Friday, February 19, 2010

plus 3, Britney Spears Loves To Spend: Lawyers Get Confidential Info Legally ... - Post Chronicle

plus 3, Britney Spears Loves To Spend: Lawyers Get Confidential Info Legally ... - Post Chronicle


Britney Spears Loves To Spend: Lawyers Get Confidential Info Legally ... - Post Chronicle

Posted: 18 Feb 2010 08:11 AM PST

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Britney Spears has reportedly spent $700,000 renovating her home.

Britney Spears, the '3' singer spent the huge amount on various projects on her lavish Californian property, including on decorating, new furniture and electronic equipment.

A source said: "Britney remodelled her entire home. She loves spending money."

According to the insider, as well as a reported $200,000 spent on artwork, Britney splashed out $150,000 on electronics, purchased a new $100,000 bathroom, paid $100,000 for Venetian plaster walls and bought $150,000 of new furniture.

Meanwhile, Britney's lawyers have moved to make sure confidential information about the pop star and her children, Sean Preston, four, and three-year-old Jayden James, are legally sealed amid fears her private medical information could be leaked.

Lawyers Geraldine Wyle and Jeryll Cohen said in legal documentation: "A Google search for Ms. Spears' name yields 54,300,000 hits.

"Photographs and personal information, particular information of a highly confidential nature (such as personal medical information of Ms. Spears and her children), can potentially reap thousands if not millions of dollars.

"The possibility of such enormous profits presents a substantial risk that Ms. Spears' most confidential medical and personal information will be disclosed." (c) BANG

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Britney Spears Shoots Candie's Ads With Top Fashion Photogs - Post Chronicle

Posted: 18 Feb 2010 06:52 AM PST

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Britney Spears has teamed up with celebrated fashion photographers Annie Leibovitz, Mark Seliger and Terry Richardson to shoot her new ads for American clothing line Candie's.

The Toxic hitmaker, who became a Candie's girl last year (09), strikes several poses in different scenarios for the special "through the lens" promotional campaign.

In one of Seliger's shots, sexy Spears wears nothing but a corset and feather boas while posing in a boudoir. The shot was inspired by a French burlesque dancer's dressing room.

Leibovitz's shoot took place against an industrial backdrop, while Richardson opted for a plain white set.

In a statement, Spears says, "Annie, Mark and Terry are three of the biggest photographers in the world, I am honoured to be working with them... It was an amazing shoot and I know my fans are going to love the cool images." (c) WENN

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'Love Fruit' earns radio host $2,000 - Greensboro News & Record

Posted: 19 Feb 2010 12:46 AM PST

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He spent five grueling days writing, recording and editing. His mother labored tirelessly at the sewing machine for the entire weekend. But in the end, all their time and effort was worth it. One soulful song and one giant avocado costume later, Greensboro resident Josh Anderson was $2,000 richer.

The 107.5 WKZL "Murphy in the Morning" show co-host took home the grand prize in a national video contest sponsored by Avocados from Mexico. The avocado distributor asked participants to submit a video about their love for the avocado and its aphrodisiac qualities.

Anderson, 33, won in the "Most Entertaining" category for his "I'm an Avocado Song (Green and Sexy)," a Marvin Gaye-style ode to "the love fruit."

"I was like, 'Well, what would be the most ridiculous thing I could possibly

do?' " Anderson said. "And I think dressing up like a big puffy avocado is more ridiculous than anything."

Anderson, who regularly writes parody songs for "Murphy in the Morning," found out about the avocado contest from a 107.5 listener. When he learned the 15 finalists would automatically receive $500, he thought he might have a chance at placing.

"I've got a wedding coming up, and I was like, 'Well, maybe I can just make a few extra hundred dollars to pay for a DJ or something like that,'" Anderson said. "Which is ridiculous, having to pay for a DJ when you are a DJ."

Anderson thought the best way to show the sexy side of avocados was with a smooth R&B song. But he faced a dilemma when it was time to make the giant avocado suit he wears in the video, because he doesn't know how to sew.

With an egg-crate mattress pad and some green felt, Anderson's mother sewed the costume by hand. Since the bottom of the costume was open, Anderson also had to wear pantyhose underneath.

"It was quite possibly the most embarrassing moment of my life," Anderson said. "I didn't really think as many people were going to see it as they did."

Anderson also recruited his fiancee, Angel, to be in the video as the object of the giant avocado's affection. She also lip-syncs to the video's deep-voiced backing vocals.

