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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Let's Talk All Things Michael Jackson - Part 3.1
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Reply #270 posted 06/07/09 9:26am

suga10

whatsgoingon said:

dag said:


Legal reasons? What about religious reasons? Don´t forget MJ´s still a Jehowah Witness. Just a question for a discussion.

Sorry, if that were the case they would have at least stay together to raise the children. The children would from the beginning at least know Debbie as their mother even if they did divorce. The mother would have still been active in their lives even if they live with the father. It was purely for legal reasons because they are not his biological children therefore the only way around him being seen as the legal father is through marriage. Don't forget with the child abuse allegations he would have found it difficult to adopt and so he would have to found another way around acquiring children that are not biologically his.


I doubt him and Debbie were romantically involved. Seems like he just want to father children and could care less about being involved in another relationship.
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Reply #271 posted 06/07/09 9:55am

NMuzakNSoul

Timmy84 said:



I see some of y'all have carry that DNA bullshit to Michael's sticky. evillol


lol sometimes you have to bring in sam motherfucking jackson timmy!
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Reply #272 posted 06/07/09 9:59am

Timmy84

NMuzakNSoul said:

Timmy84 said:



I see some of y'all have carry that DNA bullshit to Michael's sticky. evillol


lol sometimes you have to bring in sam motherfucking jackson timmy!


Yes I do. cool
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Reply #273 posted 06/07/09 11:28am

TotalAlisa

avatar

whatsgoingon said:

dag said:


Legal reasons? What about religious reasons? Don´t forget MJ´s still a Jehowah Witness. Just a question for a discussion.

Sorry, if that were the case they would have at least stay together to raise the children. The children would from the beginning at least know Debbie as their mother even if they did divorce. The mother would have still been active in their lives even if they live with the father. It was purely for legal reasons because they are not his biological children therefore the only way around him being seen as the legal father is through marriage. Don't forget with the child abuse allegations he would have found it difficult to adopt and so he would have to found another way around acquiring children that are not biologically his.
You are so smart. I would have never of thought of that, but it makes sense as to why he married debbie rowe.
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Reply #274 posted 06/07/09 3:56pm

babybugz

avatar

dag said:

whatsgoingon said:



I bet if Michael had married someone like Brooke Shields back in the day, he would have had his own biological kids. The fact that he married a surrogate is so strange. People NEVER marry the surrogate mother and Debbie was definetly a surrogate, I mean the children didn't know her as their mother. There had to be a specific legal reason why he had to marry Debbie, something he probably wouldn't have to do if those children were biologically his.

Legal reasons? What about religious reasons? Don´t forget MJ´s still a Jehowah Witness. Just a question for a discussion.

He's not a Jehovah witness anymore
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Reply #275 posted 06/07/09 4:13pm

Timmy84

babybugz said:

dag said:


Legal reasons? What about religious reasons? Don´t forget MJ´s still a Jehowah Witness. Just a question for a discussion.

He's not a Jehovah witness anymore


Since 1987, lol
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Reply #276 posted 06/07/09 4:27pm

babybugz

avatar

Timmy84 said:

babybugz said:


He's not a Jehovah witness anymore


Since 1987, lol

lol .yeah that was years ago
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Reply #277 posted 06/07/09 6:44pm

musicfiend

avatar

I LOVE MCHAEL JACKSON! Best artist of all time.
Bow down to the king babay! biggrin
I'm hot & I don't care who knows it, I got a job to do! I'm working up a black sweat
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Reply #278 posted 06/07/09 9:14pm

cdcgold



how about everyone post really rare pics biggrin
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Reply #279 posted 06/07/09 10:04pm

bboy87

avatar











"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #280 posted 06/07/09 11:36pm

musicfiend

avatar

They have a Michael Jackson board
for those of you that dont know lol
http://www.mjj2005.com/ko...hp?act=idx
I'm hot & I don't care who knows it, I got a job to do! I'm working up a black sweat
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Reply #281 posted 06/08/09 12:01am

ViintageJunkii
e

avatar

WOW! I've never seen this



3:28...1985 era?
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Reply #282 posted 06/08/09 12:12am

bboy87

avatar

My Friend Michael, The Real ManChild Behind The Mask

By Jonathan Margolis

This week a rabbi, a spoon bender and a superstar began a bizarre tour of Britain. Their friend JONATHAN MARGOLIS joined them: his unique report offers an extraordinary insight into the strange world of Michael Jackson - and he might have witnessed the moment the tortured singer made peace with his father.

