Asghari reacted to Campbell’s comment with a “100” emoji.
Billboard has reached out to Netflix for comment.
Spears has yet to respond to the trailer, but after The New York Times released its Framing Britney Spears documentary, the singer told Instagram followers on March 30 that she was “embarrassed by the light they put me in,” and that she “cried for two weeks” after watching a part of the documentary.
Netflix’s official synopsis of the documentary reads, “The world knows Britney Spears: performer, artist, icon. But in the last few years, her name has been publicly tied to another, more mysterious term: conservatorship. Britney vs Spears tells the explosive story of Britney’s life and her public and private search for freedom.”
Britney vs Spears will share “years-long investigative work, exclusive interviews and new documents” with its viewers and reportedly plans to provide “a thorough portrait of the pop star’s trajectory from girl next door to a woman trapped by fame and family and her own legal status. It shows Britney’s life without utilizing the traumatic images that have previously defined her.”
Britney vs Spears will arrive on Netflix on Sept. 28. Watch the trailer below, and see the Netflix Instagram post Asghari and Campbell responded to.