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Reply #300 posted 10/21/12 12:23pm

NaughtyKitty

avatar

excited love excited love excited love touched @ the documentary footage! What a treat!

On another note, Bruno Mars doing a couple of MJ impersonations on SNL last nite:

lol

[Edited 10/21/12 12:24pm]

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Reply #301 posted 10/21/12 1:31pm

mjscarousal

I CANT WAIT FOR BAD25 excited excited excited excited excited excited

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Reply #302 posted 10/21/12 5:16pm

alphastreet

I can't decide if he sounds like mj or say no to drugs from alvin & the chipmunks, but he sounds a lot like him....though a bad fan for not knowing the words! lol

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Reply #303 posted 10/22/12 4:39am

dag

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[img:$uid]http://i50.tinypic.com/rsa25y.jpg[/img:$uid]

"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 #304 posted 10/22/12 5:51am

alphastreet

dag said:

[img:$uid]http://i50.tinypic.com/rsa25y.jpg[/img:$uid]

yum yum

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Reply #305 posted 10/22/12 11:41am

NaughtyKitty

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Somebody is selling some rare pics of MJ on Ebay. http://www.ebay.com/itm/R...3a7ad3dbd1

Description says this is Michael Jackson and his associates when he was a Jehovah's Witness in 1984.

Shipping for these photos are.....$100,000???!!! eek eek eek

[Edited 10/22/12 11:48am]

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Reply #306 posted 10/22/12 1:00pm

alphastreet

so adorable, looks like the victory tour days....and now it's free LOL

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Reply #307 posted 10/22/12 1:42pm

NaughtyKitty

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Bad outtakes biggrin

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Reply #308 posted 10/22/12 3:44pm

mjscarousal

NaughtyKitty said:

Bad outtakes biggrin

biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin excited thanks girl! LOVE IT!

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Reply #309 posted 10/22/12 3:46pm

dm3857

does anyone know of any soundboard recording surfacing of any mj shows? or any good quality boots..

thanks!

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Reply #310 posted 10/23/12 7:48am

Derek1984

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Does't appear that Groove of Midnight was ever recorded by MJ...

During the BAD sessions, Michael Jackson considered many songs that finally were discarded. Songwriter Rod Temperton, who was part of the A-Team behind Off the Wall and Thriller, submitted a few songs for BAD, one of them being Groove of Midnight. This song was eventually recorded by Siedah Garrett and was released on her debut album KISS of Life on Qwest Records (1988). “Rod Temperton had some songs”, remembers Matt Forger. “Quincy asked him to have songs ready. Groove of Midnight is one of these songs. However we searched and we could not find a version with Michael’s vocals. It wasn’t a song that they considered for the BAD album eventually”.

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Reply #311 posted 10/23/12 8:36am

LiLi1992

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"Bad 25" doc had the biggest audience of VOX ever: 23 million smile
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Reply #312 posted 10/23/12 10:06am

dag

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WOW. Mike still the KING! biggrin biggrin biggrin

LiLi1992 said:

"Bad 25" doc had the biggest audience of VOX ever: 23 million smile

"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 #313 posted 10/23/12 12:14pm

jaimestarr79

where are all of the MJ jams from his vault. What a HOAX! They don't exis
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Reply #314 posted 10/23/12 2:52pm

dm3857

Derek1984 said:

Does't appear that Groove of Midnight was ever recorded by MJ...

