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Reply #210 posted 10/18/09 4:03pm

mimi07

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someone asked me for these a while ago





"we make our heroes in America only to destroy them"
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Reply #211 posted 10/18/09 7:24pm

EmeraldSkies

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mimi07 said:

EmeraldSkies said:



eek Was he seriously going to wear those? lol

lol yes

When Michael Jackson’s personal stylist, Ruschka Bergman, wanted exclusive footwear that was unique to commemorate the King of Pop’s comeback, designer Giuseppe Zanotti did justice by creating three exceptional models.

Everything had to be perfect for the first leg of the late King of Pop’s “This Is It!” tour, which was slated for July in London, before his untimely death on June 25.

And no one could rise to the needs of stars better than Zanotti. For technical reasons, Jackson’s shoes had to be suitable for dancing. They had to be soft, comfortable and functional.
And they also had to reflect the singer’s own determination and appeal.

Of the three designs, the boot was billed as extreme.

Inspired by the Dirty Diana videoclip, its totally black silhouette lights up, thanks to the alternation of jewellery buckles of various sizes.

The flat gladiator sandals, on the other hand, speaks for itself, with a choreographic pattern of studs and strass decorating its soft little calfskin straps.

Finally, the ankle boot encrusted with multi-coloured Swarovski crystals — like the colours of the rainbow — was the model that Zanotti donated to the Amfar Gala Dinner during the Milan Fashion Week on Sept 28.

Auctioned for 10,000 Euros (RM50,000), the Rainbow Boot made its own contribution to the fundraising efforts for research on HIV/AIDS.

Many from the artistic and fashion world were present, including Jackson’s little sister Janet, who was also one of the hosts.

Also applauding the Italian designer’s success were Kanye West, Amber Rose, Anna Piaggi, Alek Wek and Anja Rubik.

The other two shoe designs will be displayed at a show dedicated to the late singer, curated by Bergman herself.


I would have loved to see him do the spin in these. lol
[Edited 10/18/09 19:32pm]
Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach
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Reply #212 posted 10/18/09 7:26pm

EmeraldSkies

avatar

mimi07 said:

how many 12 year olds so u know that wear a playboy shirt lol


[Edited 10/18/09 1:59am]


One. lol My cousins daughter was 12 when she became obsessed with the bunny design,and the color pink.
[Edited 10/18/09 19:32pm]
Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach
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Reply #213 posted 10/18/09 7:31pm

EmeraldSkies

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I would love to SAMPLE that! nod
Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach
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Reply #214 posted 10/18/09 8:16pm

Layzie

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Reply #215 posted 10/18/09 8:51pm

BoOTyLiCioUs

mimi07 said:

someone asked me for these a while ago




spank
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Reply #216 posted 10/18/09 11:48pm

ViintageJunkii
e

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My friend Kriyss Grant (one of the dancers from This Is It) performing his song and also doing the Thriller routine (3:40)




In this rehearsal of him, you can see some of the choreography from "This Is It" incorporated

[Edited 10/18/09 23:51pm]
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Reply #217 posted 10/18/09 11:52pm

BoOTyLiCioUs



eek eek

have you see this picture before? look closely at his arm!
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Reply #218 posted 10/18/09 11:53pm

cdcgold

funniest thing ever

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Reply #219 posted 10/19/09 12:41am

EmeraldSkies

avatar

BoOTyLiCioUs said:



eek eek

have you see this picture before? look closely at his arm!


What about it?
Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. ~Berthold Auerbach
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Reply #220 posted 10/19/09 1:11am

voyevoda

Kurt cobain on MJ around 7:13
http://www.youtube.com/wa...3BxlfGiE9I
[Edited 10/19/09 2:51am]
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Reply #221 posted 10/19/09 6:05am

dag

avatar

EmeraldSkies said:

BoOTyLiCioUs said:



eek eek

have you see this picture before? look closely at his arm!


What about it?

i don´t think there´s someting wroong with it. Look at this. He looks perfectly fine to me.

Could be vitiligo.
"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 #222 posted 10/19/09 6:13am

mimi07

avatar

BoOTyLiCioUs said:

mimi07 said:

someone asked me for these a while ago




spank


are u spanking me or michael lol
"we make our heroes in America only to destroy them"
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Reply #223 posted 10/19/09 8:44am

sag10

avatar

voyevoda said:

It was a joke...come on. I love MJ.


