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J.Lo, Britney Vex Evercore’s Altman, Thomas Lee in U.K. Courts

Singer Jennifer Lopez is taking on the National Enquirer in Irish and U.K. courts, one of a growing number of celebrities who have sought access to stricter British libel laws.

The 36-year-old Lopez, better known as J.Lo, has started legal proceedings against the Enquirer in Belfast and is planning cases in Dublin and London over a March 12 story linking her to a drug scandal. The suit is the latest to ensnare Lantana, Florida- based American Media Inc., which is owned by Roger Altman’s Evercore Partners Inc. and Thomas H. Lee Partners LP.

Britney Spears, 25, last year won an apology from the Enquirer in a case which critics said highlighted the trend of celebrities turning to the U.K. and Irish courts. Kate Hudson, 28, and Cameron Diaz, 34, have won similar cases in the past year, as the Internet erases judicial borders for media companies, leaving them open to lawsuits around the world.

“These people are global superstars, with international reputations,” Paul Tweed, a lawyer at Johnsons Solicitors who represents both Lopez and Spears, said in an interview at his Belfast office. “They have the same right as any other individual to seek vindication in any jurisdiction where their reputation is established.”

Spears and Hudson brought cases which involved the U.K. editions of the Enquirer. Diaz in February received an apology in London for a story that appeared on the magazine’s Web site, claiming that the actress had been unfaithful to her former boyfriend Justin Timberlake.

Absence of Malice

“There is no doubt that English libel law tends to favor individual reputation over free speech,” said lawyer Floyd Abrams, the author of “Speaking Freely: Trials of the First Amendment.” “Defamation awards tend to be higher in the U.S., but it’s much easier to win a case in the U.K.”

While the 14 U.S. libel trials last year were the fewest since 1980, according to the Media Law Resource Center, stars are being drawn by London and Belfast courts, which don’t demand evidence of malice in defamation cases, unlike their American counterparts.

“U.S. celebrities are taking advantage of our friendlier courts,” said Niri Shan of the London-based law firm Taylor Wessing, who represents the Enquirer.

There were 20 celebrity-versus-newspaper court cases filed in the U.K. in the 12 months through May 2006, up from nine a year earlier, according to data from Sweet & Maxell, a London- based legal publisher that tracks cases.

“This is outrageous,” Shan said. “It’s contrary to free speech. They should sue where the substantive publication is.”

The Enquirer is one of 16 magazines, including the Weekly World News and the Star, controlled by American Media, which was purchased by Evercore in 1999. Boston-based Thomas H. Lee bought its stake in 2003.

Liberace Case

U.K. courts have traditionally been a friendlier venue for aggrieved celebrities. As far back as 1959, Liberace, the U.S. pianist, successfully sued the London-based Daily Mirror for implying he was gay after describing him, in part, as a “fruit- flavored, mincing, ice-covered heap of mother love.”

“Celebrities and others from the U.S. suing in the U.K. is something that’s been with us for a while, it’s significant, and it’s not going away,” said Dan Tench, a media lawyer at London- based law firm Olswang. “We’ll see more cases revolving around allegations made on U.S. Web sites.”

The spread of U.K. editions of gossip magazines and the Internet is fueling the trend. J.Lo’s case follows that of Spears last year, when Tweed won an apology from the National Enquirer for alleging the singer’s marriage to Kevin Federline was in trouble. The couple filed for divorce about four months later.

Dropped Proceedings

Following the breakup, Tweed dropped proceedings against publications that had yet to apologize for making allegations about the state of Spears’s marriage.

“It’s the fault of the way the law works here,” said Shan. “U.K. libel law should be reformed.”

U.S. media companies say foreign courts aren’t the most appropriate place to hear a case, as they seek to limit the spread of such claims.

“If there’s a sufficient amount of liability that is proven and they have to pay out enough of these things enough times it will hurt their profitability,” said Hal Vogel, an independent media analyst in New York. “If there’s a slew of lawsuits that they lose, the damage to the reputation of the publication could be substantial.”

