seeingvoices12 said: bboy87 said: what magazines are these from? I don't think those were on any magazines....I could be wrong tho , one of those pictures were given to premium members on MJJsource.. remember that website? Um hello, the magazine's editorial comment is right there in lower right hand corner, as well as publication credit | |
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pplrain said: graecophilos said: I agree, but the same could be said about Coca Cola or Kellogg's. Pepsi should not be blamed for his death, how stupid. After all it was MJ who never had the discipline to let off from his addiction. I was not blaming Pepsico for his death in that sentence but come to think of it now I will because they caused his addiction to painkillers and Demerol that causes insomnia, anxiety etc. His use of Diprivan to get sleep. Yeah ultimately Pepsico is to blame. Think of it what would his life have been without painkillers to numb the pain from the scalp burns. [Edited 7/16/09 16:36pm] Wait a minute. Let's get this right, you're blaming PEPISCO for the pyrotechnics that latched onto the chemicals in his Jheri Curl juice...the mothafuckin' wet, oily, flammable shit he consciously chose to spray on his own chemically treated hair for years, and it's their fault, the fault of the entire cola company, that a spark latched onto it and blew his head up? | |
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it's good to hear new mj material, but that take me to place without no pain.... | |
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Ottensen said: pplrain said: I was not blaming Pepsico for his death in that sentence but come to think of it now I will because they caused his addiction to painkillers and Demerol that causes insomnia, anxiety etc. His use of Diprivan to get sleep. Yeah ultimately Pepsico is to blame. Think of it what would his life have been without painkillers to numb the pain from the scalp burns. Wait a minute. Let's get this right, you're blaming PEPISCO for the pyrotechnics that latched onto the chemicals in his Jheri Curl juice...the mothafuckin' wet, oily, flammable shit he consciously chose to spray on his own chemically treated hair for years, and it's their fault, the fault of the entire cola company, that a spark latched onto it and blew his head up? From TMZ: Captain Don Donester was at the filming, working as a fire safety inspector. Donester says after doing take after take, he overheard the director tell Jackson, "Stand there longer [under the sparks]. You'll look more majestic." According to Donester, by making Jackson stay under the sparks for a longer period of time, it would look as if the singer was emerging from the smoke and sparks.
We just spoke with the director, Bob Giraldi, who said "That's not true. Whatever." Then he hung up. In Michael's autobiography, the singer backs up Donester's story, writing Giraldi "came up to me and said, 'Michael, you're going down too early. We want to see you up there, up on the stairs. When the lights come on, we want to reveal that you're there, so wait.'" Donester says the director's decision went against the rules set by the senior fire safety inspector. Don also told us he was one of the people who helped put out the fire on Michael's head. Various people connected with Jackson say the serious burns the singer suffered triggered his prescription drug addiction, that consumed him for the rest of his life. [Edited 7/16/09 21:51pm] | |
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lilgish said: it's good to hear new mj material, but that take me to place without no pain....
he is saying name,not pain. "Take me to a place without no name" Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach | |
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EmeraldSkies said: lilgish said: it's good to hear new mj material, but that take me to place without no pain....