During the BAD sessions, Michael Jackson considered many songs that finally were discarded. Songwriter Rod Temperton, who was part of the A-Team behind Off the Wall and Thriller, submitted a few songs for BAD, one of them being Groove of Midnight. This song was eventually recorded by Siedah Garrett and was released on her debut album KISS of Life on Qwest Records (1988). “Rod Temperton had some songs”, remembers Matt Forger. “Quincy asked him to have songs ready. Groove of Midnight is one of these songs. However we searched and we could not find a version with Michael’s vocals. It wasn’t a song that they considered for the BAD album eventually”.

there is a snippet of a rough version with mj singing it.. so i dont know if i believe that,

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Reply #315 posted 10/23/12 3:17pm

dm3857

jaimestarr79 said:

where are all of the MJ jams from his vault. What a HOAX! They don't exis

yes my friend they exist.. and there is many more than most people think.

the ones we know for sure that exist are the following:

goodness knows
sweet music
kentucky
what a lonely way to go
holiday inn
you aint gonna change nothin
goin to rio
iowa
ode to sorrow
thank you for life
rock with you (demo)
sunset driver
susie
that girl
we are the ones
got to find a way somehow
in the life of chico
startin something (early version of wbss)
under your skin
you told me your lovin
you not me
nymphette lover
slipped away
somewhere in time
when you wish upon a star
why cant i be
learned my lesson
much too soon
niteline
trouble
slapstik
the toy
who do you know
carousel
got the hots
hot street
rolling the dice
someone in the dark
stand tall
the girl is mine (demo)
bad company
buffalo bill
doing dirty
fantasy
far far away
nona
power
there must be more to life than this
victory (w/ freddy mercury)
love never felt so good
be me 4 a day
the nelson mandela song
al capone
hot fever (twymmf demo)
scared of the moon
tomboy
what you do to me
another part of me (early version)
crack kills
pyramid girl (liberian girl demo)
the price of fame
whos bad (bad demo)
black or white demo
chicago 1945
girls of another lover
groove of midnight
turning me off
color of my soul
neverland landing
throwin your life away
alright now
bottle of smoke
deep in the night
heal the world demo
if you dont love me
i have this love of me
ill be there (adult version)
monkey buisness
seven digits
stay
who is it demo
work that body
fanfare transmition
dont be messin around
a baby smiles
bad girl
do the bartman
do you know where your children are
free
give into me demo
gone to soon demo
i forgive you
in the closet demo
jam demo
little girls
little susie (early version)
Llama Lola
lonely bird
lonely man
lucy is in love with linus
make a wish
men in black
michael mckellar
serious effect
remember the time demo
she got it
stay
the love you save (adult version)
Cry (not the one written by r kelly for invincible)
Red Eye
seven bright new stars
shes not a girl
sister sue
the childrens hour
tragedy of a cheerleader
who is the girl with her hair down
why shy
someone put your hand out
california grass
dreams
fear
bass(z)oulle
face
ghost (early version)
in the back
on the line
we be ballin
angel
do you love me
thank heaven that
belong 2
do you want me
escape
fall again
i have this dream
stop the war
a place with no name
do you love me
vibrationist
tubeway
edgar allan poe
kick it
on my anger
people have to make some kind of joke
saved by the bell
seeing voices
she was lovin me
the gloved one
the way you love me
this is our time
another day
i dont live here anymore
chicago 1945 (new version/rerecorded)
get around
i dont live anymore
in the valley
make or break
maybe we can do it
shout
soldiers entrance
that kind of lover
you're a liar, brother
wonderful world of candy
all in your name
pressure
seduction
the pain
weve had enough
light the way
unknown title (charity anthem for tsunami)
from the bottom of my heart
he who makes the sky grey
you are so beautiful
whats it gonna be
im dreamin
if you dont get it
days of the broken hearted
the future
if we still love
im still the king
can you
babys fire
i will miss you
bang your head
broken chair
i am a loser
i was the loser
D.I.E.
dont make me stay
H2O
Lady of summer
Silent Spring
Children of the world
Water

this of coarse are only the ones we know exist, im sure that there are more, as there were a few tracks on bad 25 that i had never seen or heard about before.

and thats just the songs in the vault.

there is also footage of pretty much all of the tours (J5 tours,Destiny Tour,Triumph Tour,Victory Tour,Bad Tour,Dangerous Tour,HIStory Tour, etc..) Plus rehearsal footage from Bad,Dangerous,and HIStory. possibly from all the tours, but i only know Bad,Dangerous,and HIStory rehearsal footage exist for sure.

