Here's how to save the kid
Two things, via my two-bits, that Britney needs in order to ‘survive’ figuratively and, yes, literally – because something that the carrion-eating scumbag paparazzi are collectively creaming their jeans over is the fact this kid is in deep peril of having a terminal Anna Nicole moment – are both an intervention, and a Col. Tom Parker.
This is one time in which I have to agree with bombastic, hubristic and lovably ‘mean motor scooter’ shrink, Dr. Phil in his public statement that this kid is in grievous peril. She is. She is addicted, she is unbalanced (very unbalanced), she is manipulated by venal and parasitical family and others, and she’s dumb. Mega-dumb. What a perfect victim. Just like Princess Diana, except for the addicted part.
She’s also an obsessive target for the baser elements of the gutter press, as well as the legitimate (and they should be ashamed of themselves for giving this messed up kid more copy than Barack Obama). Granted, she desperately panders to them by seeking them out, forgetting her underpants, appearing drunk and disorderly and semi-dressed in public, and so forth. She's reminiscent of the late Jayne Mansfield late in her tragically short career.
This is one time in which I have to agree with bombastic, hubristic and lovably ‘mean motor scooter’ shrink, Dr. Phil in his public statement that this kid is in grievous peril. She is. She is addicted, she is unbalanced (very unbalanced), she is manipulated by venal and parasitical family and others, and she’s dumb. Mega-dumb. What a perfect victim. Just like Princess Diana, except for the addicted part.
She’s also an obsessive target for the baser elements of the gutter press, as well as the legitimate (and they should be ashamed of themselves for giving this messed up kid more copy than Barack Obama). Granted, she desperately panders to them by seeking them out, forgetting her underpants, appearing drunk and disorderly and semi-dressed in public, and so forth. She's reminiscent of the late Jayne Mansfield late in her tragically short career.
And she’s an obsessive target for the rest of us, too. What will the human train-wreck do next? Hey, if the kid didn’t exist then Perez Hilton’s screeds on “Unfitney” would leave a big empty space on his daily website.
Back to Dr. Phil. Having been in the trade, I fully believe in interventions. And, if you want a professional word on the matter check out Dr. Deb’s Jan. 4 column, it offers some excellent insights. Personally, I have seen interventions work. They work when the individual is too addled and threatened to make reasonable decisions on their own. If you don’t believe in the virtue of this approach, just ask Betty Ford.
Not that interventions always work. Sometimes when the patient gets sober they are antagonistic to interference in their lives and will bolt from whatever facility in which they have been placed. But, sometimes they don’t. I have seen this. I have seen rehab clients (who got there via family intervention) who were initially brooding and resentful, and yet, at some point, maybe a couple of weeks in, a kind of transformation would occur. We called it the ‘miracle moment’ in which a certain serenity and sense of wellness would permeate the client. Of course, such a moment offers no guarantees. There is much work to be done afterwards – literally a lifetime of work, hard work – but it can be done and is being done every day. I would rather read that such a thing had taken place for Britney, then to check out whiny and hypocritical obit comments.
My other suggested need was, yes, a Col. Tom Parker. Despite the fact that this fake Kentucky ‘Colonel’ was .a manipulator par excellence and as greedy and exploitive as they come, he protected his young hayseed (albeit magnificently talented) charge and guided his fortunes – often badly. But, the point is, nobody got close to Elvis Presley without going through Col. Tom, and when he sprited Presley away from small-town Sun Records (still the best collection of his earliest, and arguably finest renditions) and took him over to giant RCA, the Presley career soared unlike that of any of his contemporaries. Equally talented (in my esteem) Jerry Lee Lewis could have done better with a Col. Tom. And so could Britney Spears with a Col. Tom equivalent.
Like Elvis, Britney too is a dumb hayseed, and easy pray to parasites. Like Presley, she is manipulated by her family. A Col. Tom would wrest her away from that and just maybe guide her into a good career. She’s nowhere near as talented as Presley, but she has definite musical skills.
So, that’s my two bits on the matter.
Back to Dr. Phil. Having been in the trade, I fully believe in interventions. And, if you want a professional word on the matter check out Dr. Deb’s Jan. 4 column, it offers some excellent insights. Personally, I have seen interventions work. They work when the individual is too addled and threatened to make reasonable decisions on their own. If you don’t believe in the virtue of this approach, just ask Betty Ford.