Altman

A former deputy treasury secretary for President Bill Clinton, Altman founded New York-based Evercore in 1996 after leaving the administration. Altman was previously co-head of investment banking at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and a vice chairman at New York-based Blackstone Group LP.

Evercore has advised clients on 19 deals announced this year valued at $67 billion, 27th among Wall Street investment banks, according to Bloomberg data. Kenny Juarez, an outside spokesman for Evercore, declined to comment. Matt Benson, an outside spokesman for Thomas H. Lee, referred questions to American Media.

“We have a full-time legal department that’s dedicated to reviewing copy,” according to Michael Antonello, the acting head of American Media’s legal department, who said the magazine’s U.S. Web site isn’t available to British browsers. “While we get threatened a lot, we don’t get sued a lot.”

Actress Kate Hudson a year ago won an apology and undisclosed damages after the magazine in October 2005 said she was unhealthily thin. In the Spears case, the Enquirer published the apology only in its U.K. edition.

Reversing the Internet

“With the World Wide Web, the jurisdiction of the court is no longer as significant, given that any apology will be published internationally, instantly,” Tweed, 52, said. “It’s about reversing the power of the Internet.”

Since the Spears case, Tweed said he has been contacted by as many as 10 celebrities about possible cases.

Damage awards in Belfast and Dublin tend to be higher than London, Tweed said, citing a 25,000 pound ($49,700) award in February against a Northern Irish newspaper after a jury decided a restaurant review was defamatory.

While U.K. courts tend to award less damages than U.S. juries, for many celebrities, that isn’t an issue.

“A prompt categorical retraction and apology are the primary objective for these individuals,” said Tweed. “Not necessarily damages.”

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Forbes’ 15 Most Overexposed Celebrities

01.Britney Spears
Consider pop tart Britney Spears, whose every move from club-hopping to head-shaving, has grabbed gobs of tabloid ink. But rather than earn her adoration, the recent media onslaught has resulted in eye rolls. And worse.

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Britney’s night on the town

Monday night was ladies’ night for Britney Spears, who hit the town in L.A. with her assistant and BFF, Alli Sims, and some female friends.

For dinner it was SHU Sushi House Unico in Bel Air, which has become a favorite haunt of the singer’s. As always, she and her group dined in a private upstairs area, says a source, adding that Spears enjoyed her usual: California roll and a salad.

“She seemed happy,” says the source. “She just enjoyed the music [an XM "Chill" station], the atmosphere and the food. She was just having fun.”

Next the pals hit Guy’s, followed by a brief stop-off at Winston’s. “Britney and Alli were holding hands, not leaving one another’s side,” says a clubgoer. “Britney spent much of her time whispering into Alli’s ear, smiling, drinking a bottle of water – [she seemed to be] in a really good mood, goofing around.”

Just before 1 a.m., Spears and friends arrived at the hip Hollywood hangout Joseph’s, but by then, the evening was winding down. “Britney was pretty subdued,” says a witness. “She didn’t really appear to be having a good time. She was casually talking with Alli. All the guests were swarming around her table to try and get a peek.”

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Justin talks about Britney in new interview

UntouchableBritney.com: ‘Timberlake has consistently declined to be drawn on the inspirations behind the song, ‘What Goes Around’, which is assumed to be about his old friend, Britney Spears. But given that he’s brilliantly re-tooled his own career in myriad new different directions, I wonder if given the chance, he would help Britney’s?

“I think this goes for anyone: it all starts with the songs. The truth of it is, she had catchy songs. If she had catchy songs again, I don’t think anybody would be chastising her as much as they are.”‘

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Britney has a Baywatch moment

Britney Spears had a whirlwind getaway in Mexico this weekend, where she let her new hair down – and offered some friendly advice to fellow tourists. Over her three-day vacation, the singer, 25, stayed at the Four Seasons in Punta Mita, 26 miles from Puerto Vallarta.