There is alternate takes and mixes for many songs.. for example there is 91 mixes/versions of billie jean that were recorded before it was released.

There is the footage of Michael in the studio recording his albums.

Footage of all of the music video rehearsals.

There is 80 hours of this is it footage.

Michael was composing an album of classical music right before he passed, many of the pieces where completed as he showed them to award winning composer David Michael Frank. David describes them as "very pretty music" "one piece had an irish quality about it.i suggested we use a celtic harp.." "the pieces song very much like film score music, with very traditional harmony, and definitely very strong melodies." "one of them was a little John Barryish, like in Out of Africa, I could hear (in my head) sweeping strings and french horns in unison."

and probably even more that im forgetting or dont even know about..

needless to say, there is a TON of material.

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Reply #316 posted 10/24/12 4:33am

Marrk

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jaimestarr79 said:

where are all of the MJ jams from his vault. What a HOAX! They don't exis

Amusing.

Some of us have loads of them already in varying quality. Motown keep churning out J5 stuff too. Last time i checked they count too. Things keep leaking online or get passed round private collectors ALL. THE. TIME.

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Reply #317 posted 10/24/12 4:34am

Marrk

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alphastreet said:

Skylightt said:

Oh yeah they were. A lot of Michael's mid to late 90's stuff has a lot of that omninous, we need to change this feel to it. Earth Song...We've Had Enough.

we've had enough is the best song of his from the 00's

Good call. An amazing song by anyones standards.

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Reply #318 posted 10/24/12 4:38am

Marrk

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So when is Spikes documentary getting released on DVD?, i want it in my greedy mitts. I remain (relatively) unspoiled.

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Reply #319 posted 10/24/12 9:41am

dag

avatar

[img:$uid]http://i45.tinypic.com/10eqz2s.jpg[/img:$uid]

[img:$uid]http://i47.tinypic.com/280s0fb.jpg[/img:$uid]

"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 #320 posted 10/24/12 11:17am

EmeraldSkies

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Marrk said:

So when is Spikes documentary getting released on DVD?, i want it in my greedy mitts. I remain (relatively) unspoiled.

Sometime after it airs on Thanksgiving.

Does anyone know if they are going to be showing it in theaters like they did with This Is It? or is it only being shown in theater in NY,and LA?

Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach
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Reply #321 posted 10/24/12 1:01pm

alphastreet

Marrk said:

So when is Spikes documentary getting released on DVD?, i want it in my greedy mitts. I remain (relatively) unspoiled.

feb 2013

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Reply #322 posted 10/24/12 3:06pm

NaughtyKitty

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dag said:

[img:$uid]http://i45.tinypic.com/10eqz2s.jpg[/img:$uid]

[img:$uid]http://i47.tinypic.com/280s0fb.jpg[/img:$uid]

love2 Lucky ladies, especially Tatiana! They look so perfect together! mushy Thanks for posting these dag biggrin Here's another lucky lady

242549_confanGroupNN.jpg

And a lucky boy

scan0002sGroupNN.jpg

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Reply #323 posted 10/24/12 3:08pm

NaughtyKitty

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This is interesting

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Reply #324 posted 10/24/12 5:15pm

NaughtyKitty

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alphastreet said:

Marrk said:

So when is Spikes documentary getting released on DVD?, i want it in my greedy mitts. I remain (relatively) unspoiled.

feb 2013

exclaim We have to wait until Feb 2013 to buy the dvd? eek mad sad sigh Oh well, at least we will get it on dvd smile

On another topic I just read this article on the Liberian Girl video shoot. Its an older article but a really good one!

Michael Jackson dumped David Spade from his “Liberian Girl” video

Michael Jackson’s mastery of the video form is well documented, but one of his lesser known videos in America is for the song “Liberian Girl” from the Bad album. Veteran video helmer Jim Yukich, whose resume boasts artists from Iron Maiden to Debbie Gibson and the award winning video for Genesis’ “Land of Confusion”, was brought in to help craft a memorable clip.