You need to stay away from this forum.. I wouldn't want your kind of love.
^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^
Being happy doesn't mean that everything is perfect, it means you've decided to look beyond the imperfections... unknown
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Reply #224 posted 10/19/09 10:15am

sag10

avatar

mimi07 said:

lol




this is so funny
^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^
Being happy doesn't mean that everything is perfect, it means you've decided to look beyond the imperfections... unknown
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Reply #225 posted 10/19/09 10:34am

Bohemian67

avatar

What a nice picture of MJ sitting reading! Haven't seen it before.
"Free URself, B the best that U can B, 3rd Apartment from the Sun, nothing left to fear" Prince Rogers Nelson - Forever in my Life -
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Reply #226 posted 10/19/09 11:40am

Timmy84

BoOTyLiCioUs said:



eek eek

have you see this picture before? look closely at his arm!


Looks like skin blotches from vitiligo.
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Reply #227 posted 10/19/09 12:08pm

BoOTyLiCioUs

mimi07 said:

BoOTyLiCioUs said:


spank


are u spanking me or michael lol


michael
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Reply #228 posted 10/19/09 12:09pm

BoOTyLiCioUs

EmeraldSkies said:

BoOTyLiCioUs said:



eek eek

have you see this picture before? look closely at his arm!


What about it?


look at the blotches.
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Reply #229 posted 10/19/09 12:13pm

mimi07

avatar

BoOTyLiCioUs said:

mimi07 said:



are u spanking me or michael lol


michael

i thought so, why?
"we make our heroes in America only to destroy them"
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Reply #230 posted 10/19/09 12:18pm

BoOTyLiCioUs

mimi07 said:

BoOTyLiCioUs said:



michael

i thought so, why?


he's lookin yummy that's why.
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Reply #231 posted 10/19/09 12:19pm

mimi07

avatar

BoOTyLiCioUs said:

mimi07 said:


i thought so, why?


he's lookin yummy that's why.


oh it's a naughty spankin falloff i looked to deep into it and got so confused lol
[Edited 10/19/09 12:20pm]
"we make our heroes in America only to destroy them"
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Reply #232 posted 10/19/09 12:22pm

mimi07

avatar

'A new Michael'
With the documentary 'This Is It' due out soon, some who worked with Michael Jackson recall his final days.

Short of someone inventing Smell-o-Vision before Oct. 28's global rollout of the feature documentary "Michael Jackson's This Is It," fans will never get to know one of the most visceral aspects of working with the King of Pop. "He had this amazing fragrance," said Mekia Cox, one of 11 backup dancers who worked with Jackson between April and June on "This Is It," his series of 50 sold-out concerts scheduled to start taking place at London's O2 Arena over the summer. The shows would have marked the superstar's return to performing after a 12-year touring absence. Another dancer, Daniel Celebre, referred to Jackson's singular musk as "the love potion," recalling its ability to trigger an almost Pavlovian response in those downwind. "No matter what you're doing, as soon as you smell that smell, boom! You have to get more focused," Celebre recalled. "Because he needs to know we're having that love. And throwing the love around." ¶ It's not uncommon for those who worked with Jackson in his final months to speak about the entertainer in emotionally overheated terms. Several close collaborators on what was being touted as Jackson's final tour -- a concert extravaganza that could have resurrected his finances, reestablished his cultural relevancy and spread messages of global interconnectivity, love and environmentalism -- seem to have gotten swept up in his grandiose vision. It's one that would have involved elaborate aerial dance numbers, the world's largest three-dimensional LCD screen, pyrotechnic illusions, 12 original short films and even the presence of a bulldozer and a children's choir onstage. ¶ With the release of "Michael Jackson's This Is It" next week for a limited two-week theatrical engagement, his fans and doubters alike can see a nearly actualized version of that vision for themselves. To hear it from those who worked on "This Is It," the film will provide new insight into the private Jackson that few outside his inner circle ever see.

"Michael was a new Michael," said "This Is It" concert director Kenny Ortega, who also directed the film. "He was 12 years a dad, a businessman, an entertainer's entertainer. That wonderful, innocent part of Michael was ever present, but there was another Michael there with more worldly concerns. He had deeper reasons for wanting to do this than I've ever seen for him to want to do anything else before."

Consisting of digital video footage shot in rehearsals during the weeks before the production moved to London for final run-throughs, the movie also will throw Jackson's physical and mental bearing into stark relief -- at a time when many are still struggling to understand the circumstances surrounding his death. Jackson, 50, died of acute intoxication by the anesthetic propofol on June 25, and according to his autopsy, he also had been taking a laundry list of sedatives, anti-anxiety medications and painkillers.