While strolling on the beach with a pal at the Four Seasons, Spears stopped an older couple, also guests at the hotel, to warn them: “Be careful, there are lots of man o’ war jellyfish washing up on shore, you don’t want to get stung,” a source tells PEOPLE.

According to the source, Spears was “very sweet” – and the couple didn’t recognize her until she started talking to them. “She seemed happy and carefree with her friend,” says the source.

Spears, who went to Mexico on Thursday and returned to Los Angeles on Sunday, was photographed over the weekend in Mexico wearing a turquoise-and-white sarong with her blonde hair extensions in a messy ponytail.

The weekend away comes just days after she posted a message on her Web site, saying she was at “rock bottom” when she went to rehab earlier this year and thanking fans for their support. “I love you for still loving me,” she wrote.

Spears, who has been recording a new album, also recently performed several shows in Los Angeles, Miami and Las Vegas in recent weeks.

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Backstreet Boys Take America

The Backstreet Boys sent hearts soaring and voices screaming on their recent U.S. tour, which means the group may have finally found the same level of success in their homeland that they’ve been enjoying in Europe for some time.

The Florida group finally struck gold in the U.S. with its breakthrough single “Quit Playin’ Games (With My Heart)” and its follow up, “As Long As You Love Me”, but when MTV News caught up with the group last summer, the Boys still hadn’t quite landed full-on heart-throb status in the States. Last July, the Boys sat down with MTV News’ John Norris at the New York club Fez and talked about their recent in-store appearances, the legacy of the New Kids on the Block, and their struggle to make it in the U.S., not knowing that success was just around the corner.

JOHN NORRIS: So, welcome. As we said before, MTV US finally.

ALL: Yes, U.S.!

JOHN: I was asking AJ earlier about this Walmart thing that you guys have just finished, right? How’s it been? How has the response been?

AJ: Really good.

BRIAN: We got a lot more people than we really expected to come see us. The material we had, the record company supplied more material for the specific Walmart such as the single and posters and stuff, so it was really, really good. I mean we were stuck in a hot parking lot, but there were a lot of people that came up to see us.

KEVIN: It was weird doing shows over in Europe and then coming over to the heartland of the U.S. where people can actually understand what you are saying totally which was cool.

JOHN: Also weird, I would imagine, the fact that you were going from anywhere from eight to fifteen-thousand seat venues over there to, as you say, doing a Walmart. Is that a good thing in the fact that it is sort of a challenge to be back at square one?

ALL: Yeah.

JOHN: Was it deflating to the ego to go from one to the other?

HOWIE D: I think it keeps you humble, if anything. Our feet are definitely on the ground. Actually, we’re getting ready to do a tour in Europe but we are actually doing thirty- thousand to fifty- thousand seat stadiums…

BRIAN: Open air…

HOWIE D: …to doing a Walmart which is maybe a thousand people and stuff like that. We have done a couple shows here and there in the States. It’s good like I say, ya know, America here is our homeland. It’s always been the biggest challenge for us to make it here. You know, so we’re willing to go back and do high school tours and stuff like that, like we did in the very beginning.

JOHN: Exactly. It’s been a few years but you guys did play smaller venues at one point.

HOWIE D: That’s how we started out, high school and middle school tours.

JOHN: It doesn’t happen that often that American artists make it huge overseas and then come back here, but I mean it’s gotta’ be weird the times you were back home whether it be in Orlando, or wherever to be around and not be like immediately mobbed or to be able to go places.

NICK: I think it was kind of a relief sometimes when you come home from Europe and doing the big tours and everything and you get to come back and just relax and go out with your friends and do whatever. But now we want it here. We’re looking foward to it.

HOWIE D: We used to actually joke about it calling it the “No Fan Land,” we would say. And, I mean, the fans that we pretty much have out here in our houses and stuff were actually international fans from Europe that found out our adresses and stuff like that. But pretty much other than that we were normal people. We were able to walk up and down the streets, go to the malls and go to the clubs and do our own normal lives.