“[CBS Epic Video] called and Michael Jackson wants to do a video for this song ‘Liberian Girl’ and I hadn’t heard this song yet,” said Yukich. “I’m thinking like ‘Off the Wall’ or ‘Rock with You’ or just I figure it will be one of those classic Michael Jackson killer songs, right? And ‘Liberian Girl’ is not a killer song. It’s funny — what do you do? So again, we’re throwing the kitchen sink at it, and so I pitched the idea to Michael that we would have him shoot the video while all these are people waiting to begin the video, and they don’t realize it until the end is that he’s directing.”

Jackson didn’t need much convincing on the premise, so they were off and running.

“He loved the idea. We started calling people, and we just called in favors from friends. I had just done a television special with Richard Dreyfuss, and Richard said he’d love to be in it. He said, ‘Can I call up Steven?’ and I said, ‘Steven who?’ and he said ‘Steve Spielberg and Amy [Irving],’ and I said, “Yeah!” So he called Spielberg and Amy, and then you start calling people saying you have these people, and I’d start naming names and it was easy. It was very easy to get people because as soon as you get a couple of big names, everybody wants to be in it.”

The shooting day basically consisted of Yukich and his crew filming all the celebrities on a soundstage as they wait for Michael to show up. The final list of guest stars served as, in retrospect, a truly strange snapshot of that year in show business: Beverly Johnson, Malcolm-Jamal Warner, Sherman Hemsley, Brigitte Nielsen, Paula Abdul, Carl Weathers, Whoopi Goldberg, Quincy Jones, Jackie Collins, Amy Irving, Jasmine Guy, Rosanna Arquette, Billy Dee Williams, Lou Diamond Phillips, Olivia Newton-John, John Travolta, Corey Feldman, Steven Spielberg, Debbie Gibson, Rick Schroeder, Blair Underwood, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Bubbles the chimp, Suzanne Somers, Lou Ferrigno, Don King, Mayim Bialik, Virginia Madsen, David Copperfield, Richard Dreyfuss (with daughter Emily), Danny Glover, Olivia Hussey, Dan Aykroyd, and Steve Guttenberg. Comedy writers were given the task of writing some interesting things for the cast to say on camera while they waited.

“So we just had two days, and we had the live audio with John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John doing the scene when they sang together, and they hadn’t sang together onscreen since ‘Grease’, so it wassomething to do that, and we just shot this grand stuff of people talking, and the outtakes are incredible because it’s just people talking. The song is not even playing! It’s just great getting all these stars in a room and you’re just filming and they’re saying, ‘What are you supposed to do?’ and we’d say, ‘We’ll get back to you,’ and you’d just mike everybody and shoot stuff.”

Yukich said that in a room filled with stars, Steven Spielberg’s uneasiness on the other side of the camera was the biggest surprise. Yukich used a push-pull camera shot on Spielberg, who ironically was the director who made that camera shot popular, hence its industry nickname – The Jaws Shot (check it out below at 1:43).

“He was nervous. We did that push-pull move for that shot, and he was more nervous than I was, you know, being on camera. He wanted to try to do this favor for Michael because he wanted Michael for a movie.”

Yukich also said that working with the Gloved One was an amazing experience, but required some on-set preparation.

“Incredible,” he said. “I mean, at first, it was funny because he sent his handlers in first, and they check, and they said he is coming in 10 minutes. They go in all the different rooms to make sure that no bombs were there and there were no fans hanging out, and they kicked people out, and it was almost like going through airport security or something. They basically kicked people out there who weren’t supposed to be there, and they bring in a microwave oven with bananas for Bubbles the monkey and Max which was the baby monkey. It was like a real rigmarole, and then when he showed up, you know, he was unbelievably nice. Such a pleasant person and a nice guy.”

