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Reply #120 posted 11/04/13 7:38am

JoeBala

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #121 posted 11/04/13 9:13am

alphastreet

Look they added a dove at the top lol thanks dove lady....

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Reply #122 posted 11/06/13 6:32am

OldFriends4Sal
e

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Reply #123 posted 11/06/13 8:37pm

NaughtyKitty

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Reply #124 posted 11/07/13 12:08pm

Tittypants

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How is this not up here yet??? Absolutely awesome!!!!

الحيوان النادلة ((((|̲̅̅●̲̅̅|̲̅̅=̲̅̅|̲̅̅●̲̅̅|)))) ...AND THAT'S THE WAY THE "TITTY" MILKS IT!
My Albums: https://zillzmp.bandcamp.com/music
My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/zillz82
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Reply #125 posted 11/07/13 1:44pm

Scorp

Tittypants said:

How is this not up here yet??? Absolutely awesome!!!!

wooooo hooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo razz biggrin razz biggrin razz biggrin razz biggrin lol

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Reply #126 posted 11/08/13 3:04am

jasmine69

http://www.youtube.com/wa...wT9fJ2HKHg

another hidden gem of his, im lost for words. i have fallin in love with this song

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Reply #127 posted 11/08/13 1:47pm

Militant

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A Truth Untold is finally here!!!!

http://www.kickstarter.co...uth-untold

A Truth Untold is a Kickstarter project to finance a book to bring to the world THE TRUTH about the fake songs that were included on the "Michael" album. You can pledge various amounts of money to support the project - for example, $20 gets you a digital pre-order of the book, $100 guarantees you a limited edition signed hardcover, and $900 gets you an exclusive invite to a private Q&A session with longtime MJ engineer Michael Prince and collaborator Cory Rooney in LA, to which only 40 fans will attend.

Anyway, click on the link and watch the video!

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Reply #128 posted 11/08/13 4:37pm

HAPPYPERSON

[img:$uid]http://www.billboard.com/files/media/michael-jackson-billboard-cover-500.jpg[/img:$uid]

This is an excerpt. For the complete story, buy this week's issue of Billboard.

In the fall of 1987, not long after the release of his blockbuster album Bad, Michael Jackson and his longtime lawyer/adviser John Branca piled into a van to see the Los Angeles debut of Cirque du Soleil at the Santa Monica Pier

They took a van, with Branca driving, despite the fact that Jackson had gifted Branca with a Rolls-Royce, and their journey was briefly stalled after Branca headed in the wrong direction on the congested Interstate 405. But the pair eventually made it to the show. Cirque du Soleil was 3 years old at the time, and true to its inspiration in the circus, was housed in a tent on this visit to Los Angeles. Jackson could hardly contain his excitement to watch the Quebec troupe perform, Branca recalls.

"After the show, Michael said to me, 'Branca, we have to go backstage and meet the cast,'" he says. "I couldn't tell who was more excited, the cast to meet Michael or Michael to meet the cast. That's how enthusiastic he was."

Jackson's growing fascination with Cirque didn't end there. After attending many other performances by the troupe, known for its mesmerizing aerial acrobatics and otherworldly costumes, the King of Pop decided to visit the company's Montreal headquarters to get a firsthand look at its operations.

"I did the tour with him," Cirque president/CEO Daniel Lamarre remembers. "As you can imagine, all our employees were thrilled to have him in our studio, and he was thrilled to be here. He spent a lot of time in our creative studio and our costume workshop. It was a great day."

At the time, Jackson was still filling arenas and stadiums around the world. Neither the pop icon nor Cirque could have fathomed that an arena trek blending hits like "Billie Jean" and "Thriller" with stunning visuals and the theatrical touch of Cirque would one day rank among the top 10 highest-grossing tours in history.

But indeed it has, proving that even in death, Michael Jackson remains one of the most lucrative musical brands in today's live entertainment business.

CONCEIVED THROUGH AN equal revenue-sharing partnership between the Jackson estate and Cirque du Soleil, "Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour" recently became the No. 9 top-grossing tour of all time, earning $325.1 million from 407 shows that drew 2,985,324 concert-goers, according to Billboard Boxscore. Tickets prices ranged between $50 and $250.

"Immortal" also ranked fourth among Billboard's top 25 highest-grossing tours of 2012 and took home the Creative Content Award at the Billboard Touring Awards that same year. Although official rankings haven't yet been released, "Immortal" will rank among the highest-grossing tours of 2013 as well.