Some people who worked with the entertainer daily, however, insist there were no outward signs of his drug dependence.

"He was on a whole new level," said backup dancer Dres Reid. "When you saw Mike, it was a different Michael. He had a swagger about him."

Ortega directed the singer's "HIStory" and "Dangerous" tours in the '90s and is the force behind the "High School Musical" franchise and the "Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert Tour." The director had been in talks with Jackson for more than two years about mounting some kind of performance. Yet Jackson had held out for a "substantial reason" to return to performing, Ortega said.

In March, Jackson called Ortega with news that he had signed to mount a series of concerts with promoter AEG Live.

"He started saying, 'Kenny, my kids are so fascinated with what I've been doing my whole life, they're like super-fans. So I want to share with my children now that they're old enough to appreciate it and I'm still young enough to do it,' " Ortega recalled.

The superstar intended his concerts as payback to fans and a platform to broadcast his concerns. "The messages in my songs, the ones I wrote 10 years ago, are more meaningful today," Ortega quoted Jackson as saying.

Associate director Travis Payne, a choreographer who had worked with Jackson on world tours and music videos since the early '90s, said: "This was to be the biggest platform possible for him to refamiliarize the messages that had been in his music and films for years. . . . Michael was going to remind everyone of the job we have to complete with regard to reversing our damage to the planet."

Although the pop icon was about $400 million in debt heading into "This Is It," Ortega insists their conversations never broached Jackson's financial predicament. Nor, despite Jackson's long absence from the world's stages, did the word "comeback" factor into their discussions.

"One time, I said to Michael, 'You're going to get your crown back. I can't wait,' " Ortega said. "Michael just giggled at me. 'God bless you, Kenny. You're so funny.' He just didn't think that way."

"Michael Jackson's This Is It" will showcase a dimension of the performer that falls well outside the prevailing images of one of the most photographed men of the last half-century. Whether your notion of Jackson is as the surgical mask-wearing eccentric who was acquitted in a 2005 criminal trial on child molestation charges, the guy who dangled his baby over a hotel balcony, or the man who moonwalked across the stage during his epochal 1983 "Motown 25" performance and urged the world to "look at yourself to make a change" -- the movie presents a competing notion of the "Thriller" singer. Jackson as the boss, a perfectionist and creative visionary who was personally invested in the smallest details of his show.

"If he was in the middle of a dance number and something wasn't right, he'd say, 'Stop!' Everything would come to a stop," Ortega said. "And he'd say, 'Don't do that! Wait for me. Watch me.' And remind people that this wasn't an automatic production. You don't just push buttons. You watch Michael."

Cox said: "He was commanding."

"As much as he'd fire off what was on his mind at the time, he'd still have a light gesture at the end," added fellow backup dancer Shannon Holtzpffel. "But he'd be very direct. And we'd be like, 'Wow.' "

According to those close to him, Jackson's exacting nature took a physical toll on him that is visible in the film. Ortega said the singer had been losing weight and grew fatigued from missing more and more sleep as the production's London deadline neared. Both Payne and Ortega spoke of Jackson's penchant for rehearsing until as late as 1 a.m. and then calling them around 4 to brainstorm new ideas.

"He didn't sleep a lot," said Ortega, who like many others interviewed by The Times said he had no idea that Jackson had a drug dependency. "He had been losing weight and didn't like to eat much when he was in my company. It was always, 'I'm dancing. I don't want to eat.'

"I discussed it with him, with his doctor, with his team. I was really concerned about Michael getting the proper rest, the proper nourishment. We were told -- and Michael assured me -- that he was in good health," he said.

Payne, who had gotten to know the singer's professional M.O. working with Jackson on his "Dangerous" and "HIStory" tours, made sure to have Boost meal replacement shakes, Orangina and Martinelli's apple cider on hand to keep Jackson replenished.

"He'd go for periods of time without eating or sleeping because he was so immersed in what we were doing," Payne said.

Nonetheless, Ortega remains resolute that "This Is It" was nothing but a "nourishing" experience for the entertainer, not the cause of his demise. And that for Jackson fans -- for that matter, anyone curious about Jackson's final days -- the movie can still offer a meaningful interface with the King of Pop.

"The movie is dedicated to Michael's fans and his children," said Ortega. "But he's so alive and present in this movie, when we were in the editing room, there were times I'd forgotten he was no longer with us. . . . He's so big, so engaging. He draws you in. And I think there is a fascination that will go beyond the fans."
"we make our heroes in America only to destroy them"
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Reply #233 posted 10/19/09 12:27pm

musicjunky318

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I heard this film is breaking records. They should really let this run for more than two weeks.
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Reply #234 posted 10/19/09 12:33pm

sag10

avatar

This is so adobable the Jackson children with Elizabeth Taylor. Paris is in the white hat.