Jackson also had only one request involving the removal of a person from the final cut.

“He called me a couple of times after he saw the edit. He would make us do some things, like he took out David Spade. David Spade was in the original cut. He called me up and he said, ‘Jim, this is Michael,’ and you think somebody was fooling with you, basically. You would never know if it was really him until he started talking about specifics and you could say, okay, that is Michael. So he called us up and he on a walkie-talkie phone or something, or he’s up in Santa Barbara, and says, ‘You know, in 3 minutes and 20 seconds, there’s a guy blonde here. Who is that guy?’ I said his name is David Spade. ‘I don’t know who he is, take him out.’ So Spade was out, and I’m sure Spade was, like, pissed!” [Editor's note: The song was released in 1989, and Spade did not join the Saturday Night Live cast until 1990.]

David Spade wasn’t the only future comedy start working on the video, either.

“Interestingly enough, we were writing certain lines for people on the spot, and the writer with us on that was Rob Schneider. I was managed for years by the Brillstein Company, where my friend Marc Gurvitz is now the president [of Brillstein Entertainment Group]. He and I started in the mailroom at Capitol Records together, so I would call Marc and say, ‘I need a writer.’ He would send over David Spade or Rob Schneider. He sent all these people who were nobodies and they ended up being a big deal. Schneider was writing lines for us — someone funny, someone not. It was kind of interesting that he ended up huge afterwards.

Yukich is still aggravated that the song, and hence the video, was never released in America.

“He released it in Europe. I was really pissed because I thought that after we shot it after we – I mean, Michael loved it. Those are pretty big stars in that day, and we thought we all did a pretty good job and it was great, it was funny, it was the kind of style and stuff that I’ve done for years, and for them to not release it was devastating, because the only people who saw were people who saw our demo reel, and they’d say ‘What happen to this?’ You know, you almost feel embarrassed, like it wasn’t a hit or something, but it was never released here.”

When Jackson died suddenly, Yukich immediately though back to the video and a conversation the two had.

“To this day, I’ve been – I guess not so much anymore, because years have gone by — but I was convinced when he died that he didn’t die. We made that video, and he said to me, ‘I would love to be hiding and see what people say about me, you know?’ I mean, having shot all that footage and then he died? It was just kind of weird.”

People can view the video here, but it is also available on the Michael Jackson VISION DVD, a retrospective of his groundbreaking work in music video.

http://goldenageofmusicvi...irl-video/

[Edited 10/24/12 17:16pm]

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Reply #325 posted 10/24/12 6:38pm

thesexofit

avatar

NaughtyKitty said:

alphastreet said:

feb 2013

exclaim We have to wait until Feb 2013 to buy the dvd? eek mad sad sigh Oh well, at least we will get it on dvd smile

On another topic I just read this article on the Liberian Girl video shoot. Its an older article but a really good one!

Michael Jackson dumped David Spade from his “Liberian Girl” video

Michael Jackson’s mastery of the video form is well documented, but one of his lesser known videos in America is for the song “Liberian Girl” from the Bad album. Veteran video helmer Jim Yukich, whose resume boasts artists from Iron Maiden to Debbie Gibson and the award winning video for Genesis’ “Land of Confusion”, was brought in to help craft a memorable clip.

“[CBS Epic Video] called and Michael Jackson wants to do a video for this song ‘Liberian Girl’ and I hadn’t heard this song yet,” said Yukich. “I’m thinking like ‘Off the Wall’ or ‘Rock with You’ or just I figure it will be one of those classic Michael Jackson killer songs, right? And ‘Liberian Girl’ is not a killer song. It’s funny — what do you do? So again, we’re throwing the kitchen sink at it, and so I pitched the idea to Michael that we would have him shoot the video while all these are people waiting to begin the video, and they don’t realize it until the end is that he’s directing.”

Jackson didn’t need much convincing on the premise, so they were off and running.