he is saying name,not pain. "Take me to a place without no name" it sounded like pain [Edited 7/16/09 22:08pm] | |
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When the groove is dead and gone I’ve been wanting to write a post about what Michael Jackson meant to me. And then I decided against it, because what can I really say that could even be remotely substantial to someone who isn’t a fan? And what is fan-dom anyway? Being a fan of a celebrity just conjures up thoughts of silliness, unimportantness, distraction in face of news that really matter, like wars, like poverty, like global warming, like [insert topic that actually cause suffering and kill people]. And it is. It’s entertainment. It’s distraction from issues in the world that “matters”. MJ is just a celebrity, yadda yadda yadda…but he was MY favorite celebrity. Hence this post. I think people don’t put enough value on entertainment. And I’m probably being absolutely biased here, but I draw a line between insipid, brain-cell killing entertainment (re: Anna Nicole Smith, Paris Hilton, et al) and inspiring entertainment. Michael Jackson was enormously talented, that we all know. But, to me personally, I have had many many many hours of joy just listening to the music and watching him dance and being that magical, eccentric, out of this world guy. And I think that counts for something in my life. While he hasn’t released anything recently, there was always the potential future album or future performances to maybe look forward to. And now that’s gone. That bit of entertainment in my life. I was that screaming teenager, camped out outside Raffles Hotel when he was in Singapore for the HIStory tour (yes! I did that! And I enjoyed every minute of it! AND, I was in the front row, thanks to, and with, 3 of my awesome MJ-fan friends, who remain friends today…eat that!). Unlike most people who are now professing to be a fan of MJ after his death, where they seemed to solely concentrate on anything Bad album and prior, I was never part of the Thriller mania days, or even the Bad era. I was too young. I only became a fan after my brother took me to watch his Dangerous concert in Singapore in August 1993. And then I started to pick up him albums and watch his videos. And that’s when it all began. Hence, I absolutely loved the Dangerous and HIStory albums, because that’s where I commenced my interest in MJ. People don’t seem to give them enough credit. But I suspect those songs will be re-discovered and given their due appreciation in due time. I can’t explain why the 12-year old me was SO taken with MJ. After all, that was the time where the ugly allegations of child molestation first started to surface (p.s. I never for once believed he did. I don’t know how I could stay a fan if he really was. But all signs, to me, and believe me, I’ve read tons and seen tons as a fan, points to innocent). That was the time where people started to turn away from MJ, where his appearance was more often than not described as weird, or freakish. And yet, it was the start of my fan-dom. Upon hindsight, it could have been because at that age, I had yet to be impacted by other people’s judgment. I wasn’t a kid that was at all concerned about being “cool” (I was the nerd in glasses and braces and studied all the time…being cool really wasn’t a priority) or thinking what other people thought. All I knew was that I really REALLY enjoyed listening to his songs and I was really REALLY fascinated by the way he danced. And perhaps, his a-sexuality, that gentleness, that lack of machismo, was non-threatening to this young girl. Regardless of the reason, I was taken by him. I’d watch interviews with him and think he was the sweetest person ever. So cute. So magical. Where people saw freak, I, and millions of other fans, saw only that big amazing smile, beautiful eyes, and that all-encompassing talent. As time passed, it became harder and harder to be his fan, particularly since he really wasn’t releasing much creatively. Invincible was, to me, an okay album, awesome by any one else’s standard, but not in the same level as the prior albums were to me. Plus, he wasn’t really promoting anything, which I took as a good sign actually (I loved that the world barely knew what his children looked like and he gave them some privacy to grow up in. I question how kids like Suri Cruise and Shiloh and the gazillion other Brangelina kids could ever grow up normally while having cameras shoved in their faces all the time and being on magazine covers since they were babies. It’s concerning that suddenly, after his death, there are all these new picture of his kids splashed all over the news). Naturally, the fanatical fandom lost my interest as I grew up. Still, the music never stopped captivating me. As I got older, my appreciation of his music took on new meaning. I’d hear an MJ song I haven’t heard in a while (remember, in my teen years, his songs were pretty much all I’d listen to on my walkman, then discman) and go WHOAH! That’s friggin’ AWESOME! For example, I only recently started to really really like Off The Wall, which was too “disco-y” (I don’t know how else to describe it) for me when I was a teen. But given my exposure to soul/disco music in the NYC party scene, I heard new things in that album I never noticed before. And that is the genius of MJ’s music. And sadly, only after his death, people are discovering the same thing and having that WHOAH! moment. I’ve been hearing MJ’s music everywhere here over the weekend. People were blasting his music from their cars. Radio and TV had marathon MJ days all weekend. And it’s still amazing to me just how much good music he made. I find it a shame that it took his death for people to come out of the woodwork and finally say, without BS reference to unfounded allegations and plastic surgery etc, that he made GREAT music and he was a GREAT performer. So I don’t know what the point of this post really is. I just wanted to write something to convey how someone