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Celeb moms make big money with baby shots
Erin Carlson
NEW YORK—More than ever, it pays to be pregnant in Hollywood. Jennifer
Lopez, about to give birth to twins, is reportedly the latest A-lister
to strike a deal worth millions for exclusive photos of her children.
And the incentive might not be purely financial: Such pacts can also
protect celebs’ privacy by thwarting the paparazzi. Those involved in
negotiations for Lopez and her husband, Marc Anthony, confirmed that
U.S. and Latin American rights were sold to People magazine and other
international rights to OK! magazine.
Advertising Age reported on its Web site Monday that Lopez and Anthony
were negotiating with People to be paid as much as $6 million.
Representatives for both People and OK! declined to comment on the
payments. The trend toward featuring celeb babies on the covers of
glossy magazines kicked into high gear in 2006 when Angelina Jolie and
Brad Pitt allowed People to photograph their daughter Shiloh in exchange
for a donation to charity. The magazine reportedly paid $4 million for
the U.S. rights and London-based Hello! magazine obtained the British
rights.
Celeb baby covers are big business for magazines’ newsstand sales, those
who broker the deals and the stars themselves. Photos of a pregnant
Halle Berry tottering in high heels or tabloid toddlers such as Suri
Cruise, daughter of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, and Violet Affleck,
daughter of Jennifer Garner and Ben Affleck, are eye candy for
consumers.
“Part of the reason that the demand is so huge — and everyone is so
excited about it — is because it’s such a nice antidote to all the other
celebrity news that’s going on at the moment,” said Sarah Ivens, editor
in chief of OK! “There’s nothing not to love about watching these woman
blossom and their bodies change and then having babies. It’s all just
such fun, lovely, positive stuff, isn’t it?” she said.
Danielle Friedland, who runs Celebrity Baby Blog, said the craving for
celebrity news is fuelled by the tabloid media. “Celebrities always have
children ... it’s just that we’re paying so much more attention to them
right now,” Friedland said. “The more that we see of them, the more we
want.”
Christina Aguilera debuted her newborn son, Max, on the cover of People
last week for a reported $1.5 million. Larry Birkhead, father of the
late Anna Nicole Smith’s daughter, landed an OK! cover with Dannielynn.
Britney Spears’ 16-year-old sister, Jamie Lynn, also appeared on the
cover of OK! when she announced her pregnancy.
OK! doesn’t disclose the terms of its deals with celebs, but Web site
TMZ.com reported that Jamie Lynn would be paid $1 million after her baby
is born. Pacts with magazines can be a way for celebs to protect their
privacy. Cruise and Holmes kept Suri out of the spotlight for nearly
five months after her birth in April 2006. The shroud of mystery was so
intense, people wondered if she existed.
In September, Vanity Fair flaunted the first shots of baby Cruise,
warmly photographed by Annie Leibovitz. The couple weren’t paid for the
photos. “When you hit the level of Tom and Katie and Suri, you can’t
shut it down,” said Los Angeles-based publicist Howard Bragman. “It’s
pure economics. If you put those out in the world, those pictures, which
they did, and they controlled which images were out there, then suddenly
the monetary incentive for the paparazzi is taken away from them.”
Sheryl Crow agreed to a photo shoot with her infant son last year after
OK! offered to make a donation to the World Food Program, a United
Nations organization that works to fight child hunger. Julia Roberts
showed a photo of her youngest son, Henry, during a recent appearance on
“The Oprah Winfrey Show.” Confirmation of a pregnancy can also be
frustrating for celeb watchers. Lopez’s lips were sealed even as she
performed during her concert tour sporting chic maternity wear to
disguise an obvious baby bump. She eventually confirmed it during a
concert in November. Aguilera spilled the beans to the U.K. edition of
Glamour magazine.
Recently, the blogosphere has been abuzz about Angelina Jolie, who
arrived at last month’s Screen Actors Guild Awards in a suspiciously
roomy vintage gown. Tabloids quickly reported she was expecting twins
with partner Brad Pitt, and a recent issue of Life and Style magazine
pounced with the headline: “Angelina’s Dangerous Pregnancy.” Jolie has
refused to comment. “A lot of normal people don’t discuss their children
or their pregnancy until they’re a certain amount of months into it
beyond the first trimester; they worry about miscarrying, they worry
about telling people, jinxing (it),” Bragman said. “Maybe they’re not
sure they’re going to keep the baby, whatever.” Friedland said tabloids
can be too quick to declare someone pregnant. |