independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Let's Talk Michael Jackson - Part 3.0
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 20 of 35 « First<161718192021222324>Last »
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #570 posted 05/18/09 5:10pm

bboy87

avatar

trying to get back on topic.....

http://www.cnn.com/2009/S...rss_latest

(CNN) -- Contrary to a report in a British newspaper, Michael Jackson does not have skin cancer, says Randy Phillips, president and CEO of AEG Live, the promoter of the King of Pop's upcoming concerts at London's 02 Arena.

"He's as healthy as he can be -- no health problems whatsoever," the executive told CNN.

Phillips said he asked Jackson point-blank about the skin cancer rumor yesterday, and the entertainer just brushed it off and laughed.

"He's used to rumors like this. He's been famous ever since he was 5. He doesn't read the newspapers or watch news reports," Phillips explained.

He also had an answer for an item in the British tabloid The Sun that said Jackson had been "making regular trips to a dermatologist in Beverly Hills wearing a mask and surgical cap."

"Michael is very close friends with his dermatologist. It's as simple as that," said Phillips.

According to Phillips, the 50-year-old pop star had passed a stringent physical exam before he and AEG inked their deal for Jackson to headline a 50-show residency at 02 beginning July 8. "And he'll have to take another before the shows start," he offered.

Phillips also told CNN a tour with sister Janet Jackson and other performing members of the Jackson family was "never in the works, at least from Michael Jackson's side."

He added, "Never say never, but right now, he's focusing on his own show. It's not about his family."

"He's working out every day with his choreographers and his dancers. He's in better shape at 50 than I was at 30," Phillips laughed.

Phillips took the opportunity to knock down a couple of other rumors. "For now, he has no plans for his kids to be in the show. And there are no elephants. No elephants in the show, and he's not dying of cancer."

Phillips said the London shows were the first step in a multi-phase package with Jackson that he called "more than a 360-degree deal."

He said there are also plans for recorded music and movies, including a 3-D live concert film and a 3-D movie based on Jackson's 1983 "Thriller" music video.

Phillips didn't rule out a tour or a concert residency in another city, stating it would most likely start in Europe, then roll out to Asia, North America and South America.
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #571 posted 05/18/09 5:17pm

bboy87

avatar

Swa said:

bboy87 said:


If You Don't Love Me was from 1989/90



Oh ok - it sounded more 86 to me - good to know.

Swa

nah, it's from the Dangerous sessions. It was going to be included on the 2001 edition of Dangerous but was removed
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #572 posted 05/18/09 5:58pm

Swa

avatar

bboy87 said:

Swa said:




Oh ok - it sounded more 86 to me - good to know.

Swa

nah, it's from the Dangerous sessions. It was going to be included on the 2001 edition of Dangerous but was removed


Good decision in my book - while I like the song - it sounded too much like a Terence Trent D'Arby track to me than a fully fledged MJ track.

Swa
"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #573 posted 05/18/09 6:14pm

suga10

whatsgoingon said:



The fact that MJ removed everything about his ethnicity with surgery and just coincidentally happened to get "universal vitiligo" on top of it all(the only one out of all his brothers and sisters) is just one coincidence too far. As I said you can depigmentize without having vitiligo and your symptoms will be similar to that of a vitligo patient, you would have to cover up your body and remain out of the sun and you will be more susceptible to skin cancer.
[Edited 5/18/09 16:57pm]
[Edited 5/18/09 17:02pm]


Its also obvious that he suffers from Body Dysmorphic Disorder and anyone suffering from that, would go to the extreme in changing their whole appearance entirely because when they look at themselves in the mirror- they think that there's something entirely wrong with their face. Whether he has vitiligo or not- I have no idea,but the drastic changes in his appearance could very well be a product of this illness.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #574 posted 05/18/09 6:19pm

bboy87

avatar

Swa said:

bboy87 said:


nah, it's from the Dangerous sessions. It was going to be included on the 2001 edition of Dangerous but was removed


Good decision in my book - while I like the song - it sounded too much like a Terence Trent D'Arby track to me than a fully fledged MJ track.