"I told her, 'All you have to do, just no matter what I do, when I dance stupid and when I lay on our (kitchen) island like its a cutting board, you just have to look amazed by me,' " Anderson said. "And it's probably the only time she'll ever look amazed by me."

A week after submitting the video, Anderson learned he was a finalist. After 10 days of public voting and scrutiny from a panel of judges, he found out he won the $2,000 grand prize.

"I was actually really surprised," Anderson said. "One of the guys that was in the contest works for New Wave (Entertainment in Burbank, Calif.). He worked on 'Avatar' and 'Sherlock Holmes' and all these big movies."

Anderson grew up in Davidson County, and unlike many other songwriters, he has no musical background.

"I started playing guitar because my very first girlfriend thought it was hot," Anderson said.

From there, he discovered his love for parody songs. He started by writing witty melodies such as "Manhole Grandma," about a boy who loses his grandmother at the mall and discovers she fell down a manhole, and "Porpoise With a Purpose," about a porpoise who just wants to help mankind.

"When I was in high school, my teachers would give me the first five minutes of class to get whatever I had in my system out," Anderson said.

His humorous tunes have evolved since then to include local jingle work, such as the original Greensboro Grasshoppers theme, and several national competition wins.

In 2007, Anderson won $11,000 in an Alka-Seltzer jingle contest and was flown to Los Angeles to record the song for a commercial that aired during the Super Bowl. He filmed the commercial with notable music video director Nigel Dick, who has collaborated with Britney Spears and Nickelback.

Above all, Anderson is grateful to the "Murphy in the Morning" listeners for supporting his passion for humor.

"They've been supportive of everything I've ever done in the past," Anderson said. "I think they helped me out more than anything."
Next, Anderson will enter a jingle contest for FedEx. But this time, he's leaving his giant "love fruit" suit at home.

Contact Alexa Milan at 373-7120 or alexandra.milan@news-record.com.

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CKE Restaurants Incorporated - Chicago Tribune

Posted: 18 Feb 2010 11:56 PM PST

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When a reality show about the Kardashian sisters of Calabasas debuted in fall 2007, most people had never heard of the family and what was known could scarcely be considered positive.

Their late father, a lawyer, helped O.J. Simpson win acquittal at his murder trial; middle daughter Kim palled around nightclubs with Paris Hilton; and a graphic sex tape featuring the brunet and a former boyfriend ended up in the hands of a porn distributor.

Two and a half years later, the Kardashians are an inescapable cultural and commercial force. Their series, "Keeping Up With the Kardashians," which concludes its fourth season Sunday on E, has shattered viewership records for the cable network and spawned a spin-off show. Kim Kardashian.com is the world's most popular official celebrity website, according to its operator. Checkout-aisle magazines and gossip blogs cover the smallest details of the sisters' lives. And Madison Avenue calls on the family to sell mainstream America everything, from diet pills and orange juice to NASCAR and fast food.

Their popularity comes despite the fact that the sisters lack the talents that traditionally lead to superstardom and, some believe, partly because of it.

"There's an aspirational quality to somebody who has become a celebrity for -- and I don't say this in an offensive way -- but for not doing anything celebrity-worthy," said Matt Delzell, an executive at Davie Brown Entertainment, a company that helps corporations choose celebrity endorsers. The young women to whom the Kardashians appeal, he said, "tend to think that's pretty cool. That's something I might be able to achieve."

Television programming, especially on cable, is increasingly dependent on created rather than established celebrities. Turning nobodies -- or virtual nobodies -- into reality stars is cheaper than hiring actual somebodies. But the Kardashians have transcended that level. While personalities on Bravo's "Real Housewives" franchises and MTV's "Jersey Shore" and "The Hills" seem to exist to promote those shows, the Kardashians have turned their program into a promotional vehicle to expand their own empire.

Kris Jenner, the family matriarch and self-described "momager," said she had little time for those who criticized her brood for being "famous for nothing." She is too busy sorting through business opportunities, working on "SPINdustry" -- a Kardashian documentary special debuting Sunday on E -- and generally protecting what she only slightly self-consciously refers to as "our brand."

"At a certain point, you have to put on your business hat and think of yourself that way," she said recently.

"Keeping Up With the Kardashians" was conceived as a Hollywood version of "The Brady Bunch" -- the harmless high jinks of a loving blended family against a backdrop of wealth and famous connections.

