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Holly Gleason

Posted: January 27, 2008 05:28 PM

Somebody's Daughter, Somebodies' Mother: Britney Spears Plays Chicken with the Inevitable


They're readying her obituary. The Associated Press and appropriate daily newspapers. It is macabre, knowing that a 25 year-old's imperviousness to convention is reckless enough to make the final recounting of the facts of her life anything but a failsafe against the random, say a plane crash or a crazy fan. The news organizations need to get it right; right is tough in a scramble. Better to research and be ready. Especially when the young woman in question is the highly tabloidable Britney Spears, the once Lolita in knee socks, grinding and taunting "Baby... One More Time," now tragically erratic MILF out of control.

Is Britney Spears this generation's bubblegum Courtney Love -- without the intellectual punch nor the musical cred? After all, she had her Cobain, in the equally throbalicious in a far more pulse of the screaming teen nation Justin Timberlake, but he found a far more forgiving exit strategy. And yet. Yet, naughty school girls who don't get the right kind of spanking end up indulged to where there's no compass of appropriate, allowed or even encouraged to do what they will until the warp destroys the ability to function in this world.

In that freefall, it seems, the cries for help, the erratic acting out, the jagged dents in any sort of reason are deafening. So loud we are paralyzed by them, and can only stare on frozen. Then titter uncomfortably or with relish -- depending on one's asking for it gauge -- once the moment has imploded. But what's left is a voyeur's fetishist, crying "look at me," even as she's incapable of functioning.

Is she a freak? A narcissist for whom anything is possible? A mentally unstable young woman whose fame and money masked the issue until it was beyond critical? And if it's the latter, and she's reached majority, how does one pull her back from the edge? Especially since there is so much fiscal reality riding on her next stumble, tumble, fall and...

Britney Spears keeps the lawyers busy, the courts in the news, the tabloid tv and weekly magazines pumping, Perez Hilton buzzing. It's about the sustained gaze of the trainwreck slow-mo-ing to its twisted, obvious conclusion. A loud crash, metal collapsing and pounding into itself, the wreckage a colossal, steaming, molten mess that can be picked through for months...

There is an old joke about the geriatric Jewish man who marries the 19-year old. Coming back from the honeymoon, his best friend cautions him to be careful, that all that sex could be lethal. Shrugging, the newlywed cavalierly retorts, "Hey, it's okay... If she dies, she dies."

Indeed, if she dies, she dies.
For our ennui and entertainment.

After all, Britney's always jumpstarted our shock centers. Right from the forbidden frosty virgin schoolgirl tease to the MTV snake performance, kissing Madonna on the mouth, writhing and shimmying in the most prolific pole dancing manner... Then the true insane clown posse hijinks began: marrying her friend from back home for 50 hours, crotch shotting the paparazzi in the company of Paris Hilton, GI Girling her own hair in a markedly downscale salon, weeping to Matt Lauer and invoking "I'm country" as if it's a license to be responsibly retarded -- and mocking people from small rural towns and backwaters everywhere who live straight up and work hard.

Hey, give Britney a break. Or don't. Let her twist...

Because aside from the bulls-eye for a nation's libido, the undulating girlwoman also served as a rejoinder to those girls who'd work hard, trying to be people. Her message was "be a skank, see where it gets you." And if those girls who weren't so hot, so ripe, so taut, so slick found themselves grappling with an unattainable new standard -- one that wasn't grounded in merit, but an apparent Party Barbie/Girls Gone Wild ethos -- there's a certain inherent pleasure in seeing the implosion played out, painful episode by painful episode.

She thinks she's all that...
Oh, yeah...
Used up and then some...

Even the volcanic response to her MTV Awards body -- at worst a size 8, and still far from the nation's average of 12 -- speaks volumes about what we value. And how much we resent it, too.

In the real world, there are other things... Jobs, family, friends, coping. It is not one endless party behind a velvet rope where we can be so much more "all that" than the herd desperately yearning to be like us. Look at them looking at us, sneer the golden ones -- until the derision fuels its own boomerang karma.

Fame now is being about the ease of recognition instead of achievement, becoming one of "them" is easier than ever. Just ask Tila Tequila, or any number of reality stars from The O.C. to Celebrity Rehab.

Rehab is its own set of issues. Certainly for Spears, who has checked in, checked out, dispatched a manager for encouraging it, then been bounced by a management firm for her inability to be respectful and cognizant of one's obligations... always a sign of girl not gone wild, but addicted.

Addicted to what?
Fame? Bold-faced living? She does love playing for the cameras.
Drink? Drugs? Partying? The stories are legend.

The drama? If a little girl keeps working and starting fires to get attention, doesn't each achievement or crisis have to be bigger to get the desired result.