Swa

I do love the part when it goes acapella "Baby, baby, I've been missing you for such a long long time ago/ you changed your number so I couldn't call ya when I tried to tell you so" cool
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #575 posted 05/18/09 6:55pm

TheWifey

Stop feeding the trolls!!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #576 posted 05/18/09 7:44pm

BoOTyLiCioUs

Stop feeding the trolls!!


right
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #577 posted 05/18/09 10:04pm

motownlover

Timmy84 said:

PatrickS77 said:

New audition and rehearsal video... this is it:






[Edited 5/18/09 15:38pm]


Great update, finally, lol! smile



aah i wanted to post that lol it was great to see , after years of silence comes all this positive stuff .
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #578 posted 05/18/09 11:51pm

DonRants

Thanks a lot for posting this clip Patricks77.

You know guys and dolls. I have been a member on boards since the early 2000's and I have to tell you there is always a hater. Someone who comes on to talk down the artist and to talk down the artists supporters. I have found that there is only one way to deal with these haters..just ignore them. Don't repond to their hatefilled posts. While I welcome a hearty debate...the haters are not interested in one. They are just trying to stir you up. Who has time for that?


Anyway back to why I became a MJ fan in the first place..the music and dance. While it was great to see these dancers, I could not help thinking " Gee, they are half his age." MJ is going to have to "Bring It."
[Edited 5/18/09 23:58pm]
To All the Haters on the Internet
No more Candy 4 U
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #579 posted 05/19/09 12:25am

ViintageJunkii
e

avatar

PatrickS77 said:

New audition and rehearsal video... this is it:






[Edited 5/18/09 15:38pm]


That's my friend Kriyss @ 2:07!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #580 posted 05/19/09 2:37am

MattyJam

avatar

Roll on July 8th...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #581 posted 05/19/09 2:54am

seeingvoices12

avatar

PatrickS77 said:

New audition and rehearsal video... this is it:






[Edited 5/18/09 15:38pm]


thanks for posting this excited
MICHAEL JACKSON
R.I.P
مايكل جاكسون للأبد
1958
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #582 posted 05/19/09 4:55am

PatrickS77

avatar

DonRants said:

Thanks a lot for posting this clip Patricks77.

While it was great to see these dancers, I could not help thinking " Gee, they are half his age." MJ is going to have to "Bring It."
[Edited 5/18/09 23:58pm]

Yeah, that's kinda what worries me too... we'll see how it plays out!

Oh, and your all welcome! wink
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #583 posted 05/19/09 11:10am

bboy87

avatar

really good articles from the 80s

The Boy Who Would Fly: Michael Jackson

Barney Hoskyns, NME, September 1983

I've been feeling strange about Michael Jackson since I was 11 years old. I remember lying in bed with a tranny the size of a large matchbox pressed to my ear, entranced and slightly embarrassed by the choirboy purity of 'l'll Be There'. I remember thinking, gosh, he's only six months older than me; I wonder what he'd be like if he came over, you know, watched TV and played football. Now I can guess.

I loved the Jackson Five records but I never teenybopped to them. I was too busy watching Michael jump around the stage while Jackie and Tito loomed over him like giants, their Afros apparently growing bigger by the minute. The cover version of Sly's 'Stand' said it all: "there's a midget standing tall, and the giant beside him about to fall." I was green with envy.

It was when I bought 'I Want You Back' that the Motown sound first knocked me sideways. Like John Lennon When he first heard the booming organ lead-in to 'Stop! In The Name Of Love', I couldn't believe how loud it was. From the piano cascade into the crashing cymbal and guitar, through the bass tearing the bottom out of my speakers, I was literally thrown back from the turntable. Berry Gordy could call it soulbubblegum for all I cared, I hadn't heard such crazed music in my life. In the treble register it was anarchy – frantic strings, rippling guitars, hi-hats, tambourines – but through it came this tiny tantrum, a kindergarten whirlwind, belting and swaggering out of swaddling clothes. It had all the power and determination of a miniature James Brown.

