Presseschnipsel und andere kleine Infos zu Michael

  • wenn er aber schuldig gesprochen worden wäre, mit aussicht auf 20 jahre+
    glaube ich NICHT, dass er ohne weiteres unbehelligt tage oder wochen seiner wege hätte gehn dürfen :nee
    die fluchtgefahr ist/wäre allemal viel zu gross gewesen.


    eben, verdunklungsgefahr... die hätten mike nie und nimmer gehen lassen :sad

    [SIZE="7"][SIGPIC][/SIGPIC][SIZE="7"][/SIZE][/SIZE]
    [CENTER][/CENTER]


    Gone to soon... We never forget you :ehre

  • http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvs…Prince-Paris-Blanket.html



    Bringing up Jackson's children: a highly charged interview with Michael Jackson's mother | Mail Online


    There is nothing that can give a better glimpse into Michael Jackson himself than meeting his mother Katherine. They have the same whispery high voice. The same hunted look.


    They have the same air of a person who has endured much, yet has a sense of naivety. More than anything else there is a feeling that she is not quite of this world.


    I am inside the Jackson family home. The decor is chintzy faux Versailles with a few Seventies browns and oranges. There are paintings of princesses, lots of sculptures of giant hands, galloping horses and the odd giraffe.


    There is an ornament depicting Michael Jackson holding up the world with doves and children. It’s ornate and sentimental, a bit like Michael. I walk past a row of children’s bikes — a reminder that she now has custody of Michael’s three children — and a swimming pool, in sight of majestic mountains under the blue California sky, to get to Katherine Jackson’s quarters. I had to go through double-gated security to get to this house 45 minutes from Hollywood.


    She greets me warily but sweetly. She’s dressed in a pale blue jacket and black slacks. Her skin looks much younger than her 81 years. Her eyes are dark and dart around. She seems to be frisking me for my soul.


    The Jacksons are naturally suspicious and they all believe in various conspiracy theories surrounding the death of her son and their brother.


    She has just taken a call from her son Jermaine who is vehemently opposed to the Michael Forever Tribute Concert at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, on October 8, which will be televised and downloaded to more countries than any other show in the history of pop (or so they claim).


    JLS will perform with Marlon, Tito and Jackie Jackson. And a pregnant Beyoncé, wearing a Michael wig, will be seen on film, introduced by the Jackson children — Prince Michael, 14, Paris, 13, and Blanket (passport name Prince Michael II), 10.


    The concert has caused friction within the family, because Jermaine feels it is inappropriate to stage it at the same time as Dr Conrad Murray goes on trial for the involuntary manslaughter of Michael Jackson.


    Katherine Jackson seems keen to diminish the spectre of the sad Michael, plagued with demons and eccentricities, and get on with celebrating his memory and cherishing his talent.


    "I don’t understand why my son feels that way,’ says Katherine softly.
    "Jermaine feels it’s not the right time because of the trial coming up.Michael’s been gone two years now. They kept postponing the trial. We didn’t know when exactly it was coming around and I don’t see anything wrong with this."


    "Jermaine has his own thoughts. He’s entitled to his opinion."


    But she says the other siblings are all behind it."Three of them are performing and my daughter La Toya will be there. But just because some of the family don’t feel the same it doesn’t mean we’re divided."


    I have heard that Jermaine seems to be acting out the role of the new Joe Jackson, their disciplinarian father who used to beat them if they didn’t work hard enough in rehearsals.


    Sources say that it is usually Jermaine and Randy on one side and Jackie, Tito, Marlon and La Toya on another, and Janet one step removed. Katherine disputes this.


    "When we are together we get on well. I don’t know how this lie started but I’m so tired of people believing it. Every family has their problems. It doesn’t mean we never get along. Anyone can agree on something today and change their mind tomorrow."


    "My children are grown up now. I always tell them: “This is your brother, this is your family. If you don’t agree with them and something happened to them you would not pass your family by. You would always give a helping hand."


    "They may fight and have their differences. They may not speak for a while — and this never happened in my family — but if somebody got sick or needed help, I would always be there."


    "You can’t change a person but that doesn’t mean you don’t love them." I sense that here is a frail woman who has endured pain, betrayal, loss, and might snap at any minute.


