Report says teen singing sensation is trying too hard to impress his girlfriend

Oct 18, 2011 15:36 GMT  ·  By
Report says Justin Bieber has already spent $1 million (€731,154) on Selena Gomez
   Report says Justin Bieber has already spent $1 million (€731,154) on Selena Gomez

He may be rich and famous, but stranger things have happened: Justin Bieber is in danger of blowing his fortune away on Selena Gomez, a new report says. Apparently, friends fear his eagerness to impress might see him bankrupt.

The latest print issue of InTouch (story via here) claims Justin has already spent $1 million (€731,154) on presents for his girlfriend, making friends worry he might be burning through his cash at too fast a rate.

“Someone ought to slip Justin Bieber a copy of The Beatles hit, ‘Can’t Buy Me Love.’ Friends are concerned that the teen sensation is burning a hole through his hard-earned fortune in a desperate bid to impress his two-years-older girlfriend, Selena Gomez,” the tabloid writes.

Unnamed friends of the “Baby” hitmaker claim he’s already spent a small fortune on presents since he started going out with Selena.

“According to one friend, the pop star, 17, has already spent a cool million on Selena since they first started dating earlier this year,” the tab writes.

At this rate, he might end up badly in a very short period of time.

“Each date is a production, from bodyguards to flowers, private jets to catered meals. Plus, he buys her major gifts. It’s all adding up pretty quickly,” says the unnamed spy, claiming to be well familiar with the situation.

This is not the first time that word gets out that Justin is spending a lot of money on impressing Selena.

Back in August this year, another tabloid report claimed his people (his management, presumably) was worried he was throwing his fortune away on Selena and the huge entourage he was never parted with, as we also informed you at the time.

The report also mentioned private jets and expensive presents, and spending way too much money on dates and special events – but it didn’t include an estimated figure for said spending.