasn't going to be held (in hospital) for a longer period of time."
McGraw said that he had planned to tape a show on yesterday, stressing that the show would not have explored the tabloid side of Spears' problems, but instead would have focused on other issues surrounding her case.
"Clearly, it is not just Britney's family struggling to find a way to protect adult children who cannot be ordered or compelled to seek help," he said.
The television psychologist also said: "Because the Spears situation is too intense at this time, and out of consideration to the family, I have made the decision not to move forward with the taping."
McGraw said that details of his visit to Spears would remain private.
The singer was released from hospital at the weekend.
He claimed that the singer's mother, sister and brother "were very frustrated that she apparently wasn't going to be held (in hospital) for a longer period of time."
McGraw said that he had planned to tape a show on yesterday, stressing that the show would not have explored the tabloid side of Spears' problems, but instead would have focused on other issues surrounding her case.
"Clearly, it is not just Britney's family struggling to find a way to protect adult children who cannot be ordered or compelled to seek help," he said.
The television psychologist also said: "Because the Spears situation is too intense at this time, and out of consideration to the family, I have made the decision not to move forward with the taping."
McGraw said that details of his visit to Spears would remain private.
The singer was released from hospital at the weekend.
Britney Spears 'Doesn't Know How To Deal,' Mental-Health Experts Say
'If someone is involuntarily committed, that ain't just stress,' one psychologist says of singer's hospitalization.
The doctor was in — but unfortunately for Britney Spears, the doctor was Dr. Phil.
For someone who was just held against her will for observation at Los Angeles' Cedars-Sinai hospital, only to be released before the full 72 hours of observation were up, the pop star is in dire need of "real" and "ongoing" treatment, mental-health experts tell MTV News. They say Spears is not going to get what she needs from a TV doctor who wants a televised "intervention."
But that real treatment can vary widely — from talk therapy and family counseling to rehab and medication — depending on what is actually troubling the singer. So what is the diagnosis?
"Britney is having a whole host of problems that no one can diagnose for sure," said Dr. Robi Ludwig, a New York psychologist. "Clearly, though, she is troubled."
Could Spears — who has two sons, ages 2 (Sean Preston) and 1 (Jayden James) — be suffering from, as she once wrote on her Web site, a form of postpartum depression? "It can occur anytime within a year of giving birth," said New York psychiatrist Dr. Gail Saltz. "And sometimes it can develop months after giving birth."
Symptoms would include difficulty sleeping and eating, feelings of hopelessness and guilt and, sometimes, suicidal thoughts. The flipside to postpartum depression is postpartum mania, where some women feel a heightened feeling of well-being, as well as agitation, irritation and excitement. "It's the beginning of a presentation of bipolar disorder," Saltz said. "Sometimes it never comes back, and sometimes it's the beginning of a psychiatric illness. But it's treatable." There's also postpartum anxiety, as well as an extreme (and rare) form of a post-pregnancy mood disorder called postpartum psychosis, which occurs in about one of every 1,000 births. It usually begins in the first six weeks after giving birth, and includes confusion, delusions, hallucinations, obsessive thoughts and rapid mood swings.
So could Spears be suffering from a bipolar disorder, as rumored? "One minute she wants to see the paparazzi, the next she's whacking them with an umbrella," Saltz said. "Being impulsive, being seemingly irrational and destructive, this is not necessarily just mania. You could be depressed and do bad things to yourself, too, because you've lost your sense of judgment."
"If she is self-sabotaging, it's probably unconscious anxiety," said Dr. Jean Cirillo, a psychologist with a private practice in Huntington, New York. "Look at what we know of Britney. She used to be cooperative with the press. But now she's running out of photo shoots that could have redeemed her image. She's late to depositions. It sounds like she couldn't handle it. It sounds like a panic attack."
The stress is understandable, considering she's gone through a divorce, has custody issues and is responsible for two small children — on top of her career. "Add to that that she's constantly under the microscope, and not just being evaluated, but being trashed," Saltz said. "That has to be stressful, being a woman who people think failed at marriage, failed at motherhood, [and is] failing at her career. You end up with a woman who has no identity, and that's traumatic."