    Those around her say she is the driving force of the family and that nothing happens if she doesn’t want it to.


    She is the legal guardian of Michael’s children. You can’t help wondering if she has the stamina to bring up two teenagers and a ten-year-old. Isn’t it all very demanding? "No, not at all. I have a lot of people helping. They’re good kids and I don’t have that much to worry about. They have their friends over. They ride their bikes."


    It’s almost more strange that she makes them seem normal. Their upbringing even before the tragedy was at the very least eccentric. They went out dressed in Spider-Man masks and Prince in a surgical mask. Yet they sound very well adjusted.


    "They go to acting school and they love that, although Paris doesn’t need lessons," Katherine chuckles, meaning she is a natural actress.
    What makes Katherine happy now? "That’s not an easy question. I believe in the resurrection and I’m happy when Paris and Prince come home from school happy. Prince is a very good student. He’s always saying: “Grandma I got a 98 in my test.” It makes me happy to see them smile." She says she sees Michael in all three. "They are all going to be like him, especially Paris. She has pictures of him hanging all over her wall."


    "When I had a decorator come in who moved them, she put them all back. “I want Daddy hanging on the walls”, she said. I don’t know how she could, but she does."


    "She took a pillow and one of his jackets, and said: “I don’t want a jacket that’s been cleaned. I want something with his scent on it.” She put the jacket over the pillow and she breathes it. It’s still there."


    "She said: “I don’t ever want it cleaned. He’s worn it and it smells of him and I don’t ever want the smell to go away.” ’ Katherine starts weeping.


    "They’re doing OK," she says. "I’m doing OK. It’s hard being a mother and losing your child. It shouldn’t be that way round. There’s not a day goes by that I don’t..."


    Her whispers turn into tears. "People tell me all the time that I’m strong, but I don’t think so. Paris, Prince and Blanket suffer in different ways. Prince tried to be stronger than the others. He wants to be a man. He doesn’t want people to see what’s inside."


    "During the funeral when the children were given the crown to put on top of the casket, he put his hand on my shoulder and started to cry. He wanted to be strong because he was around all his cousins. From the moment they came from the hospital [after Michael died], they were all bawling their eyes out." She composes herself slightly. "He was a very good son. People tried to poison the world against him. All this molestation stuff was just a lie."


    "Oprah Winfrey says if a child tells you something, believe it. It’s just the opposite! That first boy came out and admitted he lied because his father made him and the father wanted the money."


    She recalls what happened the day she got the news that something had happened to Michael. "I got a call to come to the hospital. We rushed down there and when we got there, we said: “Where is he?” and they took me to another room. They wanted to sit down and talk to me and that’s when I was told."


    "I said: “How is he?” They told me he didn’t make it. But all I could say was: “How is he?”


    "I think when your child has died there is nothing to take that pain away."


    She is looking forward to the Cardiff concert because, she says: "It makes me feel good that people all over the world can love him even after his death and it made me feel good to know that perhaps they didn’t believe those bad things after all. I know he didn’t do it. People are mixed up. They don’t know."


    "These people who did it, they know who they are. They know what they did."


    She’s resolutely silent and not going to tell me who the people are.


    She seems to be saying that there was a conspiracy to murder her son, and in this thinking the family are not at war.


    Jermaine in his graphic book, You Are Not Alone: Michael Through A Brother’s Eyes, reveals that Michael’s chimp wore clothes and Poison perfume by Christian Dior. The book paints him in all his weirdness, but it exonerates him of any crime.


    The family toe one united line, which is that dark forces claimed Michael. Not those within him, but something beyond his reach.


    Even this fractured and broken family can agree Michael was a victim — although nobody is exactly sure of what.


    La Toya Jackson has spent the past two years making a documentary and it is speculated that in it she will reveal who she thinks is responsible for his alleged murder.


    Did Michael ever tell his mother he wanted her to look after the children if anything happened to him?


    "No. He never talked about that but he always felt that someone was after him, trying to kill him. He would ask:“Why are they after me? I haven’t done anything. What are they accusing me of?” ’


    It sounds like he was in a panic. I don’t want to say it sounds like he was paranoid in front of her in case I make her cry again. "No,’ she says, very resolute, ‘I don’t think he was panicking. He would say it just like that if he were here with us today. He felt something was going to happen."


