The Britney Spears economy
The downward spiral of Britney Spears has created an entirely new economy for the media outlets who cover celebrity news. (AFP/Getty Images)
In the days after the Britney Spears soap opera rode a
police-escorted gurney to its apex, celeb-mag sales spiked, traffic
jammed gossip Web sites, tabloid TV ratings rose and paparazzi
photo prices surged.
For a growing number of people and businesses, Britney's saga is
about money: Every time she sinks to new lows, cash flows. And
these days, no one is above the fray.
When a custody dispute devolved into a three-hour standoff at
Spears' home Jan. 3, police officers and firefighters were pressed
into duty. Television stations sent up helicopters, and cable news
anchors reported the unfolding drama in real time. The Associated
Press had two reporters working the story, with editors on both
coasts updating it seven times throughout the night.
Spears is just one of many stars driving the growing
multibillion dollar celebrity news industry. But the Spears story
in particular, with a new twist nearly every week, has become a
very profitable sub-sector unto itself.
"Britney is the most bankable celebrity out there right now,
and she has been for the past year," said Francois Navarre,
founder of the paparazzi agency X17.
Spears became a can't-miss tabloid topic after filing for
divorce from second husband Kevin Federline in November 2006. Since
then, she's been in and out of rehab, shaved her head, revealed a
bit too much above the hemline, was arrested after a traffic
accident, and lost custody of her kids (and later her visitation
rights).
"The product for the tabloid industry is the unusual, and
Britney has been delivering that consistently," said Dan Smith,
dean of the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University.
At a time when advertising spending in traditional media is
declining, celebrity gossip titles such as Star, Us Weekly and In
Touch Weekly are growing. That helped overall newsstand sales for
magazines edge 1 percent higher, to $2.39 billion, in the first
half of 2007.
"The increase is almost entirely attributable to the growth of
the celebrity magazine," said John Harrington, who runs industry
consulting agency Harrington Associates.
Any time a magazine can boost newsstand sales past its average,
the revenue is booked nearly entirely as profit, Harrington said:
"People prints 2.5 million copies and sells about an average of
1.5 million. If they have an issue that sells 2 million, the extra
half million goes to the bottom line."
People, which takes a broader and less sensational look at the
entertainment industry, dominates the sector in circulation, but
that hasn't stopped such new titles as In Touch and Life & Style
Weekly from elbowing in. Another newcomer, the U.S. version of
Britain's OK!, has taken particular interest in Spears, putting her
picture on the cover 54 times in the 103 issues since January 2006.
"An editor's dream is to have a real life soap opera unraveling
in front of you, and Britney provides that every week," said Sarah
Ivens, OK!'s U.S. editor. The magazine has a 10-person team in Los
Angeles devoted to Spears coverage. "We're on constant Britney
alert."
She wouldn't disclose the costs to the magazine, saying only
that Spears has been "amazing" for OK!'s business. Publisher Tom
Morrisy said Spears drives newsstand sales and helped the
magazine's ad revenue more than double to $51 million in 2007. OK!
expects to turn a profit in 2008, three years after breaking into
the market.
US Weekly has been just as enamored of the star, putting Spears
on nearly two-thirds of its covers last year, including each of the
last 14. People has had Spears on the cover 10 times in the past 15
months.
And that heightened demand for Spears pictures has been a boon
to photographers.
X17's Navarre said an exclusive shot of the star would sell for
about $10,000 in the U.S. and generate thousands more in residuals.
"She's the most expensive right now," he said. "For Angelina,
for example, you divide by two or even three to get the price."
In contrast, the average celebrity shot fetches $125 to $700,
according to Scott Mc Kiernan, founder of ZUMA Press photo agency.
He said residual fees on exclusives can push the value of a unique
Spears shot well past $100,000.
Many of those images wind up on celebrity gossip Web sites, like
TMZ and PerezHilton. The sites make money by delivering viewers to
ads on their pages, typically receiving a fee for each 1,000 hits.
Navarre said Spears boosts traffic to his Web site, X17online.com,
more than any other star.
"During the ambulance incident, traffic doubled every hour,"
he said, citing internal server data.
X17, which owns the infamous picture of a bald Spears taken in
February, has a team of photographers tracking her at all times.
"For us, she's the star No. 1," Navarre said.
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