I didn’t know personally had given me joy in my life, I guess. And how sorry I feel that he is gone. I won’t call this grief, because how I feel is obviously nowhere near how one would feel when someone near and dear passes. But there’s definitely that vague part of my heart that feels strangely hallow, because that person who had given me much joy and entertainment in my teen years and beyond is now gone. http://www.kewinn.com/kelchan/?p=2033 -I saw this on an enterainment blog and I so agree with everything this person said. This is how I feel exactly. He wasn't just some talented, eccentric singer for me. Much more than that and I was really looking forward to MJ's comeback eventhough I know he hadn't done anything in a while, I was so looking forward to it. I'm sooooo upset I never saw him live . When I heard he was doing the 50 shows in London, I thought "Great maybe he'll do a few dates in America later on so I can finally see him". I just can never get over that I never got a chance to see Michael in concert. I'm so upset about it and I always will be. Entertainment will never be the same for me. I don't even care about other people and their new albums or whatever now. Not interested in new music, movies or entertainment in general. I just don't care anymore. At the moment, I'm just interested in hearing MJ's unreleased songs and that's it. Hopefully it wont be another three years before they release it like i've been reading in the papers. Don't think I can wait that long! "And When The Groove Is Dead And Gone, You Know That Love Survives, So We Can Rock Forever" RIP MJ
"Baby, that was much too fast"...Goodnight dear sweet Prince. I'll love you always | |
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lilgish said: EmeraldSkies said: he is saying name,not pain. "Take me to a place without no name" it sounded like pain [Edited 7/16/09 22:08pm] "A place without no name" is such a terrible grammatical error. Nice to hear the track - though it is being reported to be over 10 years old. Swa "I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love" | |
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Cinnamon234 said: When the groove is dead and gone I’ve been wanting to write a post about what Michael Jackson meant to me. And then I decided against it, because what can I really say that could even be remotely substantial to someone who isn’t a fan? And what is fan-dom anyway? Being a fan of a celebrity just conjures up thoughts of silliness, unimportantness, distraction in face of news that really matter, like wars, like poverty, like global warming, like [insert topic that actually cause suffering and kill people]. And it is. It’s entertainment. It’s distraction from issues in the world that “matters”. MJ is just a celebrity, yadda yadda yadda…but he was MY favorite celebrity. Hence this post. I think people don’t put enough value on entertainment. And I’m probably being absolutely biased here, but I draw a line between insipid, brain-cell killing entertainment (re: Anna Nicole Smith, Paris Hilton, et al) and inspiring entertainment. Michael Jackson was enormously talented, that we all know. But, to me personally, I have had many many many hours of joy just listening to the music and watching him dance and being that magical, eccentric, out of this world guy. And I think that counts for something in my life. While he hasn’t released anything recently, there was always the potential future album or future performances to maybe look forward to. And now that’s gone. That bit of entertainment in my life. I was that screaming teenager, camped out outside Raffles Hotel when he was in Singapore for the HIStory tour (yes! I did that! And I enjoyed every minute of it! AND, I was in the front row, thanks to, and with, 3 of my awesome MJ-fan friends, who remain friends today…eat that!). Unlike most people who are now professing to be a fan of MJ after his death, where they seemed to solely concentrate on anything Bad album and prior, I was never part of the Thriller mania days, or even the Bad era. I was too young. I only became a fan after my brother took me to watch his Dangerous concert in Singapore in August 1993. And then I started to pick up him albums and watch his videos. And that’s when it all began. Hence, I absolutely loved the Dangerous and HIStory albums, because that’s where I commenced my interest in MJ. People don’t seem to give them enough credit. But I suspect those songs will be re-discovered and given their due appreciation in due time. I can’t explain why the 12-year old me was SO taken with MJ. After all, that was the time where the ugly allegations of child molestation first started to surface (p.s. I never for once believed he did. I don’t know how I could stay a fan if he really was. But all signs, to me, and believe me, I’ve read tons and seen tons as a fan, points to innocent). That was the time where people started to turn away from MJ, where his appearance was more often than not described as weird, or freakish. And yet, it was the start of my fan-dom. Upon hindsight, it could have been because at that age, I had yet to be impacted by other people’s judgment. I wasn’t a kid that was at all concerned about being “cool” (I was the nerd in glasses and braces and studied all the time…being cool really wasn’t a priority) or thinking what other people thought. All I knew was that I really REALLY enjoyed listening to his songs and I was really REALLY fascinated by the way he danced. And perhaps, his a-sexuality, that gentleness, that lack of machismo, was non-threatening to this young girl. Regardless of the reason, I was taken by him. I’d watch interviews with him and think he was the sweetest person ever. So cute. So magical. Where people saw freak, I, and millions of other fans, saw only that big amazing smile, beautiful eyes, and that all-encompassing talent. As time passed, it became harder and harder to be his fan, particularly since he really wasn’t releasing much creatively. Invincible