    Katherine’s favourite Michael Jackson song is Man In The Mirror and she is looking forward to it being performed at the concert which she is attending even though she doesn’t like flying.


    "Every time I think that people did care about my son . . ." She can’t finish the sentence for weeping.


    "If he were alive he’d be proud to see that a lot of people were giving back. It is so emotional because he really loved everyone and he’s not here to see it. I’m sure he will be nearby."


    Does she think that she can feel him around her and communicate with him and his spirit? She shakes her head. "Michael’s sleeping now and I know he’s not conscious of anything." She says this as a measure of ultimate sadness and relief. The profits from the concert will go to his favourite charities.


    "Wherever he was he would visit orphans and hospitals and babies and children in need. He would always give. Since he was that high." She gestures to knee level.


    "He would look at African children with big bellies and flies all over them on TV and he would cry. He’d say: “I’m going to help them one day.” ’


    But I had heard that the concert was to directly benefit Michael’s children, because his executors had decided to wait until the children are 40 before releasing the millions they are holding in trust.


    Although when Jackson died there were substantial debts, the subsequent posthumous sales of albums and DVDs are said to have generated £196 million.


    On the day we meet there is a news story that suggests the trust had revised its policy and was to give £20 million to Katherine and the children and to some charities. "The only thing I’m going to say is they are unfair."


    Perhaps she means the estate is unfair because it’s a trust and the children will not be awarded that money straight away.


    She continues: "They say they’re selling Hayvenhurst [the Jackson family’s English Tudor-style home in Encino, California, where Michael grew up]. I haven’t agreed to that. I don’t want it sold. Michael remodelled it as a gift to me, but I won’t go back to live there. I like where I live now because it’s lighter, brighter."


    "The happiest time for me and my family was when everybody was at home, nobody was married, my children were young and they could go out and play.


    That was before they were signed to any record companies. They were just in talent shows. And we were all there sitting around the table eating and talking and having fun."


    "I used to cook soul food. In the wintertime we would buy a big piece of beef and put it in the freezer and I would freeze peaches so we would have steaks and gravy and rice and peach cobbler. We would always have a dessert. Maybe fried apple turnovers. Those were my happy days. But they will come again."


    "I am a spiritual person and I feel I will see my son again at the resurrection. I try to be strong."


    It certainly must have taken strength to stay with her husband of more than 60 years, Joe Jackson. They are still married, although estranged.Her children have spoken about their father’s brutality. Michael in particular felt tortured by it.


    It’s hard to grasp how this empathic, intelligent matriarch stood by as her husband Joe regularly beat his children if they didn’t get their songs right. It was also rumoured that he cheated on her. Does she still love him? "Well yes, I do. That’s a strange question."


    Not really. I want to say to her, not many women would. But, instead, I ask does she get on with him? "Oh yes."


    Here I see parallels with Michael, to want to believe the good in people, that the world can be beautiful when it most definitely isn’t.


    Does that make her naive or strong? "I don’t have Michael’s pictures out all the time, but I have got some of his things. I’m never going to forget him. Every time I see something of his it just makes me feel bad." She shakes her head as if she both cherishes and is tortured by the memories.

    He's not an artist, he's a fucking work of art...



    I love you more, Mike!

  • Der erste Satz sagt schon alles über den weiteren Artikel :spinnen Tabloid Schrott :kotz


    There is nothing that can give a better glimpse into Michael Jackson himself than meeting his mother Katherine. They have the same whispery high voice. The same hunted look.

