Kmaupdates

Petition calling for new laws after Liam Payne’s death passes 24,000 signatures

Views: 15

Petition calling for new laws after Liam Payne’s death passes 24,000 signatures

 

A new petition calling for a change to the laws around the entertainment industry following the death of singer Liam Payne has surpassed 24,000 signatures.

In the days following his tragic passing, a light has been shone on the mental health pressures put on those like Payne, who originally shot to fame as part of the chart-topping boyband when he was just 16.

The petition set up on Change.org is now campaigning to “safeguard artists’ mental health in the entertainment industry” with 24,893 people signing over the weekend.

Day Kv, who created the petition, wrote: “In recent news of Liam Payne’s tragic death as many others, the entertainment industry needs to be held accountable and be responsible to the welfare of their artists.

Liam Payne originally shot to fame as a teenager in boyband One Direction
PA Wire

“We seek to implore lawmakers to create legislation safeguarding the mental health of artists within the industry.”

They further called for “regular mental health check-ups, adequate rest periods, and the presence of mental health professionals on-set, including any ongoing support during their career”.

The move comes after Boyzone singer Mikey Graham also called for record labels to take accountability and hire “psychologists” following Payne’s passing.

The 52-year-old Irish singer – who like Payne shot to stardom in a boyband – said fame can be “very damaging” with “nobody honest” around to help those struggling.

Appearing on Steven Bartlett’s The Diary of a CEO podcast host, he admitted that he “didn’t like myself very much” during the boy band days.

He said they were filled with “pills and booze” and “moments of suicidal ideation.”

Payne explained: “There is some stuff that I’ve definitely never spoken about. It was really, really, really severe. It was a problem.”

He went on to tell how things got much worse when they were on tours, locked up in hotel rooms for days.

“In the band… the best way to secure us, because of how big we’d got, was just to lock us in our rooms. What’s in the room? A mini-bar,” he said.

“So at a certain point I thought, I’m just going to have a party-for-one and that seemed to carry on for many years of my life. Then you look back at how long you’ve been drinking and you’re like, ‘Jesus Christ, that’s a long time.’”

 

THE STANDARD

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top