The call came at 2am.

They say the only thing worse than a wrong number in the middle of the night is a right number, because it invariably heralds tragedy. In this case, however, a right number in the small hours brought one of the most remarkable opportunities imaginable for a journalist.

'Would you like to come and meet Michael Jackson off the plane at Heathrow at 9 am and spend some of the week with him?' asked a familiar American voice. The caller was Shmuley Boteach, my hyperactive rabbi friend who, in one of showbusiness' more unpredictable couplings, has become pop legend Michael Jackson's guru, friend - and, last week, partner in founding a children's charity.

Naturally, I accepted Shmuley's offer and, hours later, would enter for the second time in a few months the maelstrom that is the life of the 42-year-old singer, once described by Bob Geldof as 'the most famous man on the planet, God help him'.

Behind the scenes of one of this most extraordinary of celebrity stories, I would find myself doing everything from listening to Michael in his pajamas putting the finishing touches to his Oxford Union speech, to making him laugh with a joke in the back of his car, to hearing him make one of the most emotional phone calls of his life - while on the Hammersmith flyover in West London. Michael Jackson was coming to England to launch his US-based charity Heal The Kids, in a speech at Oxford University, and to be best man at paranormalist Uri Geller's wedding, as thanks to Geller for having introduced Jackson to Shmuley over two years ago. It had been a tense weekend for Shmuley. Jackson's long-planned trip was jeopardized at the last minute by his breaking two bones in his foot falling downstairs, then by an airline strike - and finally by a snowstorm in New York.

So it wasn't just cynics who doubted that the singer would ever make it to Oxford. The rabbi, too, was getting distinctly nervous. He had put almost a year's work into getting Michael to speak at Oxford, against advice that the controversial megastar might get a rough reception from the students.

But a few minutes before phoning me, Rabbi Shmuley had received confirmation from America. Michael Jackson was in plaster, in pain and on crutches - but he was also on a flight out of JFK airport. In November, I had spent a week around Michael in New York for an American magazine article. Now Shmuley wanted me to witness further, by getting me still closer, how Jackson, who this month becomes a UN Special Ambassador for children at the behest of his friend Nelson Mandela among others, is morphing from entertainer into serious world figure - or so his influential supporters hope. Shmuley has made it his mission to convince the world that the twice-divorced Michael may be unconventional in a host of ways, but is a good-hearted, fundamentally innocent man whose desire to sensitize adults to the needs of children deserves to be heard.

So now here we were, travelling out to the airport in a minicab. Michael's people, a tribe of burly blokes, were already there, of course. There were the squat, silent, watchful American minders, and the drivers, all English and experienced at whisking celebrities around in convoys of blacked-out Mercedes and people-carriers. There was even a photographer employed to video and photograph Michael's every move for his personal archive.

Then the travelling party arrived - Jackson's young manager, his elderly Lebanese doctor, there to look after the star's bad foot, plus yet more watchful and burly men.

Normally, there would also have been Michael's children's nanny, a nice, sensible, middle-aged lady who fusses and cares for the Jackson Two, Prince and sister Paris. (There is, incidentally, no troop of 12 nannies as is often reported - just the one).

Michael's children (both by his second wife, nurse Debbie Rowe) are an impeccably behaved pair; unspoiled and scarily bright.

Their father had decided for once not to bring them on a trip, because he feared they might be photographed, something he dreads after a childhood of being constantly hunted by paparazzi.

As Michael and his men cleared Customs, the four-car entourage got into position in a public part of the airport, next to people getting out of cars to go on holiday.

To my amazement, Michael was wearing his black silk facemask, an item that hadn't made an appearance once, either in private or when we went out in New York, or for that matter when I met him in Japan years ago. Indeed, I have always told people that the mask is another myth, along with the oxygen tent story and rumours of Michael having Prince and Paris's toys thrown away after one use for fear of germs, both of which I know to be untrue.