  • Interview mit Bruce Swedien bei In Session


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  • ..ich verschieb das mal in den Murray trial thread..:jump

  • MJ Slot Machine Coming To Vegas


    (27-9-2011)




    The King of Pop will soon have a big pressence in Las Vegas as his classic hits will be heard in casinos all over town.
    Slot machine manufacturer Bally Technologies will next week unveil a Michael Jackson-themed slot machine that the company hopes will be its next big hit.
    The machine debuted at the Global Gaming Expo, which began Monday at the Sands Expo.
    The digital penny slot uses original Jackson songs and video to entertain players. Hit a certain combination on the reels and Jackson moonwalks across the screen to “Bad.”
    Use his iconic sequin glove to spin a wheel for prizes as “Smooth Criminal” plays in the background. Watch his dancing foot kick icons to transform them into wilds during a
    “Beat It” bonus round.
    Sony and the Jackson Estate provided Bally the audio and video for the project. A professional musician-turned-Bally engineer remixed them for the game in a sound studio
    at the company’s headquarters.
    Six songs — “Billie Jean,” “Dirty Diana,” “Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough,” “Smooth Criminal,” “Beat It” and “Bad” — are used in the game’s first generation, and a second version
    with two additional songs is planned for the future.
    “Michael Jackson appeals internationally,” Director of Development David Schultz said. “He was such an incredible performer. He changed popular music as we know it.
    Imagine walking by as a gold Michael Jackson statue erupts in flames while music blares," Schultz said. “People just can’t help but stop.”


    Bally executives call it coincidence, but the timing of the game’s debut couldn’t be better. Las Vegas will be awash in all things Jackson as the slot is rolled out.
    Cirque du Soleil’s “Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour” opens Dec. 3 at Mandalay Bay . It runs in tandem with the first-ever officially authorized
    Michael Jackson Fan Fest where people can view Jackson memorabilia and take pictures in re-created video sets. And Madame Tussauds at the Venetian will run a Jackson exhibit
    Sept. 8 to Dec. 27 with three wax figures from various stages of his career.



    http://www.mjfanclub.net/home/…coming-to-vegas&Itemid=82

  • http://www.dailymail.co.uk/fem…t.html?ito=feeds-newsxml#


    mal was zur ablenkung... :)



    Jackson's love life, X-rated Lady Gaga and a ghastly husband Liza Minnelli's so glad she escaped


    By Richard Barber


    Liza Minnelli cuts a tiny figure curled into an oversized chair in her riverside hotel suite. The fathomless black eyes are the only sign of animation in a face the colour of parchment.


    She’s wearing silver, high-heeled pixie boots, black velvet trousers and a black hoodie with white skull-and-cross-bones appliquéd up each sleeve, the last thing, apparently, in current New York chic.


    If she will forgive the observation, she looks like death warmed up. She smiles that crooked smile. ‘Listen honey, I’m not jet-lagged,’ she says, pulling on an ever-present Marlboro Lite. ‘I’m jet-thumped. I don’t know whether I’m coming or going.’


    Ten days ago, she left New York with her lifelong friend Rock (son of Yul) Brynner for Vladivostok where he was tracing his lineage. ‘We’ve known each other since we were five. He’s the first boy I ever kissed.’


    She then flew to London (via Korea) to perform at the White Rose Ball this Sunday in aid of the Holocaust Centre in Nottingham. ‘The more we educate young people about the terrible things that happened,’ says Liza, ‘the less likely they could ever happen again.’


    At 65, the woman is unstoppable. Four marriages, two hip replacements, one new knee, a near-fatal bout of viral encephalitis, Liza has survived them all. ‘I’ve been down,’ she says, at one point, ‘but I’ve never been out.’


    Unlike her mother Judy Garland, who died in London in 1969, awash with booze and pills, aged 47 — and about whom she is ‘bored, bored, bored’ of talking.


    But while we’re — briefly — on the subject, she does let slip a sweet, rather revealing tale about Judy.


    As a child, she’d wait in the wings at Garland’s concerts, a trembling cup of tea in her hand to deliver to her mother when the final curtain fell.


    ‘One day, I said to her: “Mama, why are you always so sad when you sing Over The Rainbow?” She looked at me. “It’s what they want,” she said. “Now let’s go get a hamburger.” Forget anything you’ve read. That’s how I remember her. That’s my reality.’


    Even so, she slightly gives the game away later in our conversation when she announces: ‘Reality is something you have to rise above.’ What can she mean? A plume of smoke. ‘Well, if you don’t like a chapter in your life, then re-write it. It’s your life. Whatever gets you through.


    ‘Ha! If you can stand back and laugh at something, you’re in control of the situation. You can face down your demons.’