So traumatic that she's suffering from a form of post-traumatic stress disorder? Cirillo thinks so, based on Spears' tendency to alienate and isolate herself from people in her life. "People who have divorce/custody issues do have some degree of post-traumatic stress," Cirillo said. "It's a temporary reaction to an outside situation, when you feel like you're suddenly in the fire. She has severe anxiety about being a performer and a mother, and the things she has to do as a performer — like be sexy — are at odds with what she has to do as a mother. It takes a really mature person to balance that."
Could it be that simple: Spears is just too immature? After all, she referred to herself as a "young girl" when defending her pantyless-partying ways a year ago — could that explain the neglect of her two young children, as the court-appointed monitor described in one report, or Spears' other erratic behavior? "It sounds adolescent, right?" Ludwig said. "I think in Britney's case, she doesn't know how to deal. She sounds like a teenage parent, who doesn't have the emotional wherewithal to think about anyone other than herself. She doesn't know how to be an adequate parent, even to get her children back. It's not computing, and she's acting in an oppositional, rebellious way, like she's stuck in adolescent mode."
Being too immature, or having a panic attack, or being stressed out, however, wouldn't have gained Spears admittance to Cedars-Sinai for observation. "If someone is involuntarily committed, that ain't just stress," Ludwig said. "Being committed is serious and significant. It's not a superficial assessment. You'd have to be a danger to yourself or others. A lot of hospitals would turn you away if you said, 'I need the rest, I'm stressed.' They don't have the space. Is stress a contributing factor? Yes. Is it the only factor? No."
Though Spears' behavior has been described as having a nervous breakdown or a meltdown, Saltz said that it's oversimplifying the case. " 'Nervous breakdown' is a layman's term," she explained. "It's not a psychiatric term, and it's not helpful to her, because there's no medication or talk therapy for that. You have to look at the very specific symptoms to make a clinical diagnosis, to have an evaluation. Were there depressive episodes? Is there a history of mania? A trajectory of substance abuse? Was there a traumatic event? It usually takes several sessions to look at all of that and say, 'Aha, that fits.' Not everything fits in a perfect box, though."
So the best thing the singer can do, mental-health experts agree, is to get professional help — even if the public is watching her every move. Ludwig prescribes a medical evaluation, with follow-up by a psychiatrist bimonthly for medication management, and psychotherapy two times a week. "That's while she's in crisis mode," she said. "Once things calm down, then once a week."
"There's a stigma and shame to these things that cause some people not to get help, to feel embarrassed," Saltz said. "Obviously, I don't know Britney Spears and I don't know what's kept her from getting treatment, but many people lack the education to know what's happening to them, or they feel it will mean, 'I'm bad, I'm weak, I'm crazy,' which is so sad, because these are biological illnesses, and [they are] not the person's fault. If you have diabetes, you get insulin, you get treated. Same here. I think we're seeing some serious, alarming symptoms that are dangerous, and things could go very, very badly if it's untreated. I would be very, very concerned about this woman."
The doctor was in — but unfortunately for Britney Spears, the doctor was Dr. Phil.
For someone who was just held against her will for observation at Los Angeles' Cedars-Sinai hospital, only to be released before the full 72 hours of observation were up, the pop star is in dire need of "real" and "ongoing" treatment, mental-health experts tell MTV News. They say Spears is not going to get what she needs from a TV doctor who wants a televised "intervention."
But that real treatment can vary widely — from talk therapy and family counseling to rehab and medication — depending on what is actually troubling the singer. So what is the diagnosis?
"Britney is having a whole host of problems that no one can diagnose for sure," said Dr. Robi Ludwig, a New York psychologist. "Clearly, though, she is troubled."
Could Spears — who has two sons, ages 2 (Sean Preston) and 1 (Jayden James) — be suffering from, as she once wrote on her Web site, a form of postpartum depression? "It can occur anytime within a year of giving birth," said New York psychiatrist Dr. Gail Saltz. "And sometimes it can develop months after giving birth."
Symptoms would include difficulty sleeping and eating, feelings of hopelessness and guilt and, sometimes, suicidal thoughts. The flipside to postpartum depression is postpartum mania, where some women feel a heightened feeling of well-being, as well as agitation, irritation and excitement. "It's the beginning of a presentation of bipolar disorder," Saltz said. "Sometimes it never comes back, and sometimes it's the beginning of a psychiatric illness. But it's treatable." There's also postpartum anxiety, as well as an extreme (and rare) form of a post-pregnancy mood disorder called postpartum psychosis, which occurs in about one of every 1,000 births. It usually begins in the first six weeks after giving birth, and includes confusion, delusions, hallucinations, obsessive thoughts and rapid mood swings.