The oxygen tent tale, Michael told me when we had Thanksgiving dinner at the Boteach home in New Jersey, stemmed from a joke he cracked to a photographer after he had crawled into one he bought for a children's hospital and emerged saying: 'Gee, if I had one of those, I could live to be 150.' The Sun took up the gauntlet and the 'Michael Jackson' label, which he despises, was born. Michael's physical distress at Heathrow, too, was palpable. He was stressed and exhausted, hobbling on crutches and putting every effort into staying upright.

He was too focused on merely walking to say hello to anyone apart from Rabbi Shmuley and, unfortunately for me, his crutches and outstretched leg took up what was going to be my place in his people-carrier.

So I followed the convoy to London's Lanesborough Hotel with a 67-year-old driver, Stan, who has been chauffeuring Michael since the singer was a teenager. Stan was illuminating on the subject of that facemask. 'It's for the fans and you lot in the Press, isn't it?' he chuckled.

'Putting it on guarantees pictures will appear in tomorrow's papers.


Never forget that Michael is a showman.

'The fans were out en masse at the back of Michael's hotel, dozens of them camping in plastic bags on the pavement for a glimpse of their idol.

As Michael settled into his suite, I watched his video man going around the crowd, who screamed and wept messages to Michael into his camcorder. It was both touching and disturbing.

Upstairs in the suite, Michael was seeing his doctor. I wondered when he emerged if he would have any idea who I was. However, he spotted me and greeted me with a funny military salute. I've no idea if he really recognised me, but he made a convincing job of making me feel he had.

Michael's makeup and quiet, shy manner make it seem as if he is detached and unaware of what is going on around him, but he has almost 360-degree vision and rarely misses anything.

Everybody, of course, wants to know what this mysterious man is really like. To me, he comes across as childlike, funny, generous spirited, considerate, if quite demanding, and unfailingly polite. He is also unexpectedly gossipy, though never really malevolent. He has, for instance, a pet snake jokily called Madonna - but is always anxious to say how he really thinks the world of his rival for the number one superstar spot.

His voice is light and has a distinct Western twang and, although he speaks quietly and dreamily, also laughs loudly and often, especially at any physical joke. People bumping into things and throwing food about crack him up. He hates even the mildest swearing and is always asking questions. He listens carefully, watches you with ever-so-slightly suspicious eyes and ensures by not saying much that he is listened to intently. As for his appearance, I don't pretend to fully understand why he cultivates the image he does, but I'm sure it has to do with shyness and wanting to hide. Up close, his cosmetic surgery is obvious and he now seems to be competing with the natural aging process. I have no reason to disbelieve (and some reasons to believe) his claim that he suffers from a skin-lightening condition, and I know for certain that he is proud of his black heritage.

He told Jackie Onassis, who helped him with his autobiography, Moonwalker, that he used to wear masks to hide, and it is also known that his father, the famously harsh and demanding Joseph Jackson, told him repeatedly as a child that he was ugly - a pretty scarring inheritance.

Michael reminds me of an anorexic teenager who is never quite satisfied with the image they see in the mirror and has to keep changing it.

Michael wanted to sleep for a few hours and we agreed to see him later as Shmuley had a list of charity-related matters to discuss. I was to be allowed to tag along as an observer again.

There was a knock on the suite door as Michael and his mentor were deep in conversation that evening. Michael asked if I wouldn't mind going to the door. Outside was Macaulay Culkin, in London for his West End play and here to hang out with Michael. 'Hi, there, you big, fat monkey head,' Culkin said to his friend.

You either understand Michael Jackson's Peter Pan thing or not, but he is earnest about it and says that he is not fond of adults and not proud of being one - hence his fellow feeling with ex-child stars like Culkin who, like him, missed out on childhood.

We left Michael and Macaulay to do whatever they do, which according to one tabloid, was sit on Michael's bed and watch kids' films.

It's interesting that when it comes to Michael, people say that what puts them off is the (ultimately fruitless and unproven) accusations in the early Nineties of child molestation and how he made an £18million settlement to quell his accuser.

When I point out that the local District Attorney subsequently invited further accusations, and that none came despite there being so much money on the table, and how surprising that is considering that some 10,000 children a year visit Michael's home, Neverland, people shift their objection to the indisputable fact that he looks a bit odd - a lesser charge, I can't help feeling.