    Liza Minnelli is showbiz royalty, famous even before she was born. Fred Astaire once said that, if Hollywood breeding could be compared to the British royals, Liza ‘would be our Crown Princess’. Noel Coward was the first visitor to her mother’s bedside after Liza was born. Ira Gershwin was her godfather.



    And she knows absolutely everyone. When she married music producer David Gest in London in 2002 (more of him in a moment), she was attended by Michael Jackson, Elizabeth Taylor and — bizarrely — Martine McCutcheon. Sadly, the first two are now dead. ‘But there’s not a day,’ she says, ‘when I don’t think of Michael.’


    She refuses to be drawn on the upcoming trial for involuntary manslaughter of Jackson’s doctor, Conrad Murray. But she’s happy to recollect the Michael she knew.


    ‘He was a supremely gifted human being but he didn’t survive, in my opinion, because he’d never been taught the rules of the game,’ says Liza. ‘He and his brothers and sisters were forced to rehearse round the clock while other kids were playing basketball.


    ‘Michael’s life was precisely the one dictated by his father. The family’s religion [the parents are Jehovah’s Witnesses] means the children weren’t even meant to be in show business. But, when they started making money for their father, that was it. Michael was used and abused almost from the time he was born.


    ‘Eventually, he distanced himself from his family, created this wonderful place — Neverland — for kids and supported different families. Then, one day, the father in one of those families called up Michael and said, “Unless you give me $30,000, I’m going to tell everyone you made a pass at my son.” And that’s when Michael called me.



    'Michal Jackson was a supremely gifted human being, but he didn't survive because he'd never been taught the rules of the game'


    ‘When he’d finished his story, I remember pausing and then saying: “Michael, maybe you should tell your lawyer about this.” He said: “But it’s insane.” So I repeated my advice. “It’s blackmail, though,” he said. “It is,” I replied, “and that’s why you need to involve your lawyer.” But he wouldn’t.


    ‘What everyone forgets is that, when kids stayed at Neverland, their parents came, too. And they were treated grandly. But then other people jumped on the bandwagon.’


    She sighs. ‘I remember he was going with this girl and he was so in love with her. He came to show me the ring he’d bought for her. I asked him what he was going to say and he didn’t know. So I said: “Let’s rehearse,” and that’s what we did.


    ‘But the girl turned him down. She said she wasn’t ready to commit right now. She told him to ask again in six months. And it all but killed him. He was heartbroken. I knew all his girlfriends including Lisa Marie who became his wife.’


    Liza thinks she knows what killed her friend. ‘In the end, the scorn, the cruelty, the vicious meanness — these are the things that took his life. He was one of the best performers we’ve ever had. He changed everything. But he was only a king when he was on stage.’


    On the other hand, Elizabeth Taylor — like Liza — was a survivor. ‘Elizabeth was just a regular girl. The glitter and the glamour and the gutter [as she witheringly dismisses it] were all in the photographs and the way stars like her were presented. The reality was that she was part of an era when movie stars were working actors. She went to the studio. She did her job.’


    Taylor’s no-nonsense approach to life is nowhere better illustrated than in this nugget of wisdom she passed on to Liza. ‘I remember calling her one day. I was crying about something awful someone had said about me in the press. There was a pause. “You read that stuff?” she said. She told me she never read a single thing about herself so I stopped, too, there and then, which meant there was never anything lousy going round and round in my brain. I thought that was good advice.’


    The colour is returning to her cheeks — but then Liza likes an audience. She takes a sip of her cappuccino, heaped to overflowing with powdered sweetener. ‘I feel centred, content right now,’ she volunteers.


    Yet the ghost of David Gest hangs in the air. ‘Now, I wake up each day and it feels like the beginning of the adventure all over again.’


    She’s made it a rule that she’s never away from her New York apartment for more than three weeks at a time. Apart from anything else, she’d miss her three schnauzers, Emelina, Oscar and Blaise, that are her heart’s delight.


    ‘I try to live in the moment and appreciate everything as it happens,’ says Liza. ‘It’s hard to be sad or melancholic when you’re curious about what’s going on around you. Anyway, what’s the alternative? Stagnation?’


    And she’s not only talking about her still frequent visits to AA as she continues to live the life of a recovering alcoholic.