was, to me, an okay album, awesome by any one else’s standard, but not in the same level as the prior albums were to me. Plus, he wasn’t really promoting anything, which I took as a good sign actually (I loved that the world barely knew what his children looked like and he gave them some privacy to grow up in. I question how kids like Suri Cruise and Shiloh and the gazillion other Brangelina kids could ever grow up normally while having cameras shoved in their faces all the time and being on magazine covers since they were babies. It’s concerning that suddenly, after his death, there are all these new picture of his kids splashed all over the news). Naturally, the fanatical fandom lost my interest as I grew up. Still, the music never stopped captivating me. As I got older, my appreciation of his music took on new meaning. I’d hear an MJ song I haven’t heard in a while (remember, in my teen years, his songs were pretty much all I’d listen to on my walkman, then discman) and go WHOAH! That’s friggin’ AWESOME! For example, I only recently started to really really like Off The Wall, which was too “disco-y” (I don’t know how else to describe it) for me when I was a teen. But given my exposure to soul/disco music in the NYC party scene, I heard new things in that album I never noticed before. And that is the genius of MJ’s music. And sadly, only after his death, people are discovering the same thing and having that WHOAH! moment. I’ve been hearing MJ’s music everywhere here over the weekend. People were blasting his music from their cars. Radio and TV had marathon MJ days all weekend. And it’s still amazing to me just how much good music he made. I find it a shame that it took his death for people to come out of the woodwork and finally say, without BS reference to unfounded allegations and plastic surgery etc, that he made GREAT music and he was a GREAT performer. So I don’t know what the point of this post really is. I just wanted to write something to convey how someone I didn’t know personally had given me joy in my life, I guess. And how sorry I feel that he is gone. I won’t call this grief, because how I feel is obviously nowhere near how one would feel when someone near and dear passes. But there’s definitely that vague part of my heart that feels strangely hallow, because that person who had given me much joy and entertainment in my teen years and beyond is now gone. http://www.kewinn.com/kelchan/?p=2033 -I saw this on an enterainment blog and I so agree with everything this person said. This is how I feel exactly. He wasn't just some talented, eccentric singer for me. Much more than that and I was really looking forward to MJ's comeback eventhough I know he hadn't done anything in a while, I was so looking forward to it. I'm sooooo upset I never saw him live . When I heard he was doing the 50 shows in London, I thought "Great maybe he'll do a few dates in America later on so I can finally see him". I just can never get over that I never got a chance to see Michael in concert. I'm so upset about it and I always will be. Entertainment will never be the same for me. I don't even care about other people and their new albums or whatever now. Not interested in new music, movies or entertainment in general. I just don't care anymore. At the moment, I'm just interested in hearing MJ's unreleased songs and that's it. Hopefully it wont be another three years before they release it like i've been reading in the papers. Don't think I can wait that long! That was a beautiful read. I only hope Michael realized how much he truely was loved,and how many people's lives he was deeply apart of. Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach | |
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Home- LaToya Jackson
It's available July 28, 2009 on itunes. The message you are about to hear are not meant for transmission. Should ONLY be accessed in the privacy of your mind. Words are so intense so if you dare to listen.Take off your clothes and meet me between the lines. | |
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Swa said: lilgish said: it sounded like pain [Edited 7/16/09 22:08pm] "A place without no name" is such a terrible grammatical error. Nice to hear the track - though it is being reported to be over 10 years old. Swa Not surprised. MJ had so many unreleased material stretching back to the mid-1970s, I wouldn't be surprised if they use MJ's 1970s vocals for an upcoming posthumous release like they did Marvin. | |
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Chic35 said: Home- LaToya Jackson
It's available July 28, 2009 on itunes. | |
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LaToya Jackson- He is my brother
Joe should have let LaToya go to college and be an attorney like she said she wanted to be, because she tried....but this just isn't working. The message you are about to hear are not meant for transmission. Should ONLY be accessed in the privacy of your mind. Words are so intense so if you dare to listen.Take off your clothes and meet me between the lines. | |
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trueiopian said: Chic35 said: Home- LaToya Jackson
It's available July 28, 2009 on itunes. Wonder if LaToya ever regrets all the things she said at the behest of Jack Gordon. It seems when the media want to put the boot in they play that clip over and over - forgetting to mention that LaToya later recanted her story/accusations. Swa "I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love" | |
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pplrain said:[quote] Ottensen said: From TMZ: Captain Don Donester was at the filming, working as a fire safety inspector. Donester says after doing take after take, he overheard the director tell Jackson, "Stand there longer [under the sparks]. You'll look more majestic." According to Donester, by making Jackson stay under the sparks for a longer period of time, it would look as if the singer was emerging from the smoke and sparks.