But perhaps I had already become too understanding of Michael after our time in New York.

I saw him there working tirelessly on planning Heal The Kids, which will 'campaign globally for parents to spend quality time with their children'.

He did this despite being under pressure from his record company to get on with recording his album, his first new music in nearly a decade.

I saw him in conversation and holding his own with child psychiatrists, bankers, writers and society bigwigs, and assured and informal on a conference call with actor Denzel Washington and Nelson Mandela, whom he asked to join the Heal The Kids board. ('I'll do whatever you want, Michael,' Mandela said. 'You know how I respect you.') I also listened to Jackson in business meetings, where a different man still emerged - focused, numerate, business-savvy and imaginative.

He has a host of plans for his future from property acquisitions to publishing ventures and leisure businesses.

And I witnessed the extent of what I think is Jackson's real commitment to children. Rabbi Shmuley's eldest daughter, Mushki, had complained tearfully to Michael on one of his frequent visits to the Boteaches' home that she was being bullied by a boy at school.

Michael proposed hosting a peace conference, chaired by him, with the boy's parents to sort it out. This was no idle promise, either.

For a week, Michael phoned Shmuley and Mushki daily demanding to know how arrangements for the summit were going. When the day of the meeting came, Michael discovered it clashed with the photographic session for his new CD cover.

So rather than change the date, he began the session at 5 am to get it over with. In the event, ironically, the boy and his family failed to turn up.

Shmuley also told me, from the hundreds of hours of interviews he has recorded with Michael for a book they are writing together, about Michael's torment over the Jamie Bulger murder on Merseyside, which he surprised his Oxford audience by mentioning last Tuesday.

The reference was dismissed by some as an attempt to inject local colour into the speech, but in fact Michael's concern over the case goes back to his first marriage, to Lisa Marie Presley, daughter of Elvis.

They ended up arguing about Jamie Bulger on a trip to London, when Michael outraged his wife by saying that, devastated as he was for Jamie and his parents, he was also concerned for Jamie's killers because he was sure they must have had a bad childhood - as indeed was the case.

Michael refuses to believe on principle that any child can be fundamentally evil.

As late as last autumn, Michael was asking what had happened to Jamie's killers and saying how he would love to have written to them, but wouldn't dream of doing so because his fame would make them think they were being rewarded, which he knew would be unacceptable.

He was, says Shmuley, quite downcast when he realised how his celebrity status could occasionally be a handicap in his mission to help children.

I joined Michael again on Tuesday afternoon in his suite, as he did a dry run of his Oxford speech, which he had been working on with Shmuley for a week.

They were already behind schedule, thanks to Michael's foot. He was insisting on delivering the speech standing up, and even reading through it as he would at Oxford, apart, that is, from the stripy grey pajamas with Mickey Mouse on the breast pocket. His focus and attention to detail were remarkable. The speech was to climax with Michael forgiving his father. There was a line where he said if the Jackson Five did a great show, Joseph would say it was OK, and if they did an OK show, he would say it was lousy.

'You know,' Michael said, 'I'm wrong there. He never said it was lousy, he just said nothing. This has got to be honest.' He went quiet and sat for a while, holding a tulip from a vase and seemingly lost in thought.

He changed the line, and that bleak' nothing' was the very word where, that night, he broke down and sobbed for nearly a minute. Some thought this was theatre; I am certain it was genuine, as were most of the Oxford students around me.

While Michael was getting dressed and seeing the doctor again, the hours were ticking worryingly away, I had a nose around the suite. Everywhere were the results of Michael's reported £2,000 after-hours shopping spree at HMV with Macaulay and a pretty, blonde, 20-year-old student daughter of a family friend in London, whom Michael has known since she was young.

Scattered around the suite were DVDs of various children's films, the David Attenborough wildlife video collection (down from £59.99 to £49.99) and dozens of CDs, including the Beatles' album 1, to which Michael of course owns the rights, and so by buying, was paying himself royalties.

It struck me that it's not correct that Michael Jackson only enjoys the company of children, as is often said. What he likes is to surround himself with people in their twenties whom he has known since they were young - and can, therefore, trust, such as the lovely student.