    She’s certainly curious about the industry that continues to be her lifeblood. ‘I love Lady Gaga. Not long ago, I went to see her show,’ she says. ‘Someone came up to me at the end and asked if I’d come backstage. Lady Gaga wanted to meet me. There she was, her hair normal, no weird costume. Just a simple dressing gown. She looked like a nice kid. She said: “You’re my favourite. You’re my hero.”


    ‘There were photographers who wanted a picture of us together so she turned towards them and opened the front of her dressing gown. I immediately closed it. I laughed. She’s into the Madonna thing: shock value. And it works. But the girl has a big talent.’


    As for Madonna . . . ‘I think she’s terrific. When I’m chatting to her, she’s just normal, the opposite of grand. We’ll meet in a restaurant with friends. Or hang out at a party. She’s always interesting and interested. She’s smart as hell and keeps her eyes peeled. She misses nothing.’


    She adds: ‘Gaga and Madonna have realised the value of shock. But why not? You need to do anything you can in this business to get noticed. And they’ve both done it brilliantly. ‘In a way, I started that with the Sally Bowles look, the cropped black hair, the lashes. It was a look that became important. It went round the world.’



    'I try to live in the moment and appreciate everything as it happens'


    Liza credits Charles Aznavour as being her biggest professional influence. ‘The first time I saw him perform, I don’t remember breathing for two hours,’ she recalls. ‘Every song was a story. The acting within each song was phenomenal, something I’ve tried to emulate.


    ‘I never thought I sang that well. I still don’t. My sister, Lorna [Luft], has a better voice than me. But I can act out what I’m singing and maybe that’s what people respond to.’


    Liza is firmly back in her groove. ‘Are these good times?’ she asks. ‘Man, these are great times. I no longer trust as easily as I used to, but I’ve become more knowledgeable about picking the people around me.’



    Hanging between the lines is the name of he who must not be mentioned (unless you don’t mind being ejected from the hotel suite). ‘I’m certainly not bitter. Bitter is so boring,’ she says


    So, broadly speaking, is this why she’d never marry again? ‘Well, look at the history. Come on! But it wasn’t the fault of those poor guys — minus the last fool. When you do what I do, when you live how I live, it’s difficult to be married.’


    The ‘last fool’ has been collaborating recently with Sir Cliff Richard on his soul album and what will be his Soulicious tour. But, if the rumour mill is even halfway true, the two are said to have fallen out spectacularly.


    ‘He [she means Gest] always did talk up a great show. And he could be very, very funny. But look, I married him when I was recovering from encephalitis. My head was all over the place.’ So she’s unsurprised by the current gossip. ‘I wondered how long it would take. I know Cliff. He’s a friend, the nicest man you’ll ever meet,’ she says.


    She skids to a halt, super-vigilant neither to enter into a new war of words with her fourth (‘and final’) husband — their divorce redefined acrimonious — nor to give him the oxygen of publicity. ‘If it’s true,’ she mutters, ‘I feel so happy for Cliff.’ I take her to mean that she’s pleased he’s escaped from Gest.


    None of which means that men are off-limits. ‘I’ve decided I want three lovers,’ she says, breezily. ‘The first would be enormously rich, with one foot in the grave and the other on a banana skin. The second would be someone who’s passionate about something — science, painting, anything, I don’t care. Passion is so sexy.


    ‘And finally, I want someone who comes to see me twice a week. I don’t even have to know his name.’

    He's not an artist, he's a fucking work of art...



    I love you more, Mike!

  • Liza Minelli: “Michael wurde benutzt”


    Michael und Elizabeth Taylor besuchten die Hochzeit von Liza Minelli und David Gest im Jahr 2002 in London. In einem Interview mit Daily Mail sagt Liza Minelli über Michael Jackson: “Er war ein höchst begabter Mensch, aber er konnte sich nicht halten, weil ihm meiner Meinung nach nie die Regeln des Spiels beigebracht wurden.” Minelli holt aus: “Michaels Leben war präzise dasjenige, das sein Vater diktierte. Die Religion der Familie sieht vor, die Kinder sollten nicht im Showbusiness sein. Aber als sie begannen Geld für ihren Vater zu machen, war es das. Michael wurde benutzt und missbraucht, fast seitdem er geboren wurde.”


