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Monday, June 21, 2021
| An
unstoppable force and global pop icon in the late 1990s and 2000s, the
trappings of fame have hit singer Britney Spears hard in the years
since. Crippling anxiety combined with punishing, sordid attention thrust upon her by paparazzi
and others fueled much publicized breakdowns in 2007 and 2008. That
then saw her placed in a legal conservatorship in which for more than a
decade, her father, Jamie, controlled her financial and personal
affairs, as well as her career and medical treatment.
With Spears on Wednesday set to appear virtually at a court hearing discussing her conservatorship,
today’s Daily Dose delves into the ins and outs of that legal concept,
the prominent international cases in which women have faced similar
restrictions on their autonomy and the important docs to watch to help
you become better informed. |
|
|
Reporters Liam Jamieson and Isabelle Lee | |
|
|
| |
|
|
1. Conservatorship Commencement
Britney Spears’ infamous breakdown after police found her in her home apparently under the influence of an unknown substance in January 2008 swiftly led to a Los Angeles court instituting a legal conservatorship.
The procedure placed the singer’s finances, medical well-being and
estate under the authority of her conservators: her father and, for a
time, a co-conservator and attorney named Andrew Wallet. Spears found
herself stripped of all but the most basic autonomy. |
| 2. #FreeBritney
For a decade, the singer dived back into her work through concert tours, reality TV
and entrepreneurial endeavors. All the while, however, there was little
word of her conservatorship and the extent to which she enjoyed control
over her own life. By 2019, a fan movement dubbed #FreeBritney,
fueled by concern over how much control others had over her life, was
gaining traction on the streets and online. Questions around Spears’
conservatorship accrued renewed attention in February following the
release of a New York Times documentary titled Framing Britney Spears,
which examines the singer’s life and ongoing legal fight against her father for control over her estate and finances. |
| 3. Just a Conspiracy?
Despite pleas from fans to allow Britney to control her own affairs (she is believed to be worth close to $60 million, though has little access to her fortune), Jamie Spears says the conservatorship is not what people are making it out to be,
claiming that the #FreeBritney movement is “a joke” and that its
followers are “conspiracy theorists.” With the conservatorship overseen
by the California court system, some close to Britney have argued that
the conservatorship may have helped her. Two years ago, the singer’s manager Larry Rudolph
stated that “the conservatorship is not a jail. It helps Britney make
business decisions and manage her life in ways she can’t do on her own
right now.” |
|
4. Court Appearance on WednesdayIn March, Spears and her legal team asked for Jamie
to be removed as her conservator (her father stepped down from
conservatorship of her personal affairs after falling ill in 2019 but
maintains partial control over her financial affairs). The following
month, the singer made a request to speak for herself at the next court
hearing on the issue, which takes place on Wednesday. The pop world will
be waiting with bated breath: Having been all but silent in public
about her conservatorship, her much-anticipated comments will likely
give the world — not least her army of ardent fans — a glimpse into a
life shrouded in controversy and mystery. |
|
|
|
| Professional
wrestler CJ Perry loves being near water, whether it’s the Seychelles
off the coast of Africa or in Hawaii. Still, when three generations of
her family wanted to get together, renting a beautiful, charming house
in North Carolina was the way to go. |
|
|
|
conservatorship: the facts |
| |
1. What Is a Conservatorship?
A conservatorship is a legal arrangement where a judge can appoint a guardian to be in complete control of an individual’s wealth, assets or person.
This can include their finances, but also health decisions, visitation
and other day-to-day decisions. The arrangement is used mainly by
caretakers for adults with severe disabilities or elderly people with
dementia or Alzheimer’s disease. In 2017, about 1.5 million adults in America were under conservatorship. |
|
2. A Force for Good?According to lawyer and pop culture commentator Emily Baker,
conservatorships can be necessary or beneficial to “protect the
conservatee from getting taken advantage of,” she tells OZY. But, when
there are “large amounts of money,” there is always the “opportunity for
people who have their own financial interests at mind.” |
| 3. Public Figures and Conservatorships
According
to Baker, “conservatorships should only be used when someone is
actually vulnerable due to medical incapacity. Otherwise, power of
attorney, business managers, and financial managers are a very good
option for public figures to protect their assets and manage their
careers.” But conservatorships tend to draw attention when applied to
people in the public eye, such as in the case of Spears and actor Amanda Bynes.
|
| |
|
| |
| Today on ‘The Carlos Watson Show’
You’ve probably found yourself charmed and chuckling from one of Tony
Hale’s iconic characters. Known for quirky and anxious roles like Arrested Development’s Buster Bluth or Veep’s
Gary Walsh, the acclaimed actor opens up about the bullying and anxiety
he faced growing up that made acting a catharsis. Listen as he dishes
about shooting The Mysterious Benedict Society during COVID and his crazy new hobby. Don’t miss it today on The Carlos Watson Show.