It didn't come out but check here.

http://www.blogcdn.com/ww...77_013.jpg
[Edited 10/19/09 12:38pm]
^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^
Being happy doesn't mean that everything is perfect, it means you've decided to look beyond the imperfections... unknown
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Reply #235 posted 10/19/09 12:50pm

dag

avatar

mimi07 said:

'A new Michael'
With the documentary 'This Is It' due out soon, some who worked with Michael Jackson recall his final days.

Short of someone inventing Smell-o-Vision before Oct. 28's global rollout of the feature documentary "Michael Jackson's This Is It," fans will never get to know one of the most visceral aspects of working with the King of Pop. "He had this amazing fragrance," said Mekia Cox, one of 11 backup dancers who worked with Jackson between April and June on "This Is It," his series of 50 sold-out concerts scheduled to start taking place at London's O2 Arena over the summer. The shows would have marked the superstar's return to performing after a 12-year touring absence. Another dancer, Daniel Celebre, referred to Jackson's singular musk as "the love potion," recalling its ability to trigger an almost Pavlovian response in those downwind. "No matter what you're doing, as soon as you smell that smell, boom! You have to get more focused," Celebre recalled. "Because he needs to know we're having that love. And throwing the love around." ¶ It's not uncommon for those who worked with Jackson in his final months to speak about the entertainer in emotionally overheated terms. Several close collaborators on what was being touted as Jackson's final tour -- a concert extravaganza that could have resurrected his finances, reestablished his cultural relevancy and spread messages of global interconnectivity, love and environmentalism -- seem to have gotten swept up in his grandiose vision. It's one that would have involved elaborate aerial dance numbers, the world's largest three-dimensional LCD screen, pyrotechnic illusions, 12 original short films and even the presence of a bulldozer and a children's choir onstage. ¶ With the release of "Michael Jackson's This Is It" next week for a limited two-week theatrical engagement, his fans and doubters alike can see a nearly actualized version of that vision for themselves. To hear it from those who worked on "This Is It," the film will provide new insight into the private Jackson that few outside his inner circle ever see.

"Michael was a new Michael," said "This Is It" concert director Kenny Ortega, who also directed the film. "He was 12 years a dad, a businessman, an entertainer's entertainer. That wonderful, innocent part of Michael was ever present, but there was another Michael there with more worldly concerns. He had deeper reasons for wanting to do this than I've ever seen for him to want to do anything else before."

Consisting of digital video footage shot in rehearsals during the weeks before the production moved to London for final run-throughs, the movie also will throw Jackson's physical and mental bearing into stark relief -- at a time when many are still struggling to understand the circumstances surrounding his death. Jackson, 50, died of acute intoxication by the anesthetic propofol on June 25, and according to his autopsy, he also had been taking a laundry list of sedatives, anti-anxiety medications and painkillers.

Some people who worked with the entertainer daily, however, insist there were no outward signs of his drug dependence.

"He was on a whole new level," said backup dancer Dres Reid. "When you saw Mike, it was a different Michael. He had a swagger about him."

Ortega directed the singer's "HIStory" and "Dangerous" tours in the '90s and is the force behind the "High School Musical" franchise and the "Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert Tour." The director had been in talks with Jackson for more than two years about mounting some kind of performance. Yet Jackson had held out for a "substantial reason" to return to performing, Ortega said.

In March, Jackson called Ortega with news that he had signed to mount a series of concerts with promoter AEG Live.

"He started saying, 'Kenny, my kids are so fascinated with what I've been doing my whole life, they're like super-fans. So I want to share with my children now that they're old enough to appreciate it and I'm still young enough to do it,' " Ortega recalled.

The superstar intended his concerts as payback to fans and a platform to broadcast his concerns. "The messages in my songs, the ones I wrote 10 years ago, are more meaningful today," Ortega quoted Jackson as saying.

Associate director Travis Payne, a choreographer who had worked with Jackson on world tours and music videos since the early '90s, said: "This was to be the biggest platform possible for him to refamiliarize the messages that had been in his music and films for years. . . . Michael was going to remind everyone of the job we have to complete with regard to reversing our damage to the planet."

Although the pop icon was about $400 million in debt heading into "This Is It," Ortega insists their conversations never broached Jackson's financial predicament. Nor, despite Jackson's long absence from the world's stages, did the word "comeback" factor into their discussions.