It is all of it, most likely. Where it leaves her parents, ex-husband Kevin Federline, anyone concerned about those two little boys is an uncomfortable balancing act.

In Al-Anon, there are notions: keep the focus on you, do not enable the addicted person. Make sure you're safe; no one gets hurt. The trouble with the very famous is there's always an enabler who will do whatever to have proximity, because proximity gives them privilege - and privilege to the out-of-control commoner, especially one who exults in basking in reflected glory, is its own addiction.

No amount of humiliation, nit-picking or teeny annoying, often conflicting demands will run the sycophant off. They have found their access point: they will cling by any means necessary. Tape worms are more independent.

So, that question: what about the family? Well, their hands are tied. To watch this go down has to be the ultimate heartbreak. This is somebody's daughter... and those parents love that bright-smiled, blond-headed cherub with the far-flung personality and will to sing.

Even Federline, who took the ride and had the time, must recognize that his sons deserve to have a healthy, functioning mother. Having the talk with them in 10, 12, 15 years about who their mother was, and why she isn't here any more can't be something to relish... if he's thought it through that far.

In a licentious world, though, it's all about thrills. It's all about where the next hit, high, can-you-believe is... Any time it's somebody else's misfortune, it allows us to reassure ourselves that we're impervious, we're not that bad... never could/would be... So in our cloak or morale high-ground and superiority, we click our tongue against the roof of our mouth, shake our head and protest that "It's so sad..." when the fact is it's really some kind of life jacket in our own pool of indulgence.

If Britney dies, truly, who cares? How would her passing impact most of us? We don't know her, don't rely on her for our living, our survival, don't even really listen to her music - as recent album sales suggest. She is our mocking board, the person we've been able to count on for a pop culture punchline whenever we've needed one... But what does that mean? Really?

We can talk about cultural erosion, white trash aesthetics becoming the status quo that we are so much more than... We can sigh and say there was so much promise, feigning tragedy where most everyone had shared the "she's done wha..." discussion...

We can actually do something. We can stop embracing the freakshow consciousness that causes us to pause when the news is bad, the slut-embracing pseudo-sexual-insurrection that's all in the streets rather than being a slower burn between the sheets, the reckless rebel oh-yeah entitlement that seems to be so desirable, and turn towards things of real value: kindness, intellect, laughter that's not mocking.

Britney Spears, regardless of what happened, has ceased to be human to anyone except her family. She is a little Disney wonder who caught the national libidinal shift in a way no one has since Madonna and wasn't smart enough -- unlike Madonna -- to handle the ride. Whether it was heartbreak fueled or not, her wicked bad-ass romp over the last years is a rebellion from... handlers? keepers? the good girl definition that had followed her? fear of being normal?

It almost doesn't matter. She played to the paparazzi, the sexual zeitgeist and now that which made her is poised to devour her. We can't know how it is to be chased and hunted in the name of a picture, and yet.... How often does she play straight to them? And just because you're complicit in the picture, it doesn't mean you get to pick when and how they shoot you - especially if you choose to mount one of the most public meltdowns since, well, Anna Nicole Smith.

Once upon a time, privilege meant responsibility. John F Kennedy espoused "To whom much is given, much is expected." Those days are gone, and with it, the ability for many of our brightest stars to negotiate the twisted path between reality and the sparkle that is the fantasyland of fame.

As for me, I'm sad. Sad the media's been reduced to this, sad that good artists, actors, musicians can't get space, while we wear lobster bibs waiting for the next dangled or dropped morsel of misstep. Sad that a young woman got so caught up in her own backdraft she's being sucked heels over head to her own demise. Sad that we as a culture can't turn away, can't turn towards something more... and send the message of what's valuable -- trashy, sleazy, party, greedy, entitled, mean-spirited and condescending -- further and further into the future generation's sense of the things that matter.

Britney Spears shouldn't die. She should get picked up by the scruff of her neck, then sent somewhere she can't use privilege and fame to scam her way out of the work. Hard as it might be, it'll save the life she deserves to live... and she does.

Sometimes reaching into the places that're hollow, hurt, abandoned is the roughest thing we can do. But is it any rougher than being some kinda brokered media whore who's encouraged to - in the long run -- harm oneself for the sake of the people feeding on you? When you look at it like that, and also consider the message it sends the zombies paralyzed by Britney's latest escapade, it's amazing the shift.

But that shift...

That shift will resonate, then exponentiate. It's not an easy thing. Nor popular. But it is perhaps the only morally sound course of action left. Well, beyond getting the facts right should our nation's newspapers suddenly have to package the reprise of a life squandered in the name of gossip mongering and entertainment.

