Britney and new hubby not faking it
Plus: McCartney wants to give geese a chance
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Britney Spears’ wedding was faked — NOT!
The Drudge Report on Wednesday carried a banner headline proclaiming “Media Tricked Again: Brit Faked Wedding.” It cited “documents” uncovered by US Weekly that “show Britney Spears’ nuptials to be a ‘faux wedding.’” The report continued: “People mag wasted 7 figures for ‘exclusive photos’. . . done to throw everyone off the case.” The buzz is that they plan to have their “real” wedding next month.
That’s not the case, according to Spears and Federline. The upcoming issue of People magazine — which hits newsstands this Friday — does, indeed, carry exclusive photos and details about the wedding. And it also has a brief article that addresses this controversy: “Are they legally wed?”
Turns out that Spears and Federline are not legally married because even though they have a marriage license, they haven’t yet filed it. They say they plan to file the license next week. As Federline explains it, after the couple hammered out their prenuptial agreement, the lawyers advised them to wait a week before filing the marriage license. But then they moved up the wedding date because they were tired of being stalked by photographers. “Basically, those reports that we didn’t legally wed are [bull],” Federline told People. “But it doesn’t bother me, those reports.”
Kathy Treggs, the Los Angeles County recorder’s office manager of public records, said the couple have 10 days from the date of the wedding to file the license. As far as she knows, Treggs said, the couple didn’t take out a license from a Los Angeles County office but could have pulled one from any county recorder’s office in the state or from any number of notary publics authorized to issue them.
“I know we’re not completely legal until we file the license, which we’ll do next week,” Spears told People. “But in a real sense, a spiritual sense, we’re married. We’re just following our lawyer’s advice.”
Regarding the reports that it was a fake marriage, she said, “I’m really upset that somebody some place decides to write a false headline about a special day that I’ve dreamed about since I was a little girl. It’s too bad. I don’t understand the thinking behind it.
Us Magazine reported that it has obtained a draft of the prenuptial agreement that states if the couple divorce, Spears will pay Federline $300,000 a year for a period of time equal to half the length of their marriage. She will have no financial obligation to his two children by a previous relationship, and any gift valued at $10,000 or more will require a legal document stating who will own it if the couple split.
Federline, described in the document as “presently possessed of property of moderate value,” can make no claim to any of Spears’ companies but bears no responsibility if any of them lose money.
Spears is worth at least $32 million, according to the document.
In January, Spears married childhood friend Jason Alexander in a surprise wedding in Las Vegas. That marriage was annulled 55 hours later.
Spears and Federline held a small wedding at a Studio City home, keeping even the singer’s parents and siblings in the dark until hours before the ceremony.
Federline said his 2-year-old daughter from a previous relationship, who was to be the wedding’s flower girl, missed the event because he feared if he canceled her previously planned trip to Disneyland that day the reason would leak out.
Give geese a chance
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Yui Mok / AP |
The former Beatle has written the former action star, asking him to ban foie gras production in California.
A bill outlawing the force-feeding of geese to produce the delicacy is on Governor Schwarzenegger’s desk, and Sir Paul McCartney, a member of VIVA!, an animal-rights group pushing the bill, is hoping the governor will sign it.
“Your signature could be the one that ends the suffering of these poor animals,” McCartney wrote to the “Terminator” star in a letter dated Sept. 20. “I feel sure that your natural feelings of compassion will encourage you to sign this basic humane bill into law.”
Notes from all over
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Chris Martinez / Reuters file Amy Brenneman |
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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