The latest reports of him being banned from one of Vienna's hippest nightclubs just proves that the woes for Justin Bieber, while on his European tour, is like the "Its A Small World Ride" at Disneyland--"the ride that never ends."
Yahoo states that "according to the management at the club the bodyguards allegedly smashed cameras of fans in the club, destroyed mobile phones whilst there was even claims that some of Bieber's security groped fans."
Though the report hasn't been confirmed, the 19-year-old singer along with his friends have tried desperately to ignore that anything even happened, but the incident caused the club's owner, Joachim Bankel, to not only confirm the truthfulness of the story to the Austrian Times, but the newspaper quoted him as saying, "Justin Bieber is no longer welcome here."
However, to Bieber's credit, the next day, he performed, on time and without exhaustion, in front of a sell-out crowd at the Vienna Stadthalle which, Yahoo reports "saw a large number of hysterical fans needing medical treatment, including one that was hospitalized overnight suffering from what is described as 'hysteria.'"
Since leaving American soil, it has been one problem after the next for the teenage phenomenon.
Whist in England, he had to withstand mass criticism from not only his "bieberbots," but actual critics, for coming on stage two-hours late.
He was also rushed to the emergency room during a concert at the O2 arena for fainting backstage, due to dehydration.
Though, Bieber turned out to be fine and even found the time to take a picture of himself in bed, shirtless and post a few thoughts on Twitter, the damage of his public image had already started.
Then, upon landing in Germany on Thursday, March 28, the story comes out that due to not having the proper papers, he had to leave his pet monkey at the airport.
"The 19-year-old arrived at Munich airport last Thursday. When he went through customs, he didn't have the documentation necessary to bring the capuchin monkey into the country, so the animal had to stay with authorities," customs spokesman Thomas Meister said, reported CBS News.
How much more trouble can he get himself into?
This article is copyrighted by Travelers Today, the travel news leader