Friday, February 22, 2008
It was only a couple of weeks ago that the Britney Spears’ drama unfolding during the last year came to a head when she lost custody of her children to ex-husband Kevin Federline.
Shortly after the ruling, Spears checked into the hospital, but it was even sooner that she checked out (less than a week later).
Britney’s collapse is no surprise, though.
Her lost custody battle comes after a stand-off with police and an even more bizarre series of events leading up to it.
In fact, in just a year Britney has shaved her head, been in and out of rehab, started wearing increasingly outlandish dress (see official Web site and MTV music awards) and perhaps most extreme, insists she is not simply another mediocre washed-up pop star (two studio albums in the last six years after one each year from 1999 to 2001).
In just a decade, Britney has gone from pop princess to deranged diva — from the spotlight to the high-beam headlights. Now she’s staring at the lights.
One of these lights is the one the media are shining on her, but the other is the one she shines on herself — her pitiful narcissistic cries that insist, “I’m not old news!”
Her extreme behavior supports this.
Britney is on the verge of rivaling Courtney Love for ridiculous and shocking public behavior. She is like a child nagging for dessert, and like bad parents, the media have given her unlimited Ben & Jerry’s. She is growing fatter, uglier and more annoying because of it.
However, this story is not about Britney — it’s about the failure of the American dream.
Fame has taken its toll on the innocent schoolgirl we were introduced to in 1999.
As singer/songwriter Nick Drake once said, “Fame is but a fruit tree, so very unsung.”
Seeking fame is not unique, but acquiring it is.
The irony is that Spears has attained the fame, but it has not let her escape her misery. In fact, it has only isolated her more.
Again though, her situation is not unique. First look at other famous people. There are plenty examples of meltdowns: Start with famous writers.
What’s disturbing is that people still look up to her and people like Britney — or that people still believe fame (or the money that comes with it) will solve all their problems.
There is no one solution to all life’s problems. If you think there is, then you’re addicted to something.
Yet we are the ones addicted to this rags to riches story — this fable beaten into us since about age 6. Why do we seek it?
A former government teacher said, “Getting rich just frees up time for you to spend thinking about your problems.”
It was at that moment when she lost custody of her children that Britney reached the pinnacle of her fame.
She reached the top of the mountain, but when she looked around she found she was the only one there, but it meant nothing because there was no one there to share it with.
Mangiaracina is a Lenexa senior in journalism.
Fans purchase 90s pop stars’ new albums
After the debut of Britney Spears and the Backstreet Boys’ new albums, ...
Guest Column: Have any recent bands lived ...
"Across The Universe," with all its sexy men and (less importantly) artistic ...
What do you think: April 18, 2007
Students weigh-in on media saturation. All the usual suspects make an appearance.
Celebrities offer poor role models
Brown: Celebrities not quite role models
Younger generations look to Spears, not Superman
Hawk Topics
Raine Reviews: news you can use
Unexpectedly Expecting: Katie's story
Katie gets pregnant twice within just a year of each other by ...
Minster: Web not always a great source ...
The Internet provides an up-to-the-minute, constant stream of information but readers should ...
Hawktopics
News you can use
Hawktopics
News you can use
Doing Without: Celebrity News
Absence makes the heart grow...?
Holopirek: Who cares about Britney Spears?
Britney and Anna are old news. The Media needs to inform their ...
Trapped in a game
Students who encounter video game addiction could face job loss, poor grades, ...
Hawk Topics
News you can use
After cold start, freshman guard heats up
Coach Bonnie Henrickson gains confidence as Monica Engelman starts showing improvements.
Personal essay: What a girl wants
Throwing my dreams of unrealistic perfection aside, I'm beginning to accept me ...
Mersmann: Bad parodies hurt U.S. culture
Movies often misinterpret the genre they are trying to mock.
Durbin: The truth is missing
Media should rely on concrete facts, not unfounded opinions.
Latter-day stripper
Tori — as she is known on stage — has been dancing ...
Minster: The summer that (sort of) was
How do you liven up up a summer spent in calculus class? ...
Nichols: Why an old person shouldn't make ...
Hawk topics
News you can use
Morris shuts down Colorado’s Spears
Forwards Sade Morris and Nicollette Smith dominates Buffs.
Free For All: November 5, 2007
Holy Ladybug Invasion, what the hell is going on?
Overworked students' dangerous race against time
Is too much work and too little time putting students' health at ...
Nontraditional student Jennifer Osborn teaches students to ...
She has dropped 12 sizes since taking up a lifting class.
Falun Dafa: A Western Practice with Virtuous ...
A growing category of spiritual discipline. There's more than yoga out there.
The unsettled life of Sarah Bregman
How one student's tumultuous past gave her a chance for a better ...
YouTube video featuring students in drag goes ...
Former student’s version of Lady Gaga’s “Telephone” has more than 11 million ...
Yours, mine and not ours
When a relationship ends, what happens to the stuff?
A generation of sex symbols
The accepted level of sexuality in the media has changed drastically from ...
KU Women's basketball player selected for Team ...
Danielle McCray was chosen to play in the World University Games in ...
Unexpectedly Expecting: Taé's story
Taé, broken-hearted and pregnant at 16, faces pressure from her family and ...
Fee continues amid controversy
Senate votes to continue $80-a-year charge to subsidize KU athletics budget.
Senior contributes more than court time
Jamie Boyd rarely left the bench, but her dedication to the team ...
Porn Star Profile: Jody Maxwell
Erotica star talks about Midwest roots.
Mangiaracina : Life began nine months earlier
Let’s start small. People alive or dead are approximately nine months older ...
Thornbrugh: Textbooks ignore women’s triumphs
History should not favor one sex over the other.
Campus black student union provides solidarity and ...
The black student union provides a gateway to greater opportunities beyond KU
Who you gonna call?
A reporter’s search for the paranormal turns up some interesting information and ...
From left: Kimberlee Hinkle, Libby Johnson and Hannah ...
1 comment
Kansas Jayhawk fans hold aloft a reproduction of ...
2 comments
Erin Saupe, a Ph.D. student from St. Cloud, ...
1 comment
0 comments
Armed robbers continue to threaten.
3 comments
Comments
Mangiaracina: Idea of American dream has failed
I sincerely hope that when people think of the American dream they aren't thinking about becoming pop stars or A-list celebrities. The idea of the "American Dream" is that you can get there by hard work and innovation.
Mangiaracina: Idea of American dream has failed
...and it's a lie.
Mangiaracina: Idea of American dream has failed
How is it a lie? I know plenty of people who come from low-income backgrounds and have ended up quite successful.
Sign in to comment
Or login with:
OpenID