Last month, Britney Spears shocked fans with another racy dancing video featuring a series of nip slips.
And now, Kerry Katona, 45, has admitted she is concerned about the pop star's wellbeing as she compared her own past struggles to Britney's infamous 2007 meltdown.
Writing in her New! Magazine column, the former Atomic Kitten star said she is genuinely 'concerned' about Britney after the singer returned to Instagram with another one of her 'erratic' dance videos.
She wrote: 'I'm so worried about Britney Spears. She returned to Instagram recently with one of her typical posts and if she's gonna do stuff like that she might as well set up an OnlyFans account. It's bad!
'I am genuinely concerned about her wellbeing and it is so, so sad to see.'
Kerry went on to explain that while she runs her own OnlyFans account for over-18s, she prefers to keep her Instagram PG and family-orientated.
Kerry Katona, 45, has admitted she is concerned about Britney Spears' wellbeing as she compared her own past struggles to the pop stars infamous 2007 meltdown (Kerry pictured 2025)
She then compared her own past struggles to Britney's in 2007, when the singer famously shaved her head during a period of intense public scrutiny.
She continued: 'I was in the same era as Britney when she shaved her head. I was going through my own meltdown and I was nicknamed the British version of Britney Spears. I got through it, though.'
It comes after Britney returned to Instagram with a new racy video, just days after she posted other dancing videos in which her top struggled to cover her up.
The pop superstar - who sold her music catalogue - sparked concern from fans as she showed off her dance moves to Clean Bandit's 2016 dancehall tune Rockabye, which features vocals from Sean Paul and Anne-Marie.
Two days earlier, Britney had shared two similar racy dancing videos.
She suffered multiple nip slips as she broke out her signature moves while dancing to the 2019 Billie Eilish song Bad Guy.
Britney sold the rights to her music weeks ago, cashing in on her iconic discography, which she built over three decades.
She gave up her stake in a deal with publishing powerhouse Primary Wave, though the exact price is unknown.
The former Atomic Kitten star said she is genuinely 'concerned' about Britney (seen) after the singer returned to Instagram with another one of her 'erratic' dance videos
However, sources who spoke with TMZ described the transaction as a 'landmark deal,' with estimates placing it in the same league as Justin Bieber’s reported $200 million catalogue sale.
Records reveal the singer signed off on the agreement on December 30, and an insider said she's happy with the decision and is celebrating by 'spending time with her kids.'
Britney shares her sons Sean, 18, and Jayden, 17, with her ex-husband Kevin Federline, 47.
Her music catalogue is regarded as one of the most valuable in modern pop, built on a successful career that began with her 1999 debut ...Baby One More Time.
The song sold over 10 million copies worldwide and spent two weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Britney went on to rack up 11 No. 1 singles, more than 30 Top 10 hits, and nine studio albums.
Hits like Toxic, Oops!… I Did It Again, Gimme More, Circus, and Womanizer have all gone multi-platinum, with cumulative album sales exceeding 100 million worldwide.
Her songs have earned multiple Grammy nominations, MTV Video Music Awards and Billboard Music Awards, and they continue to generate massive streaming revenue, with billions of streams across Spotify, Apple Music and YouTube.
The catalog sale comes as the singer has reignited tensions with her family, amid the lingering fallout from her conservatorship battle.
Four years after ending her 13-year conservatorship, largely controlled by her father Jamie Spears, 73, Britney slammed her relatives for 'isolating' her and insisted they will 'never take responsibility' for their actions.
'I'm incredibly lucky to even be alive with how my family treated me once in my life and now I'm scared of them,' the singer wrote in a lengthy caption.
'They will never take responsibility for what they did,' she wrote, adding, 'We can forgive as people but u don't ever forget.'

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