It could be worse, Britney
Other hidden custodianships are oozing out after the Britney Spears story.
Signs were England’s soul singer-songwriter Amy Winehouse spinning out of control. Addiction. Alcohol. Drugs. Demons. Downward trajectory. Grammy winner, her last months were spent away. Hidden. Quiet. Far from press. No spotlight. Outsiders never knew how bad things were. Age 27, she lies in Britain’s Edgwarebury Cemetery.
Amy’s father, Mitch, follows Britney’s father, Jamie. As familiar with a custodianship as Britney’s dad, Mitch allegedly researched custodianships for months before his daughter passed away. He learned, unfortunately, this is not allowed under UK law. Were it permitted, friends who know say Mitch Winehouse truly believes he’d have fought for custodianship. And Amy would still be alive.
He cautions being too quick to judge Brit’s dad. He says the public rarely knows the full story.
Women kick butt
OK, you know about movie hit man “John Wick” who’s played by Keanu Reeves. Its makers are now out with “The Protégé,” a female-type Wick. Samuel L. Jackson is her trainer: “Women as contract killers who kick ass are great and model/actress Maggie Q plays her as a woman who takes on this crazy, dark murderous world. I like to watch it. Beautiful, dangerous and lethal always has an appeal.” Another bad boy here is Michael Keaton, who agrees she’s a woman to avoid in a dark alley. “She beats the s - - t out of a couple guys. Young girls are going to really like this.”
It’s Showtime!
Basically, TV is alive because of documentaries. What else can you watch? In crime-ridden cities, it’s the 8,000th “Law & Order” or things light and frothy like “The Handmaid’s Tale.” Instead, it’s all docs. Like a fashion show with Mrs. Biden’s flower-printed dresses. Or a Lindsay Lohan acting lesson. So, starting Sunday the 22nd, Showtime’s playing one doc that runs four consecutive Sundays. It’s on me. If you don’t like me, maybe an alternative’s some Nat Geo six-parter on How to Make Sand.
A bright future
Zarah, Filipino-American TV personality who premiered in 2005, has worked with Beyoncé, Ashlee Simpson, Alanis Morissette, Goo Goo Dolls. Writer, producer, recording artist, she wrote a crime thriller, “Diamonds are for Cocktails.” Passion, crime, murder, deceit, which that chunk of the world can have on one’s mind set among cafes of the French Riviera. So pay attention. She’s hunting a publisher.
He loves NYC & Greece
John Catsimatidis. Born Greece. Arrived here age 5. Like crabgrass, he’s everywhere and everything. P.S. 192 in Harlem, Brooklyn Tech High, NYU. His mother got him a $1-an-hour supermarket job. He says: “The guy was too cheap to have a conveyor belt so, working till 1 a.m. daily, I’d schlep four cases of soda each time from the basement.” Paying $1,000 a month, he bought out the owner. Realizing landlords foreclose supermarket properties, he bought real estate. Then an airline. Then oil wells. Then WABC. Then 20 other things. He loves animals. He schlepped his bird — which had its own nanny — every weekend to the Hamptons. And he loves New York. Asked why, with so many rich Greek shipowners that country is suffering poverty, he says: “Not one ship’s in Greece. They’re kept in Panama. Legislators think rich people are dumb. Not dumb. They just pick up and go elsewhere. Bad taxes, bad laws, people and money move to friendlier areas. It’s what’s happening in New York.”
Speaking of New York, the union shop steward noticed their porter sharpening pencils. Said the union shop steward: “This is not allowed. That’s a job for the carpenter.”
Only in New York, kids, only in New York.
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August 16, 2021 at 05:47AM
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Britney Spears' conservatorship drama could've had a darker ending - New York Post
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