Britney 'Extremely Upset' in Australia

Australian music critics have greeted Britney Spears on her first
concert tour down under with poor reviews and stories of fans walking
out of her show. On top of that, government officials have been
critical of the singer for her use of lip-syncing during performances.
All the criticism has traumatized Spears.

"Britney is aware of all this and she's extremely upset by it," Paul
Dainty, Spears' tour promoter, told The Australian on Monday. "She's a
human being. I'm embarrassed, with such a big international entourage
here with Britney, to be part of the Australian media when I see that
kind of totally inaccurate reporting."

Critics called her first concert, held in Perth on Friday, "boring"
and "stiff."

In their reporting, Perth Now claimed "hundreds of fans stormed out"
of the Friday concert. One fan, 22-year-old Amanda Hawlet put it
bluntly: "I want my money back or I want her to sing properly. The
ticket cost me $200 and she lip-synced the whole thing."

Dainty disputes that fans who paid up to $1,500 dollars would walk out
as early as the third song, as was reported. Spears' manager Adam
Leber took to Spears' Twitter account to defend the singer to her 3.7
million followers. "Its unfortunate that one journalist in Perth
didn't enjoy the show last night. Fortunately the other 18,272 fans in
attendance did. - Adam."

Before this concert flap, Britney's trip to Australia was already
dogged with controversy. Last week, officials there announced they
were brainstorming options to ensure fans are fully informed that
parts of the concerts will be lip-synced.

"It is Britney's 'prerogative' to lip-sync, and it is my job to make
sure consumers know what they are paying for up front," said Virginia
Judge, Minister for Fair Trading for the Australian state New South
Wales, in a statement released by the government.

One consumer protection option being considered is the requirement of
disclaimers on tickets and promotional material that will indicate
that portions of the show will be pre-recorded.

"Anyone paying to attend a Britney Spears concert, or any bubblegum
pop show for that matter, should really know better than to go in
expecting an earth-shattering vocal performance. You didn't, afterall,
just pay to see Mariah Carey circa 1990," says AOL Music editor Kim
Davis. "These days, you pay to see it all -- the costumes, the
dancers, the stage props ... Britney's skin. Like it or not, the vocal
performance is, in many cases, a fraction of the arena show these
days."

"Rather than slapping a disclaimer on all ticket sales, my advice
would be for consumers to hop on the Web, where anything you want to
know is at your fingertips. Watch tour footage, read reviews, flip
through photos. Go vicarious before you actually, well, go."


t says: And you're NOT paying for live vocals...you're paying for
"Britney's skin". Does that mean the flesh she is showing....or the
quality of her actual skin.....which I imagine is pretty difficult to
see from the audience....

And Britney's "upset" because the paper's are saying she lip-sync's?!?
WTF!?!
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