Before we left, getting ever later, Michael gathered up fruit for the journey to Oxford (two apples, a banana, two plums and an orange) and frantically hobbled around on his crutches looking for reading material - a pile of upmarket magazines plus a copy of the Royal Academy's £25 catalogue for their current exhibition, The Genius Of Rome, 1592-1623 - a present from his student friend.

We piled into the people-carrier with the manager, the doctor, a bodyguard and Shmuley an hour before we were due in Oxford for dinner. Michael cradled the art book on his lap in the back, where he sat with me and the doctor and discussed Renaissance art. He explained that Diana Ross had taught him a lot about art, but that his father was also a talented painter.

It was Rabbi Shmuley who suggested when we were on the Cromwell Road that Michael phone his father in Las Vegas. 'You're making a speech forgiving him.

I think now's the time, Michael. Michael considered the idea silently all the way to Hammersmith, when he suddenly asked for the nearest mobile phone and dialed. 'Joseph,' he said, as we crawled through the London rush hour. 'It's me, Michael. I'm in London. I'm OK, I've broken my foot and it hurts a lot, but I wanted you to know I'm on my way to Oxford University to make a speech, and you're mentioned in it ...no, no, don't worry, it's very positive. . sure...how are you keeping?

Uh-huh. . .

sure, of course I will. I love you, Dad, bye.' After saying this, he stared out of the window for a long time. 'You know,' he said to all of us, beaming, 'that's the first time I've ever, ever said that. I can't believe it.' Shmuley gave him a bear hug and congratulated him. Michael continued reading.

It was a happy journey, apart from the traffic. Michael complained that all the CDs his manager had chosen for the drive were too loud. At one stage on the M40 there was a silence and I cracked one of those jokes you wish you hadn't. 'It's getting boring now,' I said, 'I think we should have a singsong.

Can anyone here sing?' Normally, making jokes around celebrities is unwise, but the atmosphere was so jolly and excited that I couldn't help it.

To my delight, Michael had the generosity to laugh loudly.

Michael began to panic as we got later and later. He wanted to phone everyone he had inconvenienced by being late. For a star who doesn't need to give a damn, it's hard not to be struck by his solicitousness.

Michael's speech was amazing.

We know the students and the newspapers and TV were bowled over by it, but I wondered what the reaction would be of Trevor Beattie, the advertising creative guru, who was in the packed Victorian debating chamber, with its statues of Asquith and Gladstone.

Beattie is probably Britain's most renowned ad man, and has worked on commercials for UNICEF recently with Mandela, and with everyone from Muhammad Ali to Tony Blair, whose TV commercials for the forthcoming Election campaign he has just made.

Beattie, in other words, knows a bit about presentation. 'What I've seen tonight confirms what I've always believed about Michael,' he said. 'All these theories about him trying to become white miss the point. I believe his great thing is not to be anything like his father and that tonight, he has finally laid the ghost of Joseph and can start again.

'That's why I find it sad that until now, everyone's concentrated on things like his appearance and his eccentricities and overlooked his personal turmoil. He did it brilliantly with obvious sincerity. I couldn't admire the man more.' We went on to an incredibly grand, starry, late dinner for 40 at Blenheim Palace, where I was amused to watch Richard E. Grant, a Hollywood star himself, fretting over how to approach Michael.

'I mean, what does one do? Do you pretend you know him and say, hi, [and] introduce yourself. I'm just not quite sure.' And the next day came the glitzy Geller wedding. Michael was late again (more trouble with that foot, exacerbated when he slipped on it - believe it or not - in a fish and chip shop in Marylebone.) People were sorry, especially for Uri's wife, Hanna, but then Michael also had to cancel a helicopter trip from the Gellers' out to George Harrison's home. Harrison, he told me, is the Beatle he is closest to.

My 11-year-old daughter shook hands with Michael and pronounced him, 'Not as scary as in photos, actually really nice looking.' And I was asked to dance under the wedding canopy with Uri, Shmuley and David Blaine, the American magician - and with the world's number one song-and-dance man, Michael Jackson, sitting in a chair three feet away, clapping along.

Noting my hippopotamus-like attempts at rhythm, the King Of Pop winked at me. I do not expect to be signed up for his next video any time soon.

