“As I started to see it going in the wrong direction, I started to prepare. I put deals in place where he was protected for the long run. And I started to prepare my company to scale, because I was not going to let him work. [After “Journals,” Justin’s 2013 digital compilation,] he wanted to tour, and I honestly at that time felt, if he toured, he could die,” the uber manager told the New York Times.
“I decided I needed six months of that. I looked at Robert Downey Jr. and all these people — when you ask for redemption, people will give it to you. But if you’re the boy who cried wolf, they’ll destroy you. Once I saw there was consistency I said, O.K., now it’s time to go back in the professional life. The click happened about 20 months ago. Six months after that, you start seeing me planning a [Comedy Central] roast. And then the Calvin Klein ads come, and the roast comes …” before he’s interrupted.
“The outsiders don’t really know what was happening. It was far worse than people realize. And when he is ready, he will tell what he was going through. But it’s a hard thing to watch someone you care and genuinely love go through that. I’m really, really happy that’s over,” Scooter reveals. Things are definitely better for the Biebs these days, with his hit album Purpose and his chart topping singles off of it.
By: bshilliday.
Review: Emerging Market Formulations & Research Unit, Flagship Records.
For The #FacebookTeam