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Sad truth behind Brooklyn Beckham's identity crisis and bitter row about money
Daily mirror | January 21, 2026 6:39 PM CST

Brooklyn Beckhamwas world-famous before he could even walk, and now his staggering stardom has come back to haunt him.

From early photoshoots to public appearances alongside his parents, Brooklyn grew up in one of the most famous family names. David and Victoria Beckham were not only parents, but a commercial powerhouse, with their children frequently appearing in campaigns, at events and even in documentaries that reinforced the 'Brand Beckham' image.

For many celebrity families, that line between private upbringing and public persona is blurred - and experts warn the impact can linger well into adulthood. For Brooklyn, it seems that growing up in his parent's glitzy world has left a gaping whole in his own sense of identity - and now he's made it his mission to "take control back". In turn, the aspiring chef has shattered the picture-perfect family image his parents have spent years cultivating.

"My family values public promotion and endorsements above all else," he raged in a six-page statement on social media. "Brand Beckham comes first. Family 'love' is decided by how much you post on social media, or how quickly you drop everything to show up and pose for a family photo opp, even if it's at the expense of our professional obligations."

• Real reason Brooklyn Beckham exploded at Victoria as bitter 'trademark row' exposed

Perhaps the most astonishing claim in Brooklyn's letter - aside from brutal allegation that Victoria's "hijacked" his first wedding dance with "very inappropriate" behaviour - centres around money. He wrote: "Weeks before our big day, my parents repeatedly pressured and attempted to bribe me into signing away the rights to my name, which would have affected me, my wife, and our future children. They were adamant on me signing before my wedding date because then the terms of the deal would be initiated. My holdout affected the payday, and they have never treated me the same since."

It's currently unclear exactly what Brooklyn means here by payday, but it's well known that the Beckhams, whose fortune is estimated to be around the £500 million mark, are protective when it comes to maintaining their family's hard-built legacy. And fresh details about the 'Brand Beckham' trademarks may shed some light on what really lies at the heart of the feud.

In April 2017, BBC News reported that Victoria had trademarked her four children's names with intellectual property authorities in Britain and Europe, allowing for the release of branded products while protecting the Beckham name from being used by other celebs or businesses. She and David had previously trademarked their names in 2002 and 2000, respectively.

And now it's emerged that Victoria is the sole owner of the trademark on Brooklyn Beckham's name - said to expire this year. Documents seen by the Daily Mailreportedly show that in December 2016, the fashion mogul took out the trademark in her son's name, with the deadline for expiration said to be December of this year. When it ends, Brooklyn will be free to renew using his own lawyers, the publication claims.

And while a trademark may be incredibly lucrative, for Brooklyn, whose whole identity is tied up in Brand Beckham, it's appears to be far more personal than financial gain. His early exposure was often framed as wholesome and aspirational - a tight-knit, loving family navigating fame together. But as he grew older, he began carving out his own public identity, moving between careers in photography, cooking and fashion, all under intense scrutiny. Each pivot was followed closely by commentary questioning his credibility, independence and whether his success was earned or inherited.

As a child during family weddings and official appearances, he was often dressed to mirror the occasion, reinforcing the sense that even milestone moments were carefully curated for public consumption. His presence at football matches became part of the spectacle too. These moments were celebrated by fans, but for Brooklyn, they also reinforced his role as an extension of the brand itself. And the weight of that seems to have torn the family relationship apart.

But why has Brooklyn's nuclear attack come now? And were Victoria and David wrong to protect their empire by trademarking their children's names? "The conversation around monetising Brooklyn from a young age is complicated," Mayah Riaz, a PR to the stars, explains. "Children raised in famous families often don't realise where the brand ends and where they begin. That can absolutely affect identity and autonomy later in life."

That pressure can be particularly destabilising for someone who has never known life outside the spotlight, according to the expert. "When fame is normalised from birth, it becomes harder for a young person to develop a sense of self that exists separately from public expectation," Mayah says. "However, participation does not automatically equal exploitation, especially when it's framed as family rather than commerce. The nuance often gets lost in headlines."

Meanwhile, Dr Jane Halsall, a chartered counselling psychologist, believes that Brooklyn's uncharacteristic outpouring - that is bound to enrage and sadden his PR-savvy family - will have been borne of a desperate need to take some power back. "From a counselling psychology perspective, speaking publicly after prolonged privacy is often not impulsive, but a last-resort boundary," she told the Mirror.

"Estrangement frequently emerges when repeated attempts at private repair fail, particularly where power imbalances, loyalty conflicts, or emotional coercion are present. Public disclosure may be a way of reclaiming agency when private channels no longer feel safe or effective."

For those who know David and Victoria, Brooklyn's claims of "manipulation" and "control" are hard to swallow. Often described as devoted parents who believe family "is everything," their once-unbreakable family unit has been shattered overnight. Despite the very public fall-out, their efforts to reconcile have been long-running.

When Brooklyn and Nicola missed David's 50th birthday bash, a source told the Mirror: "Victoria feels betrayed because she's done everything she can to make them both feel welcome and Nicola like another daughter. But she feels it's been thrown back in her face. She would normally do anything to avoid a family fallout, but she thinks they're both being unreasonable."

And now that Brooklyn has aired their feud on the public stage, it seems there's no way back. "Victoria is on the floor, shocked to pieces that her son would do this," a source told us. "They're still blaming Nicola, feeling she had put him up to this, and it's all to do with her; they're constantly blaming Nicola. But as Brooklyn said, he had to do this. He's sick of being controlled by their narrative."

In recent years, Brooklyn has appeared to push back against the family narrative that once defined him, choosing to live in the US with his wife, Nicola Peltz Beckham, and increasingly distancing himself from the public image long associated with his parents.

In his bombshell statement on Monday, Brooklyn claimed that his parents were out to "ruin" his relationship to Nicola from the get go, with tensions mounting as the wedding date approached. He also said that the narrative Nicola controlled him was "completely backwards", adding that he felt controlled by his parents for most of his life. "What matters most is whether the individual feels they had agency," PR guru Mayah said. "The challenge comes later, when someone begins asking: was this who I chose to be, or who I was shaped to become?"


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