"One time, I said to Michael, 'You're going to get your crown back. I can't wait,' " Ortega said. "Michael just giggled at me. 'God bless you, Kenny. You're so funny.' He just didn't think that way."

"Michael Jackson's This Is It" will showcase a dimension of the performer that falls well outside the prevailing images of one of the most photographed men of the last half-century. Whether your notion of Jackson is as the surgical mask-wearing eccentric who was acquitted in a 2005 criminal trial on child molestation charges, the guy who dangled his baby over a hotel balcony, or the man who moonwalked across the stage during his epochal 1983 "Motown 25" performance and urged the world to "look at yourself to make a change" -- the movie presents a competing notion of the "Thriller" singer. Jackson as the boss, a perfectionist and creative visionary who was personally invested in the smallest details of his show.

"If he was in the middle of a dance number and something wasn't right, he'd say, 'Stop!' Everything would come to a stop," Ortega said. "And he'd say, 'Don't do that! Wait for me. Watch me.' And remind people that this wasn't an automatic production. You don't just push buttons. You watch Michael."

Cox said: "He was commanding."

"As much as he'd fire off what was on his mind at the time, he'd still have a light gesture at the end," added fellow backup dancer Shannon Holtzpffel. "But he'd be very direct. And we'd be like, 'Wow.' "

According to those close to him, Jackson's exacting nature took a physical toll on him that is visible in the film. Ortega said the singer had been losing weight and grew fatigued from missing more and more sleep as the production's London deadline neared. Both Payne and Ortega spoke of Jackson's penchant for rehearsing until as late as 1 a.m. and then calling them around 4 to brainstorm new ideas.

"He didn't sleep a lot," said Ortega, who like many others interviewed by The Times said he had no idea that Jackson had a drug dependency. "He had been losing weight and didn't like to eat much when he was in my company. It was always, 'I'm dancing. I don't want to eat.'

"I discussed it with him, with his doctor, with his team. I was really concerned about Michael getting the proper rest, the proper nourishment. We were told -- and Michael assured me -- that he was in good health," he said.

Payne, who had gotten to know the singer's professional M.O. working with Jackson on his "Dangerous" and "HIStory" tours, made sure to have Boost meal replacement shakes, Orangina and Martinelli's apple cider on hand to keep Jackson replenished.

"He'd go for periods of time without eating or sleeping because he was so immersed in what we were doing," Payne said.

Nonetheless, Ortega remains resolute that "This Is It" was nothing but a "nourishing" experience for the entertainer, not the cause of his demise. And that for Jackson fans -- for that matter, anyone curious about Jackson's final days -- the movie can still offer a meaningful interface with the King of Pop.

"The movie is dedicated to Michael's fans and his children," said Ortega. "But he's so alive and present in this movie, when we were in the editing room, there were times I'd forgotten he was no longer with us. . . . He's so big, so engaging. He draws you in. And I think there is a fascination that will go beyond the fans."

Thanks. Nice read.



This is so adobable the Jackson children with Elizabeth Taylor. Paris is in the white hat.

It didn't come out but check here.

http://www.blogcdn.com/ww...77_013.jpg

It really is precious. I mean how many twelve year old girls will you see pushing a wheelchair with an elderly lady? Bless her.
"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 #236 posted 10/19/09 12:58pm

sag10

avatar

Michael must have been a wonderful father.

Everyday you see more and more proof.. God Bless Michael.
^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^
Being happy doesn't mean that everything is perfect, it means you've decided to look beyond the imperfections... unknown
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Reply #237 posted 10/19/09 4:04pm

voyevoda

http://www.rollingstone.c..._own_words

Madonna on MJ.....all nice things.smile
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Reply #238 posted 10/19/09 4:05pm

voyevoda

sag10 said:

Michael must have been a wonderful father.

Everyday you see more and more proof.. God Bless Michael.
Yeah cuz drug addicts make great fathers.
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Reply #239 posted 10/19/09 4:05pm

daPrettyman

avatar

musicjunky318 said:

I heard this film is breaking records. They should really let this run for more than two weeks.

I see them rushing the DVD out by either Christmas...no later than February. They will milk this man until there is nothing left.

I hope they do something like the Elvis estate did and go ahead and setup some ways to make a regular living with the estate outside of record sales. An MJ museum or a traveling museum would be really cool.
**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
U 'gon make me shake my doo loose!
http://www.twitter.com/nivlekbrad
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