Not that interventions always work. Sometimes when the patient gets sober they are antagonistic to interference in their lives and will bolt from whatever facility in which they have been placed. But, sometimes they don’t. I have seen this. I have seen rehab clients (who got there via family intervention) who were initially brooding and resentful, and yet, at some point, maybe a couple of weeks in, a kind of transformation would occur. We called it the ‘miracle moment’ in which a certain serenity and sense of wellness would permeate the client. Of course, such a moment offers no guarantees. There is much work to be done afterwards – literally a lifetime of work, hard work – but it can be done and is being done every day. I would rather read that such a thing had taken place for Britney, then to check out whiny and hypocritical obit comments.
My other suggested need was, yes, a Col. Tom Parker. Despite the fact that this fake Kentucky ‘Colonel’ was .a manipulator par excellence and as greedy and exploitive as they come, he protected his young hayseed (albeit magnificently talented) charge and guided his fortunes – often badly. But, the point is, nobody got close to Elvis Presley without going through Col. Tom, and when he sprited Presley away from small-town Sun Records (still the best collection of his earliest, and arguably finest renditions) and took him over to giant RCA, the Presley career soared unlike that of any of his contemporaries. Equally talented (in my esteem) Jerry Lee Lewis could have done better with a Col. Tom. And so could Britney Spears with a Col. Tom equivalent.
Like Elvis, Britney too is a dumb hayseed, and easy pray to parasites. Like Presley, she is manipulated by her family. A Col. Tom would wrest her away from that and just maybe guide her into a good career. She’s nowhere near as talented as Presley, but she has definite musical skills.
So, that’s my two bits on the matter.
Labels: Let's lend her a hand, OK?
18 Comments:
Hmm. Now I thought you weren't going to worry about Britanny Spears anymore?
I think Britney is her own worst enemy, and now she can't make a move out of the public eye. Especially with a paparazzi boyfriend. Who knows how her two kids will turn out.
Its her children i feel sorry for.
In the end Britney has to make her own mind up that she needs help. I am unsure if an intervention would work for her - her upbringing has made her such that she does not know the meaning of the word 'no'. She has learned via her family how to be manipulative and get her own way. To me the intervention would have to include her family as well as Britney herself, otherwise it would be like fixing the hurt and abuse and trauma of a child and then sticking him right back in the same environment he came from. This is not merely an addiction problem - this is a deeply rooted psychiatric problem stemming from how she was brought up and will require years of help. I am sure she has been already confronted many times about her behavior and to no avail. To me she is an individual who needs to be forced into looking at her problems and forced to make a change. If the press, the music world, her friends and her family would refuse to aid and abet her behavior until she did receive help perhaps there is a chance of her recovery. Just my thoughts on the matter.
An interesting post!
I'm sad for Britany ;-(
Great post. I can feel your passion in the composition of it all.
As I've been watching this whole saga unfold, I cant get beyond thinking Britney is bipolar. Give her some good medication and a less stressful environment and watch her get so much better.
Meanwhile, I think the public should respect her privacy.
Watching Britney is like watching the Titanic hitting the iceburg. You know she's going down, and that there is nothing much you can do. She may be a bimbo but nobody deserves to melt down like that. As you say she should be institutionalized for her own good, but I'm not sure it'll do any good since the gutter press and human craving to see another human being self destruct will always be around.
Looking at this from your perspective maybe it wasn't such a bad thing that Celine Dion married a guy a hundred years older than her after all. Maybe that's what poor li'l Britney needs/needed, who knows. I fear though that she will be dead before long, your right the paparazzi are awaiting it with glee...
I'm with you on the media coverage issue and still feel so for all of pop culture's train wrecks. Especially the really talented ones. And therein lies the difference between Elvis and B, as you have pointed out. Elvis was revolutionary. Britney is... good at saccharine pop.
It occurred to me today that Britney has finally crossed the line from being a person to being this huge, amorphous industry and very little of it is due to her.
PS Nominated you for a Bloggy in the writing dept.
Yep; I think you've hit the nail on the head. Unfortunately, I don't think any serious changes are going to be made and Britney is going to continue in her horrible death spiral.
An intervention or a good spanking? Hard to say which she needs more.
V.
while i agree she desperately needs help, i feel she's too dumb, and her 'friends' too manipulative, for much chance of that happening :(
Ian, I left you an e-mail at your shaw.ca address, with a question.
V.
Curious here: How often do interventions work?
Oh, Lordy - her again. I do feel sorry for her kids, although they have wealth and will fare betetr than most children of mentally ill addicts.
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