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LOS ANGELES -- To the mortgage crisis and the energy crunch and the devalued dollar, add this: a recession in the Britney market.
The young woman who rose and fell (and fell and fell) in the paparazzi's strobe lights seems to have put bizarre public displays behind her, and the photographers who made hundreds and thousands -- and in some cases, hundreds of thousands -- capturing her missteps must look elsewhere for celebrities more predictably unpredictable.
"She's boring. She doesn't even have a boyfriend," said Francois Navarre, the co-owner of X17, the photo agency that set the standard for aggressive 24/7 coverage of Britney Spears.
In the past two years -- but not lately -- Britney Spears has:
* Had her head shaved.
* Gone to rehab -- several times, some for only a day.
* Attacked a paparazzi car with an umbrella.
* Appeared dazed and listless during a performance at the MTV Awards.
* Been involved in an apparent hit-and-run incident.
* Appeared in revealing outfits without panties -- several times.
* Lost custody of her children.
* Tried on shorts in the middle of a Hustler store.
* Displayed erratic behavior during a magazine shoot, including using the bathroom with the door open.
Photographers who relied on Spears for hourly material for the gossip blogs are confronted by a lack of access and a lack of drama. She rarely goes out, and when she does, she behaves herself. No umbrella attacks. No head shaving. No fake British accent. No panty-less car exits.
Agencies that dispatched SUV-loads of freelancers to track her every move last year have downsized their Britney teams.
"At the height of the story, we had maybe six or eight guys on it round the clock," said Chris Doherty, the owner of INF, which sells pictures to magazines, Web sites and TV shows. "Now, we would have at most two. There's no real point to being there all the time."
Spears' allure remains, as evidenced when two paparazzi were arrested last week near her home. But the coverage does not compare with the intense stakeouts that proceeded her confinement in a psychiatric ward in January.
A court subsequently named her father, Jamie, co-conservator of her and her estate, giving him and a lawyer control of the 26-year-old's medical care, finances and day-to-day activities.
The structure and supervision transformed Spears' life for the better, her representatives say. Ten months after she lost custody of her sons, she finalized an agreement with her ex-husband that provides for gradually expanding visitation rights. She is reportedly back in the recording studio. On the rare occasions she ventures out, the gossip sites have congratulated her on her healthy, happy appearance.
"Her father is doing what a good parent would do, but that doesn't help the paparazzi," said Bonnie Fuller, who was editor of Star magazine and Us Weekly when Spears was a staple. "She's not going out with her former BFFs Paris and Lindsay anymore," Fuller said, referring to Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan.
Pennies on the dollar
Before the court intervened, Spears was seemingly omni-available to the videographers and still photographers who camped outside her gated community.
She dated a paparazzo. Her closest friend and adviser, Sam Lutfi, allowed photographers into her house and provided them with information about her comings and goings, according to her mother, Lynne.
Every rant meant salable video; each new outfit meant fresh photos. The prices that photos sell for are often overstated, but Navarre said an exclusive photo of Spears today would bring 10 percent of what it did during her most erratic times.
"Then it could sell for $10,000 to $15,000, but now it would be hard to get over $1,500," he said.
Others who sell photos disagreed, saying that the smaller number of paparazzi has kept the prices relatively stable.
Navarre's agency, X17, had 25 people assigned to Spears duty earlier this year. Now it's fewer than 10, he said.
On a recent weekend, "we were the only ones," he said.
Nick Stern, a photojournalist who quit his photo agency in disgust at the apex of its Spears coverage, said that many photographers who tracked her were foreigners drawn by the relatively easy money. When their access to Spears dried up, Stern said, they had no incentive to stay on the beat or even in the field.
"These guys don't really have any interest in the media or reporting news. It was about money. I wouldn't be surprised if many of the snappers covering Britney have moved on to other jobs or other parts of the U.S. or even back to their home countries," said Stern, chief photographer for the Australian agency Crocmedia.
And good riddance
An attorney for Spears said the singer doesn't miss the glare.
"Britney and her family are delighted to dis-incentivize the outrageous behavior of the paparazzi," lawyer Blair Berk said.
Her neighbors have noted the shrinking number of lenses camped outside the guardhouse.
"At the peak, there were 25, but now it's down to three or four," said Jim DeBoard, who said it had been about six months since he saw paparazzi breaking traffic laws to get behind Spears' vehicle.
"We are still all amazed at how crazy it was," DeBoard said.
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