LOS ANGELES, April 3, 2008

The "Brit" Pack: Paparrazi

Photogs Begin To Share In Fallen Pop Star's Spotlight

  • Play CBS Video Video Britney's On 'Mother'

    "ShowBuzz RAW": Pop star Britney Spears made a guest appearance on the hit CBS sitcom "How I Met Your Mother." Spears played a receptionist with an eye for one of the show's main characters.

    • Britney Spears has an entire team of paparazzi that devote their day entirely to her

      Britney Spears has an entire team of paparazzi that devote their day entirely to her  (AP)

    • Paparazzo Craig Williams, of Hollywood.tv, is seen through the side mirror during a stakeout near Britney Spears' house in Los Angeles Sunday, March 16, 2008.

      Paparazzo Craig Williams, of Hollywood.tv, is seen through the side mirror during a stakeout near Britney Spears' house in Los Angeles Sunday, March 16, 2008.  (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian)

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(AP) 
Ready For Her Close Up

As Hollywood.tv has come to dominate video coverage with its business model, X17 dominates photo coverage of Spears with sheer numbers. Run by Francois and Brandy Navarre, it consists of dozens of street-smart former valets or waiters, many from Brazil.

Rivals say X17 is responsible over the last four years for making old-school undercover paparazzi using stakeouts and long zoom lenses, largely irrelevant. It's a rare moment nowadays that Spears doesn't know she's being photographed. Instead, X17 and other new-school shooters swarm and shove to get the best shots.

This LA story merges with another one: immigration.

"There's a lot of illegals out there, and X17 has a lot of them," said Morgan of Splash.

Francois Navarre has said that many paparazzi are in the process of becoming legal immigrants.

Photos: Britney's Little Sis
"It used to be all white guys," Cousart said. "Now it's like 'We Are The World' out there."

Veteran paparazzi like Frank Griffin, who runs the Bauer-Griffin agency, complain that the new LA shooters know nothing about their cameras or subjects.

"I call them knuckle-scraping mouth breathers," Griffin said. "They can either make $1,500 a month running around with cameras, or they can go rob a 7-11."

"We see them as the scourge of the problem," Cousart said in one breath, before acknowledging in the next that his guys join in the scrum: "We've got to play or we're going to starve."

They won't so long as there's interest in the pictures they provide.

Market Driven

Spears is shopping with her mother at the Miss Sixty jeans store at the corner of Melrose and Crescent Heights. Twenty-six paparazzi line up against store windows, pointing cameras inside from every possible angle.

Catcalls come from passing vehicles: "Get a life!" and "Leave her the (expletive) alone, you idiots!"

But also, over and over again, there's the question, the one that stems from the same curiosity keeping glossy celebrity magazines alive: "Who's in there?"

One photographer responds: "Who do you think?"


By Ryan Pearson
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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