And it was all I neeeeed(ed). Thirteen years on and still I wanna be startin' something. Michael Jackson is singing "you're a vegetable", only it sounds like "nashty boy" or "nashty girl".

He's charging these words with the bitterest twists, bending and dragging them, winding vowels round his throat, spitting syllables like darts of poison. The drum machine's programmed for eternity; like a piston, it goes on hissing and revolving, turning and driving, too high to get over, too low to get under. You're carried, you can't escape, you're ripped by the voice's current. And it won't stop till you've got enough.

How does Michael cut so deep? Why does he do me that way?

Sometimes I wonder how great Michael Jackson really is, and how much of his "magic" derives purely from the spell of fame. He is, after all, the biggest star on earth. There's no-one who can command his fee, precious few who can pay it. The promoters of this year's US festival offered over $1 million. The response was simple: "You're not even close."

His fame fascinates because it is total. Seemingly withdrawn from it, in fact it cocoons him. Like Howard Hughes, he doesn't have a public relationship with fame but abstractly embodies it. o when he starts saying things that sound completely mad, like "if I could, I would sleep onstage", he is simply stating a logical implication.

When one says that Michael lives in fantasy, one is not just referring to the fact that he thought ET was a real living creature, or that his favourite movie is Captains Courageous (would you believe one of its characters is a fisherman called Disko Troop?), or that he confides more in his pet llama and his mannequin collection than he does in his own family. One is saying that up on the stage, deep in the dark womb of the studio, Michael's voice is a vehicle of fantasy, an instrument ceaselessly running circles round itself, tripping itself up, playing make-believe.

He can take the human voice as far out as Diamanda Galas. On the Jacksons Live album, there's an extraordinary half-minute between 'I'll Be There' and 'Rock With You' which perhaps conveys more of Michael Jackson than anything he's ever done. Breaking free of accompaniment with the playful virtuosity of a saxophonist, he winds up 'I'll Be There' with a series of piercingly sustained shrieks, cutting up each cry with a tiny ripple of chuckles. The audience goes predictably ape: reflex gratification. But for Michael, every breath, every laugh, every "hick!" is a link, a phrase, a segment of the flow. So engrossed is he by himself that his own responses to his voice are incorporated into the performance. "BE THEY AAARE!HICK! CAN YER FEEEL EEEEAAART! YIP!" Going up two octaves: "HEEEAH HEE HEE HEE! HEEEAH HEE HEE!" Down again. "AH DEE DADA DADA DADA DUNKA DUNKA DEE DADA DUNKA ... I THINK I WANNA ROCK!"

It's a voice which starts into every split spare second, stretching like rubber, filling cracks like water. It's not warm or sensual or "black" but sharp, a squeezing of the throat's aperture, a voice of pure technique. Detaching itself, it gets lost in free flight. Its narcissism is almost not human.

For two months, while preparing in Los Angeles for an interview that never happened, I couldn't hear this voice without feeling that it was all there was to know about Michael Jackson, that in it he released everything which is otherwise denied him, all that must stay quiet. At a point of masturbatory orgasm, it can all but shut out the world. To try to engage it in conversation seemed absurd, dangerous.

There was a time when I wrote The Jacksons off. As for Michael, I felt sure that this puckish dynamo, part Frankie Lymon, part James Brown (with something, too of former 12-year-old genius little Stevie), would, like all child stars, crack, go mad or end, like Frankie himself, a penniless drug addict. Isn't that how all pop's fairy tales conclude?

But no, Michael fasted, stretched into an unnaturally elongated superfreak, a balletic stick insect, looked into the business, and when The Jacksons left Motown for Columbia in 1975, was lined up to star in a CBS biopic called – you guessed it – The Life Of Frankie Lymon.