We just spoke with the director, Bob Giraldi, who said "That's not true. Whatever." Then he hung up. In Michael's autobiography, the singer backs up Donester's story, writing Giraldi "came up to me and said, 'Michael, you're going down too early. We want to see you up there, up on the stairs. When the lights come on, we want to reveal that you're there, so wait.'" Donester says the director's decision went against the rules set by the senior fire safety inspector. Don also told us he was one of the people who helped put out the fire on Michael's head. Various people connected with Jackson say the serious burns the singer suffered triggered his prescription drug addiction, that consumed him for the rest of his life. [Edited 7/16/09 21:51pm] The way you have stated your case proves nothing. The only thing you have been able to show is that Michael took direction to set-up the scene. The guidelines set up by the fire marshall? Hearsay. Unless there was or is a fire marshall that has gone on record to discuss what guidelines he set up for filming the subject coming through the the pyro and down the stairs was. It's second hand info. We don't know for certain what the time frame for coming down the stairs was, and therefore can't be certain that the director was misguided by making him come through a few seconds slower. At most, you could grill the director and try to pin him for negligence. But to make the leap to holding the cola company responsible, to the point of being responsible for him abusing surgical anesthesia some 30 years later is absurd. Beyond that, if we're going to hypothesize about responsibilty, I would say that knowing you have a head sprayed full of glycerin, alcohol and chloride on your shoulders while walking through stage fireworks wasn't exactly cognizant on Mike's part. Anyone who's ever chemically treated their hair with curly perms knows now (and knew then) that it made your hair highly flammable. Most people I knew would barely be near a gas stove or barbecue grill, with a curl perm in their heads, let alone fireworks. But then, by that time the Jacksons were used to performing around pyrotechnics, so I could see them not giving it a second thought really. Was the crew and the creative team aware of Michael's chemically treated hair and that in and of itself it was a safety hazzard to have him so closely surrounded by pyro in a concert scene? Somehow I doubt it. You know, great care is taken with using pyrotechnics on a set so that accidents like this can be avoided, people stay safe, production expenses are not wasted, and nobody gets sued. I really just see this as an unfortunate accident. Unfortunate and unforseen, and I am sorry that the man suffered like that. But all this nonsense about the cola company being responsible for his continued abuse of painkillers is just that, nonsense. The man publicly admitted over a decade ago that he had a problem abusing these drugs. There was a space of over a decade thereafter where he could have made the conscious choice to seek proper treatment for his addiction, and turn to alternative or replacement therapies for his pain management and sleep issues. Great strides have been made in traditional and holistic medicine in the West to help people with this. I can't comprehend the idea that we would try to look back at Pepsi, it's ceo, board of directors, it's shareholders, it's assembly line workers, machine installers, delivery truckers, and blame them for Jackson intentionally seeking out physicians to routinely put him under anesthesia for sleep issues at 40-50 some years old. It's ridiculous. To begin with, anesthesia is not supposed to be used to induce sleep or alleviate chronic pain. It's for surgery . If we're looking hold people responsible for contributing to his demise, I would start with the physicians who willingly enabled his painkiller addiction after he acknowledged he had one, and the idiots who unethically administered anesthesia to him outside of a hospital or clinic setting. | |
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Chic35 said: Home- LaToya Jackson
It's available July 28, 2009 on itunes. Um. Bless her heart. But....no. The instrumentation is good. Very MOR Celine-ish. Age appropriate stuff. But those lyrics . Bless her heart, but....um umm. | |
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Chic35 said: Home- LaToya Jackson
It's available July 28, 2009 on itunes. | |
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ONGOING MICHAEL JACKSON COVERAGE