    “Eventuell distanzierte er sich von seiner Familie, kreierte seinen wunderbaren Ort - Neverland - für Kinder und unterstützte verschiedene Familien. Dann, eines Tages, der Vater in einer dieser Familien, rief Michael auf, 'Wenn du mir nicht 30 000 Dollar gibst, werde ich Jedem erzählen, du hättest meinen Sohn angemacht.' Und das war, als Michael mich anrief”, sagt Minelli. Sie hätte Michael überreden müssen, seinen Anwalt einzuschalten. “Was jeder vergisst ist, dass wenn Kinder in Neverland weilten, auch ihre Eltern kamen. Und sie wurden grossartig behandelt. Aber dann sprangen andere Leute auf den fahrenden Zug auf.”


    LIza Minelli sagt, “ich erinnere mich wie er mit diesem Mädchen ging und er war so verliebt. Er kam, um mir den Ring zu zeigen, den er für sie gekauft hatte. Ich fragte ihn, was er ihr sagen werden und er wusste es nicht. So sagte ich, lass uns üben, und das war, was wir taten.” Doch das Mädchen lehnte ab, sie sei nicht bereit, sich jetzt zu entscheiden und er soll sie in sechs Monaten nochmals fragen. Michael war so gekränkt, erinnert sich Minelli. “Ich kannte all seine Freundinnen, inklusive Lisa Marie, die seine Frau wurde.”


    Liza denkt, dass folgendes Michael umbrachte: “Am Ende, die Verachtung, die Grausamkeit, die bösartige Gemeinheit - das sind die Dinge, die ihm das Leben nahmen. Er war einer der besten Performer, die wir je hatten. Er veränderte alles. Aber er war nur ein König, wenn er auf der Bühne war.”


    Quelle: jackson.ch, dailymail.co.uk

  • Liza Minelli: “Michael wurde benutzt”


    ...........
    Liza denkt, dass folgendes Michael umbrachte: “Am Ende, die Verachtung, die Grausamkeit, die bösartige Gemeinheit - das sind die Dinge, die ihm das Leben nahmen. Er war einer der besten Performer, die wir je hatten. Er veränderte alles. Aber er war nur ein König, wenn er auf der Bühne war.”


    Quelle: jackson.ch, dailymail.co.uk


    Umgebracht hat Ihn der Doktor und kein anderer :tatort

  • Sieht so aus, als würde Captain EO im Disneyland Paris bald wieder abgesetzt :( Ich war noch nicht da..:heulsuse


    ich habe captain eo vor 18 jahren im disneyland anaheim, californien, gesehen... war an einem tag dreimal hintereinander drin, weil man das gefühl hatte, michael fast die hand reichen zu können, das war sowas von genial :top

    [SIZE="7"][SIGPIC][/SIGPIC][SIZE="7"][/SIZE][/SIZE]
    [CENTER][/CENTER]


    Gone to soon... We never forget you :ehre

  • Umgebracht hat Ihn der Doktor und kein anderer :tatort


    und der prozess von dem sich michael meines erachtens niemals wirklich erholt hat und deswegen wieder mediabhängig wurde und zuletzt in die hände dr. death gefallen ist... :sad

    [SIZE="7"][SIGPIC][/SIGPIC][SIZE="7"][/SIZE][/SIZE]
    [CENTER][/CENTER]


    Gone to soon... We never forget you :ehre







  • mehr jetzt:




    [h=1]IMAGES: Michael Jackson Slot Machine Las Vegas[/h]


    With iconic images of his sequined glove and dancing shoes, the Jackson slot machine exemplifies state-of-the-art gaming, with a surround-sound chair that even vibrates to the pop legend’s music,
    Bally Technologies said.
    [INDENT]The Michael Jackson game is being introduced Tuesday at the Global Gaming Expo in Las Vegas. The game will be in casinos by early 2012.
    [/INDENT]“We started the process about a year ago,” said Mike Mitchell, vice president of game design at Bally, adding that’s when the firm negotiated the licensing of Jackson’s music and videos
    with several parties, including Jackson’s family and estate.






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