In all fairness, before 1978 there was little evidence of any production or songwriting talent. Trapped at Tamla for six years, where the hacks of the self-styled "Corporation" became ever more predictable in their selection and treatment of the group's material, they left Gordy's fold in a blaze of controversy, stripped of their name, only to be cosseted for a further two non-albums by the hacks of Gamble and Huff in Philadelphia. Yet one song on The Jacksons (1976) bore a second listen. Tucked away at the end of side one, 'Blues Away' had a pleasant shape and substance that the rest of the record lacked hopelessly. The credit said Michael Jackson.

After Goin' Places (1977), The Jacksons looked beat. The doowoppy strains of 'Heaven Knows I Love You, Girl' were quite unsuited to them. Motown had tried them on The Delfonics' 'Ready Or Not (Here I Come)' back in 1970, but as Nelson George dryly remarked, "no-one ever accused them of being a great close harmony group". From 'I Want You Back' through 'Mama's Pearl' to 'Doctor My Eyes', the Five have always been at their best with bubblegum. Popcorn love, you dig? (New Edition certainly do.) Philly just wasn't their style. As for the orchestral disco funk of 'Enjoy Yourself', 'Keep On Dancing', et al, – a muted continuation from their last Motown album, Movin' Violation – I'd say they were lucky to get hits from this period at all.

When the proof of talent finally came, you wondered why they'd bothered with anyone else, particularly producers as stylistically bankrupt as Gamble and Huff. Destiny (1978) wasn't a great album but it had a sprinkling of great moments which one can review now as sketches towards the superb Triumph (1980). The ballads, for example, anticipate 'Girlfriend' and 'Time Waits For No One'. 'Things I Do For You' points crudely to 'Get On The Floor' and 'Everybody'. Singleswise, 'Blame It On The Boogie' was flatulent pulp but 'Shake Your Body' prefigured everything that would so gloriously burst open in 'Lovely One', 'Don't Stop', and 'Walk Right Now'. It's wondrous flavour is due to the presence of ex-wonderlovers Nathan Watts(bass), Mike 'Maniac' Sembello (guitar), and Greg Phillinganes (keyboards), who has featured on Jackson output right up to Thriller. These guys do so much more than the half-asleep MFSB of the Philly albums.

On Destiny, the best is saved for last.'That's What You Get (For Being Polite)' was the first evidence that The Jacksons – in this case Michael and the (I suspect) very talented Randy – could write a great soul toon. Moreover, it seemed uncannily close to a self-portrait of Michael. The song is about a character called Jack (the 'son' castrated?):

Jack still sits alone
He lives in the world that is his own
He's lost in thought of who to be
I wish to God that he would see
Just love, give him love...

The song ends:

Don't you know he often cries about you
He cries about me
He cries about you, about me, about you
Don't you know he's scared?
Don't you know don't you know don't you know...?

That's what you get for being Michael Jackson.

In The Wiz(1978), Michael played the scarecrow who is looking for a brain, an irony not worth labouring here. The film's musical director was none other than Quincy Jones, and a single from the soundtrack, the inoffensive 'You Can't Win', was Michael's first solo release since leaving Motown.

Obviously more important was the resulting partnership on Off The Wall, a record whose landmark stature need hardly be mentioned. By now it must have been purchased by every pop fan on earth and even as I write is probably being secretly exported to other galaxies. Of course, as an album it's not great, but if the first time you heard 'Don't Stop ('Till You Get Enough)' doesn't rate as almost the greatest moment of your life, you're obviously some kind of vegetable.

Off The Wall is an oddly mixed bag – Carole Bayer-Sager here, Earth, Wind, & Fire there – yet it's possible to see it both as culmination (in Gavin Martin's words "the final summation of the great disco party") and as the inauguration of a new, softer funk for the 80s. Like EWF's 'Boogie Wonderland', 'Don't Stop' takes ''disco" into the outer cosmos, while the sublime Rod Temperton songs – 'Rock With You', 'Off The Wall' – look forward to the less frenzied black pop of today. Nothing has topped them. Born out of Heatwave (Temperton-written) and The Brothers Johnson (Jones-produced ),the initial trio of singles took the world completely by storm. Nobody had heard such draped, sweeping choruses before, nor been pummelled by brass like Jerry Hey's Seawind Horns; never had a pop voice stretched so far. Off The Wall contains the most intricately times, fully textured, glossily sensual dance music ever made. It's still a giant thrill.