“He loved the idea. We started calling people, and we just called in favors from friends. I had just done a television special with Richard Dreyfuss, and Richard said he’d love to be in it. He said, ‘Can I call up Steven?’ and I said, ‘Steven who?’ and he said ‘Steve Spielberg and Amy [Irving],’ and I said, “Yeah!” So he called Spielberg and Amy, and then you start calling people saying you have these people, and I’d start naming names and it was easy. It was very easy to get people because as soon as you get a couple of big names, everybody wants to be in it.”

The shooting day basically consisted of Yukich and his crew filming all the celebrities on a soundstage as they wait for Michael to show up. The final list of guest stars served as, in retrospect, a truly strange snapshot of that year in show business: Beverly Johnson, Malcolm-Jamal Warner, Sherman Hemsley, Brigitte Nielsen, Paula Abdul, Carl Weathers, Whoopi Goldberg, Quincy Jones, Jackie Collins, Amy Irving, Jasmine Guy, Rosanna Arquette, Billy Dee Williams, Lou Diamond Phillips, Olivia Newton-John, John Travolta, Corey Feldman, Steven Spielberg, Debbie Gibson, Rick Schroeder, Blair Underwood, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Bubbles the chimp, Suzanne Somers, Lou Ferrigno, Don King, Mayim Bialik, Virginia Madsen, David Copperfield, Richard Dreyfuss (with daughter Emily), Danny Glover, Olivia Hussey, Dan Aykroyd, and Steve Guttenberg. Comedy writers were given the task of writing some interesting things for the cast to say on camera while they waited.

“So we just had two days, and we had the live audio with John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John doing the scene when they sang together, and they hadn’t sang together onscreen since ‘Grease’, so it wassomething to do that, and we just shot this grand stuff of people talking, and the outtakes are incredible because it’s just people talking. The song is not even playing! It’s just great getting all these stars in a room and you’re just filming and they’re saying, ‘What are you supposed to do?’ and we’d say, ‘We’ll get back to you,’ and you’d just mike everybody and shoot stuff.”

Yukich said that in a room filled with stars, Steven Spielberg’s uneasiness on the other side of the camera was the biggest surprise. Yukich used a push-pull camera shot on Spielberg, who ironically was the director who made that camera shot popular, hence its industry nickname – The Jaws Shot (check it out below at 1:43).

“He was nervous. We did that push-pull move for that shot, and he was more nervous than I was, you know, being on camera. He wanted to try to do this favor for Michael because he wanted Michael for a movie.”

Yukich also said that working with the Gloved One was an amazing experience, but required some on-set preparation.

“Incredible,” he said. “I mean, at first, it was funny because he sent his handlers in first, and they check, and they said he is coming in 10 minutes. They go in all the different rooms to make sure that no bombs were there and there were no fans hanging out, and they kicked people out, and it was almost like going through airport security or something. They basically kicked people out there who weren’t supposed to be there, and they bring in a microwave oven with bananas for Bubbles the monkey and Max which was the baby monkey. It was like a real rigmarole, and then when he showed up, you know, he was unbelievably nice. Such a pleasant person and a nice guy.”

Jackson also had only one request involving the removal of a person from the final cut.

“He called me a couple of times after he saw the edit. He would make us do some things, like he took out David Spade. David Spade was in the original cut. He called me up and he said, ‘Jim, this is Michael,’ and you think somebody was fooling with you, basically. You would never know if it was really him until he started talking about specifics and you could say, okay, that is Michael. So he called us up and he on a walkie-talkie phone or something, or he’s up in Santa Barbara, and says, ‘You know, in 3 minutes and 20 seconds, there’s a guy blonde here. Who is that guy?’ I said his name is David Spade. ‘I don’t know who he is, take him out.’ So Spade was out, and I’m sure Spade was, like, pissed!” [Editor's note: The song was released in 1989, and Spade did not join the Saturday Night Live cast until 1990.]

David Spade wasn’t the only future comedy start working on the video, either.