After divorcing Robert Kardashian, with whom she had four children -- Kourtney, 30; Kim, 29; Khloe, 25; and Rob, 22 -- Kris married former Olympic gold medalist Bruce Jenner, who had four children of his own. The couple had two more daughters, Kendall, 14, and Kylie, 12. From the beginning, Kim occupied the Marcia role -- sexy and popular -- but there were story lines for everyone.

Her sisters snagged their own show, "Kourtney and Khloe Take Miami," last year and made headlines when Kourtney became pregnant by an on-again-off-again boyfriend and Khloe married Lakers' sixth man Lamar Odom less than a month after they met. When the NBA champions and their families visited the White House last month, Khloe was photographed chatting with President Obama. Kim, meanwhile, agonized over whether to get back together with New Orleans Saints star Reggie Bush. (She did and showed up on the sidelines at the most-watched Super Bowl in history.)

Cameras recorded every tear and shriek and the audience spiked. "Keeping Up With the Kardashians" has averaged 3.7 million viewers this year, double last season's total, and was especially successful in the young, female and free-spending demographic coveted by advertisers. According to Nielsen, Kardashian viewers tend to be single, college-educated women with no children, white-collar jobs and annual salaries of more than $60,000.

The show is the highest-rated series on cable among women ages 18 to 34, and occasionally beats even the network shows in its time slot for those viewers.

Why the Kardashians have succeeded where other programs purporting to show the real lives of beautiful people have not is the subject of much analysis in an industry eager to replicate them. Many credit the relationship between the sisters and their mother.

In spite of the sex tape, the quickie marriage and the out-of-wedlock child, the family still somehow manages to seem a model of sorts, said veteran celebrity journalist Bonnie Fuller. The sisters have their own homes, love interests and career prospects, but seem to enjoy nothing more than a good, long family talk at their mother's kitchen table.

"It's a modern-type of wholesome. We're living in a very different world now. Sarah Palin's daughter has a child out of wedlock," said Fuller, the editor in chief of Hollywood Life, a celebrity and entertainment website. "Despite everything that has gone on with them, they come across as a very tight-knit family, and that appeals to women."

Any conversation about the Kardashians' popularity eventually touches on the sexual allure of Kim. The tape she made with rapper Ray J -- she initially sued to stop it but later reached a settlement with distributor Vivid -- is "definitely a best-seller," a company spokeswoman said while declining to provide sales numbers. There was also a Playboy pictorial and her annual pin-up calendar. But she has managed to pull what marketers say is an unusual feat -- appealing to men without pushing away women.

"She's attractive to guys because she's absolutely beautiful," said Brad Haley, the executive vice president of marketing for CKE Restaurants, whose Carl's Jr. burger chain hired Kim to promote its new chicken salad. But she also draws in women, he said, because "she's not a waif-thin model. She's got curves . . . and talks about how she's got to diet and keep after her body."

"[Our fan base] started off very male, but it's transformed into a very heavily female base," Kim Kardashian said Tuesday backstage at the New York runway debut of a new Kardashian fashion line from Bebe. "I think that's because we're not afraid to share our beauty secrets and our flaws. If I have cellulite, I'm not afraid to talk about it and try to find a product to make it look better."

Beyond "Keeping Up" -- which Kris Jenner calls "the mothership" -- and its spinoff, the Kardashians stoke their tech savvy fans with an intense online presence. Kim's website, where she blogs and posts answers to fan questions, gets more than 6.7 million page views a month, according to Quantcast. Khloe's gets 3 million and Kourtney's 2 million, according to site operators.

"They have embraced social media in a way that is profoundly different than other celebrities," said Karina Kogan, chief marketing officer for Buzzmedia, a company that operates celebrity sites, including the Kardashians'. While Britney Spears, another Buzzmedia partner, relies on "a team of folks" to write the material on her site, the Kardashians most often handle it themselves, she said. The sisters routinely make news on Twitter or their blogs. When Kim wanted to refute reports that she had breast implants, she posted a photo of herself in a bikini at age 14.

How long the Kardashian franchise will endure is a subject that sparks debate. Kim's appearance on "Dancing With the Stars," which could have established her legitimacy as an entertainer with a broader national audience, fizzled when she was sent packing after two episodes.

"It remains to be seen how [the Kardashians] will do in the future. I don't think the TV show has an incredibly long shelf life," said Delzell, the branding executive.

But Kris Jenner is convinced otherwise. Asked to look 10 years in the future, she doesn't hesitate.

"It's 'Keeping Up With the Kardashians,' season 24. Kylie gets married," she said.

harriet.ryan@latimes.com

adam.tschorn@ latimes.com

Times staff writer Greg Braxton contributed to this report.

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