Local
Foreign
Business
Sports
Leisure
BM
Kadazan Dusun
Archives
Latest News
 
Nst-studio
Classifieds
In_sites_link
Football-link
Smbb-logo
Kosimbayanan do rayat orurukut tinaru nosili kosuusuayan di koimbayat |  Koupisan audit pogun tumanud standard sompomogunan |  SONGKOSUAYAN 'PONOKOSANGANU' |  Pihak bank, syarikat pengawal diminta tepati masa bagi agihan BR1M |  Penerima BR1M diingatkan tidak buat penipuan: Charles |  JKR diminta buat pusingan silang di lampu isyarat dekat Sg Pampang, Kg Limbawan |  Tiada unsur jenayah kematian bekas MP Batu Sapi: Inkues |  Tawau catat penurunan kadar indeks jenayah |  Penduduk P. Sebatik bakal ditempatkan di Tg. Arang |  Warga asing ‘bermaharajalela’ |  2,397 rumah ‘bina baru’ PBR disiapkan |  AUDIT NEGARA IKUT STANDARD A-BANGSA |  Zambia keep promise to honour 1993 victims |  Pearce interim manager |  Move to break squash top 100 world rankings | 
 Leisure

Britney Spears in Australian lip synch furore

9th November, 2009

Britney Spears’ Australian tour ran into controversy before it even began, with an official suggesting concert goers should be told if the pop icon would be miming her songs.

Spears, who has rebuilt her career after myriad personal troubles in the wake of her 2006 divorce from ex-husband Kevin Federline, is due to kick off her Circus tour Down Under later Friday.

But reports that she will lip-sync during many of the concerts prompted the New South Wales Minister forFair Trading to suggest tickets should carry disclaimers about whether parts of the concerts were pre-recorded.

Australians would not tolerate a “Mickey Mouse performance”, Virginia Judge told Sydney’s Daily Telegraphin reference to the US star’s past as one of Disney’s Mouseketeer personalities.

“Let’s be clear—live means live,” she said.

“If you are spending up to 200 dollars (182 US), I think you deserve better than a film clip.”

Judge said the state New South Wales government would be happy to look at options such as placing a disclaimer on a ticket that would warn consumers a performance was pre-recorded.

The minister said she had nothing against Spears but felt that concert goers should be told if musicians would be singing live.

   
Email Print
   
 
 
E-browse
Actionline