He, on the other hand, seemed happy, as if some sort of weight had been lifted from his shoulders.
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #283 posted 06/08/09 12:35am

dag

avatar

Timmy84 said:

babybugz said:


He's not a Jehovah witness anymore


Since 1987, lol

Didn´t he say in one of those interviews he´s given since the release of Invincible that he still is. I can´t remember which one was it. I´ll try to look it up when I have time.

Anyways, whatever the reasons were for him marrying Debbie, I still think these are his biological kids. I see something of Mike in Prince. Paris looks exactly like Debbie and the one who looks the most like Mike is Blanket.

BTW, thanks for the rare pictures. I´ve never seen any of them.
[Edited 6/8/09 0:36am]
"When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all."
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Reply #284 posted 06/08/09 4:58am

marnifrances

avatar

dag said:

Timmy84 said:



Since 1987, lol

Didn´t he say in one of those interviews he´s given since the release of Invincible that he still is. I can´t remember which one was it. I´ll try to look it up when I have time.

Anyways, whatever the reasons were for him marrying Debbie, I still think these are his biological kids. I see something of Mike in Prince. Paris looks exactly like Debbie and the one who looks the most like Mike is Blanket.

BTW, thanks for the rare pictures. I´ve never seen any of them.
[Edited 6/8/09 0:36am]


Yes he said something about witnessing (but then said he doesn't do it because he doesn't have the time), but it contradicts everything he's said or done in regards to JW since then (and before then). Once you quit the church, you are supposedly shunned, and during the trial he attended Kingdom Hall AND a christian church... so it's a bit confusing. He definitely wasn't a JW when he married Debbie.
www.maximum-jackson.com
The Michael Jackson Fan Forum
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Reply #285 posted 06/08/09 5:23am

dag

avatar

marnifrances said:

dag said:


Didn´t he say in one of those interviews he´s given since the release of Invincible that he still is. I can´t remember which one was it. I´ll try to look it up when I have time.

Anyways, whatever the reasons were for him marrying Debbie, I still think these are his biological kids. I see something of Mike in Prince. Paris looks exactly like Debbie and the one who looks the most like Mike is Blanket.

BTW, thanks for the rare pictures. I´ve never seen any of them.
[Edited 6/8/09 0:36am]


Yes he said something about witnessing (but then said he doesn't do it because he doesn't have the time), but it contradicts everything he's said or done in regards to JW since then (and before then). Once you quit the church, you are supposedly shunned, and during the trial he attended Kingdom Hall AND a christian church... so it's a bit confusing. He definitely wasn't a JW when he married Debbie.

Yeah, Mike´s definitely a sinful man when it comes to following Jehowah rules. lol I am also confused about his religeous beliefs. I think he may still believe in the core of Jehowah religion, since he was brought up like that but does not follow all their rules. Maybe, who knows?
[Edited 6/8/09 5:23am]
"When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all."
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Reply #286 posted 06/08/09 10:22am

angel345

babybugz said:

BoOTyLiCioUs said:



love 69

lol he was a Beautiful black man razz lol

Sure was nod
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Reply #287 posted 06/08/09 11:55am

cdcgold

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Reply #288 posted 06/08/09 12:24pm

musicfiend

avatar

That was the T.V. guide interview in 2001 that he said
he was still jehovah. I think he said he still did the door to
door thing, but he said he has to dress up in cognito so no one
recognizes him. I remember something bout wearing a wig and bottlecap
glasses.
I'm hot & I don't care who knows it, I got a job to do! I'm working up a black sweat
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Reply #289 posted 06/08/09 2:21pm

cdcgold

who's the ugly dude on the right. he completly messed up the picture. lol



sorry for the huge pics
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Reply #290 posted 06/08/09 2:23pm

cdcgold

he looks scared in this picture. no suprise
[Edited 6/8/09 14:24pm]
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Reply #291 posted 06/08/09 3:28pm

bboy87

avatar

musicfiend said:

That was the T.V. guide interview in 2001 that he said
he was still jehovah. I think he said he still did the door to
door thing, but he said he has to dress up in cognito so no one
recognizes him. I remember something bout wearing a wig and bottlecap
glasses.

I don't know, I think he still believes in some of the aspects, but he's definitely not a JW anymore. You can't a JW and celebrate holidays lol
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #292 posted 06/08/09 3:44pm

majic

if anyones still interested...