JOHN: Speaking of tourists tracking you down, Nick, I heard that you guys had to to put a fence up?

NICK: Yeah…I live in Tampa which is like an hour and a half away from Orlando and they would shuttle tourists to my house in buses, selling maps, and next I had to put up a security fence. It’s gotten that bad. They were actually coming up on the lawn and taking plants out of it and stuff.

JOHN: Has anyone considered moving as a result of this?

ALL: Hasn’t gotten that bad yet.

HOWIE D: We had to change our phone numbers. They actually got printed in magazines: adresses and phone numbers.

JOHN: As things start to get underway here in the States, what are your thoughts about America? Are you a bit skeptical? I mean pop music is, for the last few years, has had a rough time in this country. I guess it has been more rock oriented to a large extent. Are you psyched by the fact that the Spice Girls, Hanson, acts like that are breaking a bit more this year?

AJ: I think now it will be a little more easier for us than it would have been two or three years ago before the pop scene started making a massive come back. Now we actually have a story about our success in Europe or Asia and Europe and Canada and it starts to bleed back down into the U.S. now, so and we just had a lot of time to prepare ourselves and show the U.S. what we are all about and just be really prepared and give them a really good show.

BRIAN: A lot of things work in circles such as clothing and even the music buisness. You know, when pop was big, you know when Boys to Men came out with their second album, it was pop oriented R&B, but totally different, and it blew up. And then it went rap and then it’s gone alternative, and now rock and now it’s kinda making its way around. So, I think it is really good for us because the fact that we have been gone for so long, we got a chance to get really tight amongst each other because we’ve been all over the world and now it’s time to come back and say, you know, we are Americans. Everybody thinks we are from London or somewhere and we’re like, no, sorry we’re from Florida. So, it’s exciting, I mean we have a major story to tell.

JOHN: Was it dissapointing at first that it didn’t get going quickly in this country?

HOWIE D: Well, like I said, we always wanted to make it big here in America. And we hoped that it would take off here first, but like you said the timing, I think, is really important and the time we released “We Got It Going On”, I think grunge was still really kinda’ in and alternative and rock was in and rap and I don’t think pop music, you know, was. I don’t think America was ready for a group like us yet, so that’s why we released it over in Europe and internationally and it just exploded over there ’cause, you know, I think the scene was more ready at the time there for us. But I think now it’s coming back and I think, you know we’ve got it going on again.

JOHN: I mentioned the Spice Girls earlier, and I don’t want to put you in too much of a situation having to analize the U.S. pop market, because you’re not record company executives, obviously, but do you think that there is a difference for a girl group like them versus a guy group? Do guys have more of a challenge in this country, you think, more than girls do in getting MTV and radio airplay?

AJ: I think there are a lot more guy groups, a lot more mainstream guy groups and male pop bands and male bands, period than there are for women . And I think the fact that they are starting a whole new image and a whole new line of groups is kinda cool for them, you know? But for us it’s like being in Europe: there are a lot of like boys groups and when we come over here we like to blend more or less with the vocal harmony groups. We consider ourselves like that: Boys II Men, Jodeci, Shy… groups like that.

JOHN: In this country, if you are an R&B oriented harmony group, it’s o.k. Those guys have had no problem at all. But if you are five guys who do anything pop oriented at all you sorta’ get this New Kids tag. They certainly had their share of success, but…

NICK: I think our album and our music is not just oriented as pop. When you listen to our album it’s more of a variety of music. From dance music to mid tempos to some R&B ballads, you know? Because we have had producers like PM Dawn, Full Force [who] worked with us and it’s turned out really good.

HOWIE D: You know, I think we have realized here in America we definitely have a challenge and we probably really have to prove ourselves, but we just got time. That’s just gonna’ take time, that’s all we got right now, is time and we’re willing to do it. Whatever it takes to prove it.

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