 
 
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06:12 PM on 01/29/2008
Ms. Gleason's insights are on the money. Our so-called culture continues to grind 'em up and spit 'em out in a kind of bloodsport to which our youth have become inured. We have already reached the point where such things no longer qualify as spectacle but are merely profitable to report, to chase, to milk. Our teens are yawning in response to this (if they are even aware of it). She is not one of them, has passed on into the next world already. They are invulnerable and unconcerned -- and more of them would follow in her footsteps today than when she was fourteen.

If the humanity of a young mother in such circumstances is not more worthy of our attention -- either because we are more concerned with vulgar details or unconcerned altogether -- what does that say about us?
12:51 PM on 01/29/2008
You are so correct - she is a daughter, a sister, a mother and most importantly of all - a human being, in dire need of much help. I pray she gets it in time. You wrote an excellent and touching article.
11:20 AM on 01/28/2008
Thank you for this post. Are we a nation of sick voyeurs? To answer my own question, Yes, I think so. It's like rubber-necking at an automobile accident.
I see little concern expessed for this young mother in the media, and a lot of mean spirited mockery.
I hope she can get to a place where she can " do the work" and make a real life for herself.
01:32 AM on 01/28/2008
Drugs and booze have little to do with Britney's downfall. They've exacerbated it, sure. But there's a bigger picture here than substances. This is a girl who has turned into a woman--in the most sexualized extent of the term--in front of the world, whose entire existence and identity is manufactured by a record executive. She has had little input into the 'product'--herself--that has been sold. The going got tough--a failed marriage, substance problems, children she wasn't equipped to deal with--and she doesn't have a fucking clue how to handle it. All she's had to do in her life so far is to do this certain dance step when this verse plays, and say this to this reporter on the red carpet when she asks you a question. She has no idea who she is, how to make a decision, how to deal with repercussions or what is going on. She is still a 14-yr-old girl who's now used up, and since she spent her childhood not growing up, but working as a poptart pinup, she doesn't have a clue how to be anything else. She has moved into a new world where she can no longer be a little girl poptart pinup--she has children to deal with, a former husband to wrangle--and she is breaking at the seams because she doesn't have a fucking clue.

Holly made the apt comparison between Britney and Madonna, and qualifies it by saying that Britney wasn't smart enough to deal with the ensuing celebrity whirlwind. I don't think smarts make the difference. I think the difference is that Madonna was 25--already an adult--when she exploded, and more importantly Madonna has always had sole ownership of her 'product' and persona. It's Madonna bossing others around and they are but cogs in her machine. With Britney it's the opposite--she's someone else's product and a cog in someone else's machine. She's the creation of svengalis. Now the svengalis no longer care, and she's left in the lurch.
10:03 PM on 01/27/2008
Hmmmm... The obituary is written. The cynic is me goes, and I guess the media is grumbling to themselves, "Come on, now girl, get on with it. DIE!" After all, there are deadlines... and, you know, inches to fill, eyes to scald.
It is sad, I guess... That a pretty young girl can be indulged and used up at such a startling rate. Faster, harder, deeper, more is a whole other kind of battle cry now.
Mr Earflaps, however, misses the point. Part of Amy's downfall is the very same thing: no one stopped the trainwreck before critical momentum was hit. Factor in fame, and the enablers will always crawl from the cracks... especially if the media glamourizes, even in that weird can't turn away from a carwreck way.
But then, it's just easier to say it's their own damn fault, especially when they're just kids who truly don't have enough worldly experience to know beyond what they're taught to feel entitled to.
07:58 PM on 01/27/2008
I guess if Amy Winehouse did not exist, the British would be looking down their nose about how our evil American society produced Britney, and how all Americans are to blame for her inevitable fate. Because Amy does exist, they are keeping their fucking mouths closed. Of course, sane people around the world know how hard it really is to save people. Many of us have known our share of alcoholics of varying ages who died well before their time despite legions of efforts to save them. I knew two women who no one could save, and while it eats me up, I do not blame America, George Bush or the white race.
06:59 PM on 01/27/2008
Holly nails it. As anyone who has seen All The President's Men can attest, the line that says it all is, "Follow the money".
Britney ceased to be a person and became an object in the course of a scant four years. And objects can be idolized, sold, traded, and judged for their value.
Regardless of how she acts, a person is there, buried under the object that supplies so many around her with more than a decent living.
Holly states, "...I'm sad. Sad the media's been reduced to this, sad that good artists, actors, musicians can't get space..."
Look at your life. Imagine yourself as an object that others value. Recall your youth. Recall forgiveness. Then turn to something else.
Look at your bills, your retirement plans, your own children, and focus on your life.
Then decide how much credence you wish to give someone who's handler's can or won't handle or help what they see as a decent paycheck.
And if you wish to post the fact that her behavior will influence other children to act as she is, then become a Big Brother or Big Sister and teach young children to think for themselves and to stop imitating what they see from the media.
To be a bystander is titillating. To judge is arrogant and inconsequential. To act is responsible.