Coming August 18th...



[Edited 6/8/09 15:53pm]
How will we fill our empty room?

Long Live The Funk

Housequake
1997-2009
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Reply #293 posted 06/08/09 4:10pm

MuchLove

^^^^^

eek isjghrgjhnmgnhklg/hgnjitiyi

Oh my goodness!! So "Hello World" is really being released?! The cover looks fantastic!! How did you even get a hold of that? Wow, I'm excited. Do you know the tracklisting? Thank you so much! biggrin
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Reply #294 posted 06/08/09 5:40pm

bboy87

avatar

majic said:

if anyones still interested...


Coming August 18th...



[Edited 6/8/09 15:53pm]

I was gonna post that! mad
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #295 posted 06/08/09 5:45pm

Timmy84

majic said:

if anyones still interested...


Coming August 18th...



[Edited 6/8/09 15:53pm]

eek NICE FUCKIN' COVER!
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Reply #296 posted 06/09/09 3:15am

seeingvoices12

avatar

Timmy84 said:

majic said:

if anyones still interested...


Coming August 18th...



[Edited 6/8/09 15:53pm]

eek NICE FUCKIN' COVER!


Yeah,A Great Cover. biggrin
MICHAEL JACKSON
R.I.P
مايكل جاكسون للأبد
1958
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Reply #297 posted 06/09/09 3:16am

majic

MuchLove said:

^^^^^

eek isjghrgjhnmgnhklg/hgnjitiyi

Oh my goodness!! So "Hello World" is really being released?! The cover looks fantastic!! How did you even get a hold of that? Wow, I'm excited. Do you know the tracklisting? Thank you so much! biggrin


no problem...got it from Hip-OSelect's Twitter page...no known tracklisting as of yet!
How will we fill our empty room?

Long Live The Funk

Housequake
1997-2009
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Reply #298 posted 06/09/09 3:52am

unique

avatar

something i've been trying to figure out for a while is something that would essentially be a follow up to the motown boxset, but as there's already been umpteen compilations, the project would be an unnoficially one

the idea is to take the solo work from off the wall, right up to the most recent releases, and put it in an kind of chronological order so you have all the songs from off the wall to date

thus for example, off the wall, then outtakes etc between off the wall and thriller, then the thriller album, then bad outtakes, then bad, then captain eo and moonwalker stuff, dangerous, history, blood on the dancefloor, invincible, invincible outakes, seven, etc

i would also replace the album versions of tracks with 12" extended versions, such as billie jean, wanna be starting something, bad, but not "remixes" that have a different sound to the album version, and i'd add in stuff like say say say, the man, and other collabs where MJ has a lead vocal, but not tracks where he is only on backing vocals. you could perhaps think of all that material as a seperate "bonus" disc, and likewise another bonus disc could be various demos such as billie jean and other unfinished work, but songs that are demos and of reasonable release quality can be included in the main set if there isn't a final MJ vocal version, ie. we are the world demo can be included as that would be better than the official version. i'd miss out the wiz and simpsons stuff and pepsi ad's and stuff like that, so basically you have a long multi disc compilation with one version of each song, as if it was an expanded version of the album. as this would be a multi disc set, rather than just stick all the outtakes on the end or on the second disc, the idea would be to put them chronologically either before or after the main album, thus thriller outtakes would come before thriller, as they would have been recorded before thriller was, and soundwise they would perhaps sound more like the previous album than the next album, and listenability is a key concern, which is why simpsons and backing vocal tracks won't be included in the main set

the idea of this would be to take the tracks that are officially released, or in circulation in reasonably good quality in full versions, so you can literally take the outtakes and rarities from official releases and boxsets and add in other outtakes that are floating about in listenable quality. tracks that are around in crap realplayer hissy quality or only 1 min snippets or tracks you know about but aren't around, can't be included. if you get my jist, if you don't have the tracks yourself, you couldn't make the playlist and load it into your itunes, and neither could i. we can take the stuff from the anniversary editions, b sides, 12"s etc, and outtakes from the internets, but we can't use tracks that the fans don't already have, and we don't want to use shitty sound quality stuff, think about that stuff as being on another bonus disc with pepsi ads and other bits and bobs, this idea is to make a genuinely good listening experience, as opposed to a anally complete discography. i'd stick on perhaps the freddie mercury version of state of shock instead of jaggers, as it's about in good quality and makes an interesting alternate take, but i'd keep the album version of PYT rather than the original demo, that can go on a bonus disc of demos, the idea would be to keep the official albums in the same running order with the same versions, except for extended versions, and there are only really a few of those

