Culture Feature

Britney Spears' Brother Weighs In on #FreeBritney Movement

Bryan Spears maintains that Britney's conservatorship has been "a good thing" for the family.

Britney Spears -

Photo by Pariente Jean-Philippe-Sipa (Shutterstock)

After a few weeks of the growing #FreeBritney movement taking over social media sites like TikTok, Britney Spears' older brother, Bryan, has spoken out about his pop star sister's conservatorship.

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Culture Feature

Is Britney Spears Giving Us Secret SOS Messages on TikTok?

TikTok has uncovered possible hidden messages that Britney needs help.

Free Britney TikToks

Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP/Shutterstock

From her beginnings as a teenager to her new presence on TikTok, no pop star has been scrutinized from such a young age throughout their career quite as much as Britney Spears.

While it's sadly not uncommon for young female musicians to be unfairly criticized—*cough cough,* Taylor Swift—Spears was under the strict control of label executives from her teen years on. After releasing her debut single, "...Baby One More Time," at just 16 years old, Spears became a massive paparazzi target and tabloid subject. When she infamously shaved her own head in 2007 after leaving a rehab facility, photos of the incident spawned more Internet memes instead of genuine concerns about whether or not Spears was actually OK.

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On this day in 2000, Britney Spear's salacious career as a teen star was in full swing.

Her single "Oops...I Did It Again" had debuted at #1 on the UK charts after dominating the Billboard charts stateside. The track, produced by pop legends Max Martin and Rami, sold over 600,000 copies in the UK alone and certified the teen idol as an international pop star. The song would land Spears a 2001 Grammy nomination for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.

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Culture News

#FreeBritney: A Movement for the Era of Fake News and Female Erasure

Sony just greenlighted a new musical-movie based on her songs, but fans are more concerned that their beloved icon is being trapped by her manager.

Photo by Jan Kopřiva on Unsplash

Is Britney Spears being held against her will at a mental hospital?

Even though the star herself has requested privacy, many fans still insist that Britney has been imprisoned and needs our help. Playing out like an eerie distortion of the Women's March, inspired by an ethos as absurd and unfocused as our president's tweets, their movement may be a telling encapsulation of our current socio-political moment.

The concept that Britney might be trapped with no hope of release was first proposed in a podcast called Britney's Gram, released on April 3. The hour-long episode featured a voicemail from an anonymous member of Britney's team, claiming that the icon has been held against her will since early January.

Britney's fans—fiercely loyal through it all—immediately began to protest, holding rallies in Los Angeles and spreading the hashtag #FreeBritney across the Internet. At the protest outside of West Hollywood City Hall on Monday, they carried signs reading "Truth will set her free" and chanted "Hey, ho, Larry Rudolph has got to go!" (Rudolph is Britney's manager, who many fans blame for her purported imprisonment).

All this comes after Britney announced an indefinite professional hiatus and the end of her Las Vegas residency, which she left in order to take care of her ill father. Then in March, she checked herself into a 30-day health and wellness program. Somewhere along the way, fans began to grow suspicious, and thus the modern Britney Liberation movement was born.


Unfortunately, some stans took things way too far, forcing Spears herself to address the concerns on Instagram. "I wanted to say hi," she wrote, "because things that are being said have just gotten out of control. There's rumors, death threats to my family and my team, and just so many things crazy things being said. I am trying to take a moment for myself, but everything that's happening is just making it harder for me." She continued, "You may not know this about me, but I am strong, and stand up for what I want! Your love and dedication is amazing, but what I need right now is a little bit of privacy to deal with all the hard things that life is throwing my way."

In this era of constant protests, fabricated news, and endless lies from people in positions of power, it's hard to know what truth means or what the merits of anger might be. Perhaps the #FreeBritney movement is a mutated offshoot of the paranoid, social-media-driven panic and (usually merited) distrust of authority that is defining our modern era. Perhaps it's a subconscious transmutation of women's fears of their own erasure, a phenomenon that is not new but has been brought to the fore by events like the dismissal of Christine Blasey Ford's testimony in favor of Brett Kavanaugh's calendars ( of course, this erasure is far more pronounced for women of color). Perhaps it's the child of nostalgia for Britney's famous, ever-more-relatable 2008 breakdown.

Regardless, Britney has requested privacy, so here all speculation must be laid to rest. Now, the best we can do for her is stream "Toxic" as many times as possible and get excited for the musical featuring her songs, Once Upon a One More Time, which premieres in Chicago this fall and is coming to Broadway in 2020. Plus, Sony just secured film rights to the musical, so we can all look forward to watching Britney's songs belted out by feminist Disney princesses on the big screen sometime in the near future.


Eden Arielle Gordon is a writer and musician from New York City. Follow her on Twitter @edenarielmusic.


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