So could Spears be suffering from a bipolar disorder, as rumored? "One minute she wants to see the paparazzi, the next she's whacking them with an umbrella," Saltz said. "Being impulsive, being seemingly irrational and destructive, this is not necessarily just mania. You could be depressed and do bad things to yourself, too, because you've lost your sense of judgment."
"If she is self-sabotaging, it's probably unconscious anxiety," said Dr. Jean Cirillo, a psychologist with a private practice in Huntington, New York. "Look at what we know of Britney. She used to be cooperative with the press. But now she's running out of photo shoots that could have redeemed her image. She's late to depositions. It sounds like she couldn't handle it. It sounds like a panic attack."
The stress is understandable, considering she's gone through a divorce, has custody issues and is responsible for two small children — on top of her career. "Add to that that she's constantly under the microscope, and not just being evaluated, but being trashed," Saltz said. "That has to be stressful, being a woman who people think failed at marriage, failed at motherhood, [and is] failing at her career. You end up with a woman who has no identity, and that's traumatic."
So traumatic that she's suffering from a form of post-traumatic stress disorder? Cirillo thinks so, based on Spears' tendency to alienate and isolate herself from people in her life. "People who have divorce/custody issues do have some degree of post-traumatic stress," Cirillo said. "It's a temporary reaction to an outside situation, when you feel like you're suddenly in the fire. She has severe anxiety about being a performer and a mother, and the things she has to do as a performer — like be sexy — are at odds with what she has to do as a mother. It takes a really mature person to balance that."
Could it be that simple: Spears is just too immature? After all, she referred to herself as a "young girl" when defending her pantyless-partying ways a year ago — could that explain the neglect of her two young children, as the court-appointed monitor described in one report, or Spears' other erratic behavior? "It sounds adolescent, right?" Ludwig said. "I think in Britney's case, she doesn't know how to deal. She sounds like a teenage parent, who doesn't have the emotional wherewithal to think about anyone other than herself. She doesn't know how to be an adequate parent, even to get her children back. It's not computing, and she's acting in an oppositional, rebellious way, like she's stuck in adolescent mode."
Being too immature, or having a panic attack, or being stressed out, however, wouldn't have gained Spears admittance to Cedars-Sinai for observation. "If someone is involuntarily committed, that ain't just stress," Ludwig said. "Being committed is serious and significant. It's not a superficial assessment. You'd have to be a danger to yourself or others. A lot of hospitals would turn you away if you said, 'I need the rest, I'm stressed.' They don't have the space. Is stress a contributing factor? Yes. Is it the only factor? No."
Though Spears' behavior has been described as having a nervous breakdown or a meltdown, Saltz said that it's oversimplifying the case. " 'Nervous breakdown' is a layman's term," she explained. "It's not a psychiatric term, and it's not helpful to her, because there's no medication or talk therapy for that. You have to look at the very specific symptoms to make a clinical diagnosis, to have an evaluation. Were there depressive episodes? Is there a history of mania? A trajectory of substance abuse? Was there a traumatic event? It usually takes several sessions to look at all of that and say, 'Aha, that fits.' Not everything fits in a perfect box, though."
So the best thing the singer can do, mental-health experts agree, is to get professional help — even if the public is watching her every move. Ludwig prescribes a medical evaluation, with follow-up by a psychiatrist bimonthly for medication management, and psychotherapy two times a week. "That's while she's in crisis mode," she said. "Once things calm down, then once a week."
"There's a stigma and shame to these things that cause some people not to get help, to feel embarrassed," Saltz said. "Obviously, I don't know Britney Spears and I don't know what's kept her from getting treatment, but many people lack the education to know what's happening to them, or they feel it will mean, 'I'm bad, I'm weak, I'm crazy,' which is so sad, because these are biological illnesses, and [they are] not the person's fault. If you have diabetes, you get insulin, you get treated. Same here. I think we're seeing some serious, alarming symptoms that are dangerous, and things could go very, very badly if it's untreated. I would be very, very concerned about this woman."
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