If people hadn’t been so busy awaiting Off The Wall's successor, the next Jacksons album, Triumph (1980), might be more often lauded as the magnificent record it is. Rivalled in the exalted sphere of Superdisco by only Earth Wind & Fire's I Am – by which it is more than a little influenced – Triumph is genius almost from start to finish: almost because as it happens its only weak points are the pompous opener 'Can You Feel It' and the closing so-so, Jermaine-ish 'Wondering Who'. Everything else either melts or stings. The scope of the production, the authority of the arrangements, the sheer strength of sound, all are dazzling.

Above all, it's the supposed "fillers" which really consolidate it as a complete album. 'Your Ways' and 'Give It Up' show how effortlessly The Jacksons can do their own EWF, their own Isleys, even their own Temperton. Of course Michael learnt a great deal from Quincy, but here he goes one step beyond. While nothing matches 'Don't Stop' or 'Rock With You' (what could?), Triumph is finally, simply, a better record than Off The Wall.

'Check Out This Feeling! 'Everybody' is a dramatic reconstruction of 'Get On The floor', 'Lovely One' is a radically exciting dance cut, while Randy's and Jackie's 'Time Waits For No One' is possible the most affecting ballad Michael's ever been given. Finally, 'Billie Jean' Mark One 'Heartbreak Hotel' takes Maurice White on at his own game and knocks him out of the ring. Michael's no Phillip Bailey, but Bailey couldn't reach this pain.

Which finally brings me round to Thriller. May I ask what all the fuss was about? If Tavares release a duff platter, do people suddenly start preaching about "blandness", "complacency", and all the other cardinal California sins? Gimme a break.

Besides, is Thriller a bad record? Hardly, I'll grant you that 'Wanna Be Startin" was a tame successor to 'Don't Stop' and yeah, 'Baby Be Mine' wasn't such a hot 'Rock With You.' Oh alright, 'Beat It' stank, it was stupid and clumsy and every time the drums came on the radio I prayed it was 'Let It Whip'. But heavens, Off The Wall had 'Get On The Floor' and 'Falling In Love', and to be honest never reckoned too much on 'Working Day And Night', so what did you expect, perfection?

What did we get? First, anything that brings Eddie Van Halen and 'Soul Makossa' under one roof is in my book pretty cool. More seriously, 'Billie Jean' was great. I know you all heard it at least 3,482 times, but really, that hissing electro hi-hat, that beat, the bass, Jerry Hey's mad string arrangement... I mean, do we have a fantasmatically supreme record here? Alright!

Beyond that? Well, there's my own fave, the beautiful Toto creation 'Human Nature' – and anyone who knocks Toto In my presence may politely F. off; I suggested they examine 'Crush On You' or 'I'd Rather Be Gone' from Finis Henderson's album for corroboration of their discreet brilliance. Apropos of which, the group is co-producing the next Jacksons album, due in the spring. (One of the songs is apparently called 'The Hurt'.) I'm also quite partial to 'P.Y.T.' due to its extravagantly thick moog bass. This leaves the only disappointment, which is Rod Temperton, who signally falls to deliver a killer. Even the title cut, despite its 'Boogie Nights' riff and blazing brass, is as hacked out as 'Turn On The Action' on Quincy's The Dude.

This is not, however, enough to stop Thriller standing up as one of the strongest albums of the last ten months.

Some people seem to think that because he's not big, butch, and badass, Michael Jackson is some kind of saint, a child lost in time. Perhaps it's true. Certainly his peculiar appeal has something to do with his raceless and asexual physique. The epicene translucence of his face is almost otherworldly. It reminds me of only one other black artist, the young Miles Davis.