another interesting one would be if someone wanted to make a similar list of remixes and 12"s, taking one officially released (ie. not home made dj mix - but unreleased proper remix is okay) version of each track (so you don't get sick listening to 20 versions of the same song) and sticking it in chrono/release order

who is up for the challenge?

if we get a few lists, i can compare them and try and then create an ultimate playlist, and then maybe someone can make some artwork. in the computer age, we don't need to worry about things fitting into lots of 80 minutes or so either, so think of it more as an itunes playlist
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Reply #299 posted 06/09/09 4:10am

ViintageJunkii
e

avatar

unique said:

something i've been trying to figure out for a while is something that would essentially be a follow up to the motown boxset, but as there's already been umpteen compilations, the project would be an unnoficially one

the idea is to take the solo work from off the wall, right up to the most recent releases, and put it in an kind of chronological order so you have all the songs from off the wall to date

thus for example, off the wall, then outtakes etc between off the wall and thriller, then the thriller album, then bad outtakes, then bad, then captain eo and moonwalker stuff, dangerous, history, blood on the dancefloor, invincible, invincible outakes, seven, etc

i would also replace the album versions of tracks with 12" extended versions, such as billie jean, wanna be starting something, bad, but not "remixes" that have a different sound to the album version, and i'd add in stuff like say say say, the man, and other collabs where MJ has a lead vocal, but not tracks where he is only on backing vocals. you could perhaps think of all that material as a seperate "bonus" disc, and likewise another bonus disc could be various demos such as billie jean and other unfinished work, but songs that are demos and of reasonable release quality can be included in the main set if there isn't a final MJ vocal version, ie. we are the world demo can be included as that would be better than the official version. i'd miss out the wiz and simpsons stuff and pepsi ad's and stuff like that, so basically you have a long multi disc compilation with one version of each song, as if it was an expanded version of the album. as this would be a multi disc set, rather than just stick all the outtakes on the end or on the second disc, the idea would be to put them chronologically either before or after the main album, thus thriller outtakes would come before thriller, as they would have been recorded before thriller was, and soundwise they would perhaps sound more like the previous album than the next album, and listenability is a key concern, which is why simpsons and backing vocal tracks won't be included in the main set

the idea of this would be to take the tracks that are officially released, or in circulation in reasonably good quality in full versions, so you can literally take the outtakes and rarities from official releases and boxsets and add in other outtakes that are floating about in listenable quality. tracks that are around in crap realplayer hissy quality or only 1 min snippets or tracks you know about but aren't around, can't be included. if you get my jist, if you don't have the tracks yourself, you couldn't make the playlist and load it into your itunes, and neither could i. we can take the stuff from the anniversary editions, b sides, 12"s etc, and outtakes from the internets, but we can't use tracks that the fans don't already have, and we don't want to use shitty sound quality stuff, think about that stuff as being on another bonus disc with pepsi ads and other bits and bobs, this idea is to make a genuinely good listening experience, as opposed to a anally complete discography. i'd stick on perhaps the freddie mercury version of state of shock instead of jaggers, as it's about in good quality and makes an interesting alternate take, but i'd keep the album version of PYT rather than the original demo, that can go on a bonus disc of demos, the idea would be to keep the official albums in the same running order with the same versions, except for extended versions, and there are only really a few of those

another interesting one would be if someone wanted to make a similar list of remixes and 12"s, taking one officially released (ie. not home made dj mix - but unreleased proper remix is okay) version of each track (so you don't get sick listening to 20 versions of the same song) and sticking it in chrono/release order

who is up for the challenge?

if we get a few lists, i can compare them and try and then create an ultimate playlist, and then maybe someone can make some artwork. in the computer age, we don't need to worry about things fitting into lots of 80 minutes or so either, so think of it more as an itunes playlist


That sounds like a great idea!
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