Eat, Pray, Britney
A podcast by Eat, Pray, Britney - Giovedì
148 Episodio
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The Final Countdown
Pubblicato: 08/11/2021 -
Unread with Chris Stedman
Pubblicato: 03/11/2021 -
I'm Britney Spears?
Pubblicato: 22/10/2021 -
Monster Energy
Pubblicato: 14/10/2021 -
On a Scale of Zero to Britney (How Free Are You?)
Pubblicato: 06/10/2021 -
Autumn Goodbye
Pubblicato: 30/09/2021 -
Tinker, Taylor, Soldier, Spy
Pubblicato: 27/09/2021 -
There Can Be a Hundred Episodes in a Room...
Pubblicato: 20/09/2021 -
Siren Emojis
Pubblicato: 08/09/2021 -
Pistol Packin’ Papa
Pubblicato: 06/09/2021 -
Big Cats and Little Dogs
Pubblicato: 23/08/2021 -
Just the Tip
Pubblicato: 16/08/2021 -
VMA VIP
Pubblicato: 09/08/2021 -
Free Titney
Pubblicato: 26/07/2021 -
Fireworks
Pubblicato: 19/07/2021 -
Party in the Girls' Room
Pubblicato: 15/07/2021 -
Hot Potato of Blame
Pubblicato: 08/07/2021 -
A Day Late and a Dollar Short
Pubblicato: 05/07/2021 -
The Whole Damn System is Wrong
Pubblicato: 24/06/2021 -
My Cousin Alli
Pubblicato: 07/06/2021
Britney Spears was under a conservatorship from 2008 to 2021 where all her financial and personal decisions had to be approved by her conservators, including her father, Jamie Spears. Britney earned hundreds of millions of dollars during that time, performing and touring extensively, while being deemed too impaired by the courts to be in control of her life. Britney is one of the most recognizable celebrities in the world, yet very little of the massive media coverage she generated focused on the conservatorship until the #FreeBritney movement grew within the last few years before the restrictive legal arrangement finally ended. Now that the conservatorship has been terminated, there are still an enormous amount of unanswered questions, including whether those responsible for the conservatorship will be held accountable for what Britney experienced during those 13+ years. Eat, Pray, Britney tries to draw attention to the restrictive constraints Britney was under during the conservatorship, as well as her current pursuit of justice, while also examining her life and career through a feminist lens.