Michael goes so far as to compare himself to a haemophiliac, betraying an instant paradox; for if he is a haemophiliac, he's one who only feels safe surrounded by sharp edges. In other words, he feels strange around people but not in front of crowds. As Vince Aletti put it, he has "a compulsion to entertain". It is only before crowds that he can "lose himself", touch that innocence where magic reigns.

Sometimes the articulacy of this shy, paranoid, tongue-tied idol is positively unnerving. He hates to describe himself as an actor because "it should be more than that. It should be more like a believer... Sometimes you get to a note, and that note will touch the whole audience. What they're throwing out at you, you're grabbing. You hold it, you touch it, and you whip it back – it's like a Frisbee."

Michael is alone amongst superstars in consistently hinting at misery – at the absence inside. How can he live in himself when he is everywhere outside, when at the age of 12 he was watching cartoons of himself on TV? The world is plastered with him, he is a thousand billboards. And the tragic truth seems ancient, that only onstage can he get back inside.

All this is rather wonderfully illuminated by the German author Kleist in his 1810 essay On The Marionette Theatre. In the essay, a dancer has become fascinated by marionettes, or puppets. He believes that because they are not conscious, and are thus free of affectation, they are more graceful than we are – they have "a more natural arrangement of the centres of gravity". Scorning the vanity of modern dancers, whose souls often appear to reside on their elbows, he says:

"Misconceptions like this are unavoidable, now that we've eaten of the Tree of Knowledge. But Paradise is locked and bolted, and the cherubim stands behind us. We have to go on and make the journey round the world, to see if it is perhaps open at the back."

Hinging on the third chapter of Genesis, in which Adam and Eve eat from the Tree and become conscious of their nudity and their difference, the essay makes clear that we cannot simply forget our fall and regain Innocence. If life is the graceless search for grace, knowledge must "go through an infinity" to arrive back at the simplicity and harmony of the marionettes – and, for Michael Jackson, at the innocence of children and animals. They don't wear masks.

Of his mannequins, Michael says, "I guess I want to bring them to life... I think I'm accompanying myself with friends I never had." This is the boy that wants to fly; on a stage he soars into the unreal. "Grace appears most purely in that human which either has no consciousness or an infinite consciousness. That is, in the puppet or in the god."

It is the finest irony that at the very moment when Michael Jackson is seen as a god, when he is lost in voice and dance, he is in fact the most graceful of puppets.
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #584 posted 05/19/09 11:33am

carlcranshaw

avatar

Barney writes great articles for MOJO.

But to read: "I've been feeling strange about Michael Jackson since I was 11 years old. I remember lying in bed with a tranny"..... is scary.
‎"The first time I saw the cover of Dirty Mind in the early 80s I thought, 'Is this some drag queen ripping on Freddie Prinze?'" - Some guy on The Gear Page
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #585 posted 05/19/09 11:39am

Timmy84

carlcranshaw said:

Barney writes great articles for MOJO.

But to read: "I've been feeling strange about Michael Jackson since I was 11 years old. I remember lying in bed with a tranny"..... is scary.


Well that word could mean something completely different ("tranny")... what is a tranny in the UK?
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #586 posted 05/19/09 3:14pm

BoOTyLiCioUs



lol
[Edited 5/19/09 15:15pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #587 posted 05/19/09 5:09pm

suga10

Taken a a few hours ago

Hope he's ditching the masks for good although you can never be sure. lol

Found these MJJCommmunity


[Edited 5/19/09 17:11pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #588 posted 05/19/09 5:15pm

Timmy84

eek Is that a replica of the legendary Thriller jacket?! lol
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #589 posted 05/19/09 5:16pm

Swa

avatar

Timmy84 said:

carlcranshaw said:

Barney writes great articles for MOJO.

But to read: "I've been feeling strange about Michael Jackson since I was 11 years old. I remember lying in bed with a tranny"..... is scary.


Well that word could mean something completely different ("tranny")... what is a tranny in the UK?


A tranny is 80s slang for Transistor Radio - or simply a radio. A "tranny" was simply a small hand held mono speaker radio.

