And I've just thought, the team nature of football means there's more likely to be someone around who'll see the signs of their personality changing and can raise concerns with an authority figure like the manager. With entertainers, it's a lot more solitary, and although they have managers it's generally the artist that's in control. You look at someone like Cairney, if he starts going off the rails or getting big headed (some would say he has) there's NP in place to drop hiim from the side, tell him it's unacceptable and show him that his career is determined by others being happy with him rather than being solely him. Then look at Andy Murray, if he got into that mood what cna his coaches etc do? They can't stop him entering tournaments, and he doesn't need a club to employ him. It's similar with entertainers, alright they need record labels or directors, but at the end of the day they're not tied to working with one, if they get sacked they can go independent so it doesn't matter what they think.
Again fair point although I feel you maybe looking to far into this. And if I may add drink and drugs is quit the norm in the music industry and is how a lot of the great and not so great albums were conceived thus managers and entourages normal wouldn't think of intervening unless they thought the artist was on a colision course with death.
There was Alan McGhee (Creation Records) and a guy from Island Records (Amy W's label) on the radio this a.m. Island apparently did what they could, as did her management. McGhee claimed if someone wanted to go that way there was little could be done. They seemed to agree: If a singer/artist was working - recording, promoting, touring, writing, recording, etc. then they would be too occupied to 'fall'. Hmmmmm?
hilarious, the gift that keeps on giving. Though if I'd been Mancini with that show of disrespect I would have punched Biblotelli out. Pretty sure if he had, there would have been no witnesses at all