|
|
|
|
power games: women’s autonomy overseas |
|
1. Saudi Arabia
In
a country notorious for its lack of gender equality, women in Saudi
Arabia are subject to a different form of conservatorship — from birth
until death. The Middle Eastern state’s male guardianship system is,
according to rights groups and many Saudi women alike, the country’s biggest impediment
to women’s rights. Whether it be a husband, father, son or brother,
women need permission from their designated male guardian to do a wide
range of activities, including getting married, traveling, working and
accessing health care. Women’s rights activists have called on the
government to abolish its guardianship system, and while some reforms
have been made in the past decade, most notably with women’s suffrage and inclusion in politics, the guardianship system remains a key roadblock to any semblance of gender equality. |
|
2. United Arab EmiratesAlthough Saudi Arabia’s neighbor ranks higher
in terms of gender equality than many of its regional counterparts,
among the modern and luxurious skyscrapers of Dubai there exists a
suppressive male guardianship system. Dubai’s ruling family drew
international scrutiny in 2018 after the prime minister’s daughter,
Princess Latifa, was detained after she was found on board a boat off the coast of India while attempting to flee her family’s oppressive grip. |
|
3. Qatar
In another petrostate that supports a male guardianship system,
activists have boldly taken to social media to criticize Qatari
authorities — a rare occurrence in a country where policies are rarely
questioned. The Twitter account @QatarFem — which condemned the
guardianship laws and also discussed topics like domestic abuse — was short-lived,
effectively shut down before it could reach 2,000 followers. But the
sentiment from the Qatari feminists group was clear: Qatari youth are
tired of the system in place and aren’t afraid to pressure their rulers
for change. With the nation’s officials eager to promote their country
as being more progressive than Saudi Arabia and the UAE, will Qatar
reconcile with its discriminatory policies against women? |
| 4. Nepal
Though Nepal’s 2015 Constitution was celebrated by many for its
progressive outlook — abolishing the death penalty, establishing LGBTQ
rights and equalizing property rights for sons and daughters
— Nepalese women still took to the streets in protest. Why? The
constitution’s framework still espouses gender-based discrimination,
particularly surrounding citizenship.
Children of a Nepalese father and foreign-born mother are granted
citizenship by descent while children of a Nepalese mother and
foreign-born father are not. Some believe that the constitutional policy
was established to prevent Madhesi women in the country’s south from
intermarrying with Indian men across the border, in a move to protect Nepal’s sovereignty.
|
| 5. Nevada
Nevada’s Las Vegas Valley is promoted as a retirement paradise.
But amid the sunny skies, warm weather and posh retirement communities
hides a sinister practice that removes retirees from their homes and
strips away their rights. Under Nevada state law, courts can appoint a
guardian to those considered incompetent. The guardian then has the
authority to determine where their ward can live, manage their assets,
decide the medical treatment they receive and even whom they interact
with. Court-appointed guardians can arrive unannounced,
evict wards from their homes and place them in assisted living
facilities while selling off many of their personal belongings. With an
unknown number of wards suffering under guardianship laws, with most
lasting until death, the system is contributing to growing rates of elder abuse and exploitation. |
|
|
|
|
|
1. ‘Dirty Money’Fascinated by the world of shady guardianship cases? Then Netflix’s docuseries Dirty Money is for you. One episode features journalist Rachel Aviv of The New Yorker,
who wrote an early exposé of an elder abuse case in Nevada.
In one instance, a guardian named April Parks took control of an
elderly couple, isolating them and draining them financially before
being caught by authorities. |
| 2. ‘The Guardians’
The Canadian-made documentary The Guardians
is an up-close and personal look at guardianship abuse in Las Vegas.
Nevada is one of the worst culprits of elder abuse due to its broadly
defined conservatorship/guardianship laws. The documentary focuses on
the ways cunning lawyers have taken advantage of seniors and other
vulnerable people. |
|
3. ‘Mystery of the Missing Princess’As mentioned above, in Dubai, Princess Latifa has
accused her father of holding her hostage after she fled the UAE in
2018. She has sent text messages to friends about being held against her
will in a villa. Now, the United Nations is asking her father for proof
that she is in good health.