Swa
"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #590 posted 05/19/09 5:16pm

suga10

Timmy84 said:

eek Is that a replica of the legendary Thriller jacket?! lol


I think its resembles the Beat it jacket.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #591 posted 05/19/09 5:17pm

Swa

avatar

Timmy84 said:

eek Is that a replica of the legendary Thriller jacket?! lol


Looks like the Thriller jacket and Beat It jacket hooked up.

Swa
[Edited 5/19/09 17:18pm]
"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #592 posted 05/19/09 5:26pm

Timmy84

Swa said:

Timmy84 said:



Well that word could mean something completely different ("tranny")... what is a tranny in the UK?


A tranny is 80s slang for Transistor Radio - or simply a radio. A "tranny" was simply a small hand held mono speaker radio.

Swa


Yeah I figured it was. nod Thanks for confirming.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #593 posted 05/19/09 5:28pm

Timmy84

Swa said:

Timmy84 said:

eek Is that a replica of the legendary Thriller jacket?! lol


Looks like the Thriller jacket and Beat It jacket hooked up.

Swa
[Edited 5/19/09 17:18pm]


It don't have the bands that came around the Beat It jacket tho. And he is wearing a black shirt.



lol
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #594 posted 05/19/09 7:15pm

report345

Michael Jackson thinks he is now bigger than Elvis and the Beatles....

http://www.examiner.com/e...he-Beatles


I wish we fan forget Michael Jackson ever existed after 1991. He really destroyed his legacy.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #595 posted 05/19/09 7:30pm

carlcranshaw

avatar

Each time The Beatles and certain Elvis songs get played MJ gets paid so, that in itself is kewl.
‎"The first time I saw the cover of Dirty Mind in the early 80s I thought, 'Is this some drag queen ripping on Freddie Prinze?'" - Some guy on The Gear Page
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #596 posted 05/19/09 8:03pm

bboy87

avatar

report345 said:

Michael Jackson thinks he is now bigger than Elvis and the Beatles....

http://www.examiner.com/e...he-Beatles


I wish we fan forget Michael Jackson ever existed after 1991. He really destroyed his legacy.

why do you keep posting tabloid articles? Can you please leave that shit out of here?
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #597 posted 05/19/09 8:12pm

Swa

avatar

report345 said:

Michael Jackson thinks he is now bigger than Elvis and the Beatles....

http://www.examiner.com/e...he-Beatles


I wish we fan forget Michael Jackson ever existed after 1991. He really destroyed his legacy.


When was the last time Elvis or the Beatles sold out 50 shows in one city?













It's a joke people!

Swa
"I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #598 posted 05/19/09 8:42pm

Timmy84

The only thing Michael Jackson is destroying now is concert ticket sales. lol His legacy is intact, lol.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #599 posted 05/19/09 8:58pm

suga10

And he's come out of his hermit shell too smile Man he's sure on a roll. Its like the paparazzi don't give a crap about the other stars anymore.

According to MJJ pictures

All within the past couple of months lol

http://www.mjjpictures.com/main.html

. Michael visits doctor in Los Angeles
. Michael visits doctor in Beverly Hills
. Meeting at the Bel Air Hotel
. Doctor Appointment in Beverly Hills
. Shopping with Christian Audigier on Rodeo Drive
. London Visit 2009
. Michael visits doctor in Beverly Hills
. Shopping at Wacko
. Michael visits doctor
. Michael visits doctor
. Michael leaving a dance studio
. Meeting at the Bel Air Hotel
. Michael shopping at Lladro
. Leaving the Bel Air Hotel
. Shopping in Beverly Hills
. Michael visits doctor in Beverly Hills
. Shopping in Hollywood
. Michael visits doctor in Beverly Hills
. Shopping on Melrose Avenue
. Michael visits doctor in Beverly Hills
. Michael arriving for rehersals
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 20 of 35 « First<161718192021222324>Last »
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Let's Talk Michael Jackson - Part 3.0