“Interestingly enough, we were writing certain lines for people on the spot, and the writer with us on that was Rob Schneider. I was managed for years by the Brillstein Company, where my friend Marc Gurvitz is now the president [of Brillstein Entertainment Group]. He and I started in the mailroom at Capitol Records together, so I would call Marc and say, ‘I need a writer.’ He would send over David Spade or Rob Schneider. He sent all these people who were nobodies and they ended up being a big deal. Schneider was writing lines for us — someone funny, someone not. It was kind of interesting that he ended up huge afterwards.

Yukich is still aggravated that the song, and hence the video, was never released in America.

“He released it in Europe. I was really pissed because I thought that after we shot it after we – I mean, Michael loved it. Those are pretty big stars in that day, and we thought we all did a pretty good job and it was great, it was funny, it was the kind of style and stuff that I’ve done for years, and for them to not release it was devastating, because the only people who saw were people who saw our demo reel, and they’d say ‘What happen to this?’ You know, you almost feel embarrassed, like it wasn’t a hit or something, but it was never released here.”

When Jackson died suddenly, Yukich immediately though back to the video and a conversation the two had.

“To this day, I’ve been – I guess not so much anymore, because years have gone by — but I was convinced when he died that he didn’t die. We made that video, and he said to me, ‘I would love to be hiding and see what people say about me, you know?’ I mean, having shot all that footage and then he died? It was just kind of weird.”

People can view the video here, but it is also available on the Michael Jackson VISION DVD, a retrospective of his groundbreaking work in music video.

http://goldenageofmusicvi...irl-video/

n f

[Edited 10/24/12 17:16pm]

I love the website that article is from. And yeah, I never saw that video for many years 'till the mid 90's, and I lived in Europe. It wasn't a big hit in the UK (an instrumental on the b side would of been nice as its a lovely sounding song),

but anyway the video is fun for 80's geeks like me. It's fun seeing then celebs like Corey Feldman, Bubbles, Olivia Hussey (obscure one), John and Olivia (looking very pretty), Dan Akroyd hamming his one line up ("Awww Mike" or something like that?) etc... and then Mike cheesing up his line LOL. Cheesy and very dated and a more relaxed video from Michael. It wasn't a "short film" or anything big for once, and has an easy going vibe which is cool...

Good article.

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Reply #326 posted 10/25/12 6:07am

JoeTyler

are the unreleased/rare songs of the second disc of Bad-Special '12 Edition any good?

tinkerbell
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Reply #327 posted 10/25/12 6:36am

dag

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JoeTyler said:

are the unreleased/rare songs of the second disc of Bad-Special '12 Edition any good?

They're great.

"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 #328 posted 10/25/12 6:39am

JoeTyler

dag said:

JoeTyler said:

are the unreleased/rare songs of the second disc of Bad-Special '12 Edition any good?

They're great.

thanks

I've always thought that the original Bad album could have been expanded to a double-album, one disc for the hard-dance numbers, and the second for the experimental songs & ballads

I'll def purchase this once is a bit cheaper

tinkerbell
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Reply #329 posted 10/25/12 7:00am

LiLi1992

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JoeTyler said:

are the unreleased/rare songs of the second disc of Bad-Special '12 Edition any good?

Well, I think these songs are good, but not sure that not a fan will be impressed, too, the songs are little bit raw.

you can just listen and decide for yourself wink

Al Capone http://www.youtube.com/wa...b4jo5o0CbM

Price Of Fame http://www.youtube.com/wa...ure=relmfu

Song Groove http://www.youtube.com/wa...ure=relmfu

Free http://www.youtube.com/wa...6rgnQMpauo

Don't Be Messin Around http://www.youtube.com/wa...ure=relmfu

I'm So Blue http://www.youtube.com/wa...ure=relmfu

Fly Away http://www.youtube.com/wa...GDGTPUINz0

Streetwalker http://www.youtube.com/wa...MQ9UlFcibM

[Edited 10/25/12 7:01am]

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