Photos have recently surfaced that appear to show the princess in public, most recently in Madrid,
but it is still unclear whether she maintains any level of freedom. The BBC has made a documentary (available on Amazon) about the whole crazy case, and trust us, it’s a doozy. |
|
|
| |
|
| |
Monday, June 21, 2021
| An
unstoppable force and global pop icon in the late 1990s and 2000s, the
trappings of fame have hit singer Britney Spears hard in the years
since. Crippling anxiety combined with punishing, sordid attention thrust upon her by paparazzi
and others fueled much publicized breakdowns in 2007 and 2008. That
then saw her placed in a legal conservatorship in which for more than a
decade, her father, Jamie, controlled her financial and personal
affairs, as well as her career and medical treatment.
With Spears on Wednesday set to appear virtually at a court hearing discussing her conservatorship,
today’s Daily Dose delves into the ins and outs of that legal concept,
the prominent international cases in which women have faced similar
restrictions on their autonomy and the important docs to watch to help
you become better informed. |
|
|
Reporters Liam Jamieson and Isabelle Lee | |
|
|
| |
|
|
1. Conservatorship Commencement
Britney Spears’ infamous breakdown after police found her in her home apparently under the influence of an unknown substance in January 2008 swiftly led to a Los Angeles court instituting a legal conservatorship.
The procedure placed the singer’s finances, medical well-being and
estate under the authority of her conservators: her father and, for a
time, a co-conservator and attorney named Andrew Wallet. Spears found
herself stripped of all but the most basic autonomy. |
| 2. #FreeBritney
For a decade, the singer dived back into her work through concert tours, reality TV
and entrepreneurial endeavors. All the while, however, there was little
word of her conservatorship and the extent to which she enjoyed control
over her own life. By 2019, a fan movement dubbed #FreeBritney,
fueled by concern over how much control others had over her life, was
gaining traction on the streets and online. Questions around Spears’
conservatorship accrued renewed attention in February following the
release of a New York Times documentary titled Framing Britney Spears,
which examines the singer’s life and ongoing legal fight against her father for control over her estate and finances. |
| 3. Just a Conspiracy?
Despite pleas from fans to allow Britney to control her own affairs (she is believed to be worth close to $60 million, though has little access to her fortune), Jamie Spears says the conservatorship is not what people are making it out to be,
claiming that the #FreeBritney movement is “a joke” and that its
followers are “conspiracy theorists.” With the conservatorship overseen
by the California court system, some close to Britney have argued that
the conservatorship may have helped her. Two years ago, the singer’s manager Larry Rudolph
stated that “the conservatorship is not a jail. It helps Britney make
business decisions and manage her life in ways she can’t do on her own
right now.” |
|
4. Court Appearance on WednesdayIn March, Spears and her legal team asked for Jamie
to be removed as her conservator (her father stepped down from
conservatorship of her personal affairs after falling ill in 2019 but
maintains partial control over her financial affairs). The following
month, the singer made a request to speak for herself at the next court
hearing on the issue, which takes place on Wednesday. The pop world will
be waiting with bated breath: Having been all but silent in public
about her conservatorship, her much-anticipated comments will likely
give the world — not least her army of ardent fans — a glimpse into a
life shrouded in controversy and mystery. |
|
|
|
| Professional
wrestler CJ Perry loves being near water, whether it’s the Seychelles
off the coast of Africa or in Hawaii. Still, when three generations of
her family wanted to get together, renting a beautiful, charming house
in North Carolina was the way to go. |
|
|
|
conservatorship: the facts |
| |
1. What Is a Conservatorship?
A conservatorship is a legal arrangement where a judge can appoint a guardian to be in complete control of an individual’s wealth, assets or person.
This can include their finances, but also health decisions, visitation
and other day-to-day decisions. The arrangement is used mainly by
caretakers for adults with severe disabilities or elderly people with
dementia or Alzheimer’s disease. In 2017, about 1.5 million adults in America were under conservatorship. |
|
2. A Force for Good?According to lawyer and pop culture commentator Emily Baker,
conservatorships can be necessary or beneficial to “protect the
conservatee from getting taken advantage of,” she tells OZY. But, when
there are “large amounts of money,” there is always the “opportunity for
people who have their own financial interests at mind.” |
| 3. Public Figures and Conservatorships
According
to Baker, “conservatorships should only be used when someone is
actually vulnerable due to medical incapacity. Otherwise, power of
attorney, business managers, and financial managers are a very good
option for public figures to protect their assets and manage their
careers.” But conservatorships tend to draw attention when applied to
people in the public eye, such as in the case of Spears and actor Amanda Bynes.
|
| |
|
| |
| Today on ‘The Carlos Watson Show’
You’ve probably found yourself charmed and chuckling from one of Tony
Hale’s iconic characters. Known for quirky and anxious roles like Arrested Development’s Buster Bluth or Veep’s
Gary Walsh, the acclaimed actor opens up about the bullying and anxiety
he faced growing up that made acting a catharsis. Listen as he dishes
about shooting The Mysterious Benedict Society during COVID and his crazy new hobby. Don’t miss it today on The Carlos Watson Show.