"Between ages 5 to 9" he may have been enjoyed by "pedophiles within the record industry as a means of advancing the careers of the Jackson 5." "One day Diana Ross found him dressed in her stiletto heels and red toreador pants." "He insisted servants address him as 'Miss Ross.' " Mae West told him: "Take two enemas a day" and "always deny rumors of homosexuality." After sending lavish gifts to Prince William, he received a royal kiss-off from the palace that said: "Please stop sending gifts. They aren't wanted. And please stop calling. Your calls will not be returned." It's icky things about what Poppa Joe might've done for showbiz and sticky things about what Michael might've done for sexuality. Out this month. Read it with rubber gloves. http://www.nypost.com/sev...179339.htm A stupid man’s report of what a clever man says can never be accurate, because he unconciously translates what he hears into something he can understand. | |
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Countthedays said: ONGOING MICHAEL JACKSON COVERAGE
"Between ages 5 to 9" he may have been enjoyed by "pedophiles within the record industry as a means of advancing the careers of the Jackson 5." "One day Diana Ross found him dressed in her stiletto heels and red toreador pants." "He insisted servants address him as 'Miss Ross.' " Mae West told him: "Take two enemas a day" and "always deny rumors of homosexuality." After sending lavish gifts to Prince William, he received a royal kiss-off from the palace that said: "Please stop sending gifts. They aren't wanted. And please stop calling. Your calls will not be returned." It's icky things about what Poppa Joe might've done for showbiz and sticky things about what Michael might've done for sexuality. Out this month. Read it with rubber gloves. http://www.nypost.com/sev...179339.htm Got to love it... put supposed, possible and may have in front of any claim and you can then say what you want - ridiculous. Swa "I'm not human I'm a dove, I'm ur conscience. I am love" | |
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EmeraldSkies said: Toya | |
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bboy87 said: There's Michael, Randy, Joh Vonnie, Rebbie, LaToya, Jermaine, and i think Tito... Randy's face expression | |
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mimi07 said: Shango said: Art on Flickr :
beautiful artwork Sorry for my late reply. Lotta pages i have to go through | |
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NastradumasKid said: DesireeNevermind said: Wonder if Pepsi sales will go down? I regrettably saw the burning on Larry King. I had just turned it to the channel and he goes "let's take another look at the footage" and this woman in the background was saying "oh don't show it again" and then boom there it was. I couldn't move. I saw MJ do his little kick then gleefully hop down the stairs; then the screen goes white (pyrotechnic flash) and his hair is on fire. I still couldn't move. I see the flames engulf his head and I see him in horror spinning and flailing and grabbing his head and all I could think , aside from being in shock, was "what the hell is taking so long for people to get to him?" I mean his whole head is on fire before anybody rushes to his aid. Who the hell is filming this mess? Wouldn't whoever was monitoring the camera be able to yell out when the first flame erupts? Didn't anybody see the first flame? Of course it was just horrible when he got off he floor but I'm sorry...there was much neglect on that shoot. Seriously, I wonder that too. How the hell did anyone not say anything if there was someone behind the camera????!!! That just seems sick!!!!! You can't just "say" something - I'm sure playback of the song was going, the fans were screaming as they were told to do, & the camera op isn't gonna leave the camera but surely he alerted someone immediately. Depending on the size of the stage the people who came running on probably did the best they could to get to him though it does seem to have taken a long time (I'm guessing 11 seconds, don't wanna watch it again to confirm)... | |
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Chic35 said: Home- LaToya Jackson
It's available July 28, 2009 on itunes. This better be a ghat dayum muthafuckin' JOKE | |
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Timmy84 said: Deniece Williams ? | |
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Timmy84 said: | |
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Timmy84 said: Another rare photo of the Jacksons in Jamaica:
Kangol J'maine | |
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Shango said: Timmy84 said: Deniece Williams ? I'm blanking on her name but that's not her. Something w/ a "D" though, I'm a little rusty on my 70's starras Wait - Lola Falana?? Yea, that's her. I had to look it up... , [Edited 7/17/09 1:15am] | |
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NastradumasKid said: Timmy84 said: MJ- Damn, can you back the hell off???!!! Or they're checking out the ladies ("look Mike, over there...") | |
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CalhounSq said: Shango said: Deniece Williams ? I'm blanking on her name but that's not her. Something w/ a "D" though, I'm a little rusty on my 70's starras Wait - Lola Falana?? Cool, thanks for your help. I googled Lola. Yep. | |
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