Cirque du Soleil's Jackson Tour Adding Arena Dates in 2014

On the Boxscore chart, "Immortal" edges out the Rolling Stones' 1994-95 Voodoo Lounge tour (ranked No. 10, with $320 million in grosses) and trails Bruce Springsteen's 2012-13 Wrecking Ball tour (No. 8, $347 million). U2, the Stones and Roger Waters are the top three highest-grossing touring acts, respectively. Jackson is the only deceased artist among the top 10.

The Jackson estate's deal with Cirque also includes a permanent Las Vegas theater production, "Michael Jackson One," that debuted in May at a refurbished, 1,800-seat theater at Mandalay Bay, the former home of "The Lion King" and "Mamma Mia!" Since opening, "One" has been selling at about 93% occupancy from an average of 10 shows per week, according to Cirque.

"The 'One' and 'Immortal' shows represent a true Michael experience, the next best thing to seeing him live," says Branca, who now serves as co-executor of the Jackson estate with John McClain. "'Immortal' is akin to a rock concert experience with a live band in an arena, and 'One' is more of a theatrical show."

With a total development cost of about $145 million, "Immortal" and "One" are two separate and distinct productions built around Jackson's music. Both shows were written and directed by Jamie King, a dancer on Jackson's Dangerous world tour in the early '90s. The productions also feature several other musicians, choreographers and costume designers Jackson worked with during his career.

Despite the onstage absence of Jackson himself, King says the songs, images, spoken-word interludes and other visuals chosen for "Immortal" and "One" reflect the very best of the pop legend's life and musical career.

"I had the heavy responsibility of bringing Michael's spirit onto the stage, reflecting his creative sensibilities and projecting his unbelievable talent for his fans," says King, who has also directed arena tours by Madonna, Britney Spears and Rihanna. "Michael was never, ever missing during the development, rehearsals and launch of these two shows."

"Immortal" debuted at Montreal's Bell Centre in October 2011 and performed its 407th show at New Zealand's Vector Arena on Nov. 3. The trek will relaunch in December with a lengthy run in Dubai before returning to various-sized North American arenas in March 2014 (see story, right). Cirque is also in talks with international promoters about bringing "Immortal" to select overseas territories. So far, it has already visited 25 countries on four continents.

Lamarre believes the tour will continue to climb the Boxscore chart. "I wouldn't be surprised if by the end of the tour, whenever the end of the tour is, we ranked among the top five touring shows in the history of rock'n'roll," he says.

WHEN JACKSON DIED on June 25, 2009, from drug-related cardiac arrest at the age of 50, he was reportedly $500 million in debt from years of excessive spending. Though he still had high earning potential based on 50 sold-out shows for his "This Is It" residency at London's O2 Arena, Jackson has earned more money in death than when he was living. Billboard estimated that MJ Inc. generated at least $1 billion in revenue in the year following his death (Billboard, June 2010).

Last year the Jackson estate paid off the late singer's outstanding personal debt, thanks in part to a lucrative $250 million deal with Sony Music, profits from the concert film "Michael Jackson: This Is It," 50 million albums sold worldwide after his death, his half ownership of Sony/ATV Music Publishing, various licensing deals and the high-grossing Cirque shows.

"Sometimes, sadly, our great artists are appreciated more after they've passed away. Michael was a great artist and his legacy is enduring," Branca says. "But there was a lot of interest in Michael, and a lot of earning power, before he passed away, witnessed with 50 sold-out shows at the O2 Arena."

Overall earnings from the Jackson estate are divided among charity (20%), the singer's children (40%) and his mother, Katherine Jackson (40%). Jackson's three kids will receive Katherine's share upon her death. Generally, Branca and McClain receive a 10% commission rate of the estate's earnings.

Branca says the estate is constantly approached with ideas for Jackson-related projects, but he and McClain are very selective about new partnerships and licensing deals. "We don't want to over-license Michael, but we do license those products that we think are appropriate and fun," Branca says, citing a successful approval for a Jackson slot machine in Las Vegas. "We're careful."

But the co-executors had always planned on a live experience around Jackson's music. Cirque seemed like an ideal partner given the artist's past appreciation for the troupe. So in late 2009, the estate began discussions with Cirque about potential projects. "We had thought about several potential partners to create a show, and after careful deliberation we felt Cirque was the best potential partner," Branