QAA Podcast - Premium Episode 148: QAnon VS #FreeBritney (Sample)
Episode Date: November 18, 2021A major QAnon influencer is trying to infiltrate the #FreeBritney movement, a group dedicated to the release of Britney Spears from years of unfair "conservatorship" at the hands of her handlers and m...embers of her family. Q promoter Liz Crokin recently released a "documentary" about the pop star entitled 'Slave Princess', which heavily features (and praises) BJ Courville (AKA That Surprise Witness), an attorney who claims to have lost her job due to her advocacy for the #FreeBritney movement. Courville has even gone as far as hosting Liz Crokin on her youtube show to endorse and praise her. This has caused a rift in #FreeBritney supporters between those who don't want to welcome QAnon influencers with open arms into their movement, and those convinced that the situation is "beyond politics". We explore the various layers involved. Subscribe for $5 a month to get an extra episode of QAA every week: http://www.patreon.com/QAnonAnonymous Episode music by Roman85 (https://doomchakratapes.bandcamp.com/album/roman85-the-house-you-live-in-the-house-you-look-at) Merch / Join the Discord Community / Find the Lost Episodes / Etc: http://qanonanonymous.com
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Liz Croken's Slave Princess
So I was tasked with watching the quote-unquote documentary titled Slave Princess,
which was directed by Jules Vincent, who I tried to find information on, but I couldn't.
Do you guys know who that is?
Did he also direct Out of Shadows?
No, I don't believe, I think this is like a new partner.
She seemed quite proud of the production.
By the way, I also watched Slave Princess, which I regret.
I regret. I very much regret it.
It's not a good movie.
It's executive produced by Liz Croken.
who also narrates the entire film.
In my opinion, this is a particularly insidious movie
because it tries to frame itself as a non-partisan investigation
into a shadowy web of conspirators
who the film alleges may have even wanted to kill Brittany.
The film's talking heads are comprised primarily
of social media influencers who claim their lives
have been upended by trying to dig deeper
into Britney Spears' conservatorship.
The primary focus of the conspiracy is Lou Taylor,
Brittany's former business manager, and throughout the film, Croken claims to be uncovering a twisted web of conspiracies leading all the way to the White House.
In true QAnon fashion, however, many of the claims are presented as fact with little evidence or follow-up.
It plays very much like Croken's other film Out of Shadows.
As expected, Croken, not so sneakily, lays in many of the foundations of the Q&on belief system,
using very specific QAnon language
and framing the free Brittany movement
as their own brand of citizen journalism.
Instead of really diving into the specifics
of Britney's conservatorship,
Croken instead uses her case
as a stepping stone to get viewers
to start asking, quote, the right questions.
The film is rated PG-15, which is...
Yeah, the idea that you could show
your 16-year-old this movie, not great.
Which is also not a rating.
That's not a...
Yeah.
It's not a...
It's just what you're...
she thinks. She's like, well, if you're 16, you've got to start protecting yourself.
Even in the first minutes of the film, Croken lays in religious undertones, perhaps
softening her potentially liberal viewers up for the QAnon-style conspiracies that come
into focus in the second half of the documentary. Yeah, in that way, she kept the structure
of Out of Shadows, where you front-load it with, like, stuff that everyone can broadly
agree with, and then... And that's when you hook them.
Someone who needs conservatorship is mentally incapacitated, and she is proven to give the opposite.
People manipulate young women, they manipulate kids.
It's dark and demonic energy that this industry was built on.
Making anyone worked against their wheel, taking all their possessions away, credit card, cash, phone, passport.
The only similar thing to this is called sex trafficking.
Okay, so that's the first minute of the film.
They're saying dark and demonic.
They're flashing images of Jeffrey Epstein.
They're dropping sex trafficking.
I mean, right away, it seems like this is far beyond just the case of Britney's conservatorship.
It's always important in a documentary that the narrator is a voice that can be trusted.
Liz does not include her credits as a QAnon promoter or the producer of Out of Shadows,
but instead cites her former work as a gossip columnist.
It's true.
She has many articles that chronicled different eras of Spears' career,
and it's understandable how someone with no knowledge of her more recent work could see her as a credible source.
So I used to work as an entertainment journalist, and I covered Britney Spears for many years.
I worked for Us Weekly Magazine, for In Touch Weekly Magazine.
I had my own column in the Red Eye Edition of the Chicago Tribune.
I have been sent to Kentwood, Louisiana, many times to cover Brittany.
I've met Kevin Federline. I've met Jason Alexander.
I've met several people that are close to Britney Spears.
Even before her conservatorship, it was very clear that she was surrounded by people she couldn't trust.
That she was manipulated, that she was too controlled.
Even before she was taken to a mental facility and put into a 5150 hold, it was very clear that Britney Spears was the victim of some kind of
of abuse.
Notice how, and she does this later on in the film.
Anytime somebody says abuse, they like let it echo off into, you know, the ether.
So then Croken lays out a little background on Brittany in a bizarre segment titled
Through the Storm by Lynn Spears.
Now, this was a book, a real book, that was written by Lynn, Brittany's mother, and published
in 2008.
I think that Croken is potentially just reading a passage from the book.
as a lazy way to get some background information on the family and set the scene.
The weird thing is, she animates the segment with some truly demented cartoon imagery.
Once upon a time in a land far, far away, there lived a beautiful girl named Brittany.
She could sing, dance, and do gymnastics.
And everybody in the town loved listening to her perform.
She would excel in everything she did.
And to the outside world, she seemed to have it all.
But Home Laugh was a hot mess.
Brittany's family were very poor.
Her mom, Lynn, said they often had to rob Peter to pay Paul just to get back.
Brittany's dad, Jamie, had a really hard time getting his hands on money.
After a long time of financial instability and a string of failed businesses, Jamie filed for bankruptcy.
Lynn threatened to divorce him many times when Britney was just a kid.
Then there were rumors that Jamie was messing around on Lynn.
And it was no secret he loved to shine up that Pepsi Max.
Sometimes when Jamie was in a drunken rage, things got pretty rough.
This one time, he got as juiced up as Cooter Brown
and tried to drive off with Brittany when she was just five years old.
Uncle Willie tried to reach down and grab the keys,
but he got punched up instead.
All while Brittany was hysterical and crying in the back seat.
It's like this weird little cartoon-y kind of situation,
but it's depicting like alcoholism and violence.
and punching and crying
it's just really bizarre and horrifying
despite how cutesy
the sort of like the animation is.
There's this scene where they talk about
Jamie Spears cheating on the mother
and there's this like,
like sound effect
and he filed for bankruptcy
and it's like boi-ya-ya-y-y-y-y-y.
Yes.
What the fuck?
Like what the fuck is this?
It's like domestic violence.
Auga.
As we creep towards the 10-minute mark,
beginning to notice a lot more coded QAnon-style language.
There's even a throwaway reference to, you guessed it, the drinking of blood.
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Thank you.
Thanks.
I love you.
Jake loves you.