This time the 31-year-old “Countdown” singer is in the news due to her
ridiculous dressing room demands that’s causing “difficulties” for
organisers of the upcoming Super Bowl in New Orleans.
It’s been
reported that Super Bowl officials emailed Beyonce’s laundry list of
demands to their friends in the media for a good laugh. The officials
responded to Bey’s list with a list of their own — detailing exactly
what “production costs” they plan to cover under the usual $600,000
budget cap for Super Bowl performers.
Beyonce was also informed
that she will not receive special treatment apart from the usual
amenities that are extended to any superstar halftime performer.
Most
amusing to the Super Bowl officials were Bey’s list of requests for her
pampered 13-month-old infant daughter, Blue Ivy, who isn’t even
performing in the Super Bowl halftime spectacle.
The Daily Star
reports that Beyonce asked for Blue Ivy’s $22,000 USD cedar crib to be
shipped from their home in New York to the New Orlean’s Superdome in
time for Sunday’s game.
Bey reportedly demanded her dressing room
be stocked with $6,000 worth of imported cigars and alcohol for Jay-Z,
and she requested that Blue Ivy’s nursery be decorated with rose-scented
candles and the room temperature be kept at exactly 78.5 degrees.
The
officials made it clear to Beyonce that there will be no $1 million
nursery installed at the Superdome unless Beyonce and her husband Jay Z
were paying the exorbitant costs out of their own pockets.
“She’s
by far one of the most difficult celebrities we’ve ever dealt with,” a
source told the newspaper. “The list is as long as my arm. She may be a
superstar, but this day is about football not her.”
Sources say Beyonce plans to turn to her sponsor, Pepsi, for help covering her out-of-pocket costs.
After her demands were turned down, a dejected Beyonce Instagram’d a picture that symbolizes her feelings of rejection and hurt.
A
source, who is embedded deep within Beyonce’s camp, said Bey is telling
friends that she feels like a regular spectator rather than the
singular most important person inside the stadium.
No comments:
Post a Comment