|
|
|
|
power games: women’s autonomy overseas |
|
1. Saudi Arabia
In
a country notorious for its lack of gender equality, women in Saudi
Arabia are subject to a different form of conservatorship — from birth
until death. The Middle Eastern state’s male guardianship system is,
according to rights groups and many Saudi women alike, the country’s biggest impediment
to women’s rights. Whether it be a husband, father, son or brother,
women need permission from their designated male guardian to do a wide
range of activities, including getting married, traveling, working and
accessing health care. Women’s rights activists have called on the
government to abolish its guardianship system, and while some reforms
have been made in the past decade, most notably with women’s suffrage and inclusion in politics, the guardianship system remains a key roadblock to any semblance of gender equality. |
|
2. United Arab EmiratesAlthough Saudi Arabia’s neighbor ranks higher
in terms of gender equality than many of its regional counterparts,
among the modern and luxurious skyscrapers of Dubai there exists a
suppressive male guardianship system. Dubai’s ruling family drew
international scrutiny in 2018 after the prime minister’s daughter,
Princess Latifa, was detained after she was found on board a boat off the coast of India while attempting to flee her family’s oppressive grip. |
|
3. Qatar
In another petrostate that supports a male guardianship system,
activists have boldly taken to social media to criticize Qatari
authorities — a rare occurrence in a country where policies are rarely
questioned. The Twitter account @QatarFem — which condemned the
guardianship laws and also discussed topics like domestic abuse — was short-lived,
effectively shut down before it could reach 2,000 followers. But the
sentiment from the Qatari feminists group was clear: Qatari youth are
tired of the system in place and aren’t afraid to pressure their rulers
for change. With the nation’s officials eager to promote their country
as being more progressive than Saudi Arabia and the UAE, will Qatar
reconcile with its discriminatory policies against women? |
| 4. Nepal
Though Nepal’s 2015 Constitution was celebrated by many for its
progressive outlook — abolishing the death penalty, establishing LGBTQ
rights and equalizing property rights for sons and daughters
— Nepalese women still took to the streets in protest. Why? The
constitution’s framework still espouses gender-based discrimination,
particularly surrounding citizenship.
Children of a Nepalese father and foreign-born mother are granted
citizenship by descent while children of a Nepalese mother and
foreign-born father are not. Some believe that the constitutional policy
was established to prevent Madhesi women in the country’s south from
intermarrying with Indian men across the border, in a move to protect Nepal’s sovereignty.
|
| 5. Nevada
Nevada’s Las Vegas Valley is promoted as a retirement paradise.
But amid the sunny skies, warm weather and posh retirement communities
hides a sinister practice that removes retirees from their homes and
strips away their rights. Under Nevada state law, courts can appoint a
guardian to those considered incompetent. The guardian then has the
authority to determine where their ward can live, manage their assets,
decide the medical treatment they receive and even whom they interact
with. Court-appointed guardians can arrive unannounced,
evict wards from their homes and place them in assisted living
facilities while selling off many of their personal belongings. With an
unknown number of wards suffering under guardianship laws, with most
lasting until death, the system is contributing to growing rates of elder abuse and exploitation. |
|
|
|
|
|
1. ‘Dirty Money’Fascinated by the world of shady guardianship cases? Then Netflix’s docuseries Dirty Money is for you. One episode features journalist Rachel Aviv of The New Yorker,
who wrote an early exposé of an elder abuse case in Nevada.
In one instance, a guardian named April Parks took control of an
elderly couple, isolating them and draining them financially before
being caught by authorities. |
| 2. ‘The Guardians’
The Canadian-made documentary The Guardians
is an up-close and personal look at guardianship abuse in Las Vegas.
Nevada is one of the worst culprits of elder abuse due to its broadly
defined conservatorship/guardianship laws. The documentary focuses on
the ways cunning lawyers have taken advantage of seniors and other
vulnerable people. |
|
3. ‘Mystery of the Missing Princess’As mentioned above, in Dubai, Princess Latifa has
accused her father of holding her hostage after she fled the UAE in
2018. She has sent text messages to friends about being held against her
will in a villa. Now, the United Nations is asking her father for proof
that she is in good health.
Photos have recently surfaced that appear to show the princess in public, most recently in Madrid,
but it is still unclear whether she maintains any level of freedom. The BBC has made a documentary (available on Amazon) about the whole crazy case, and trust us, it’s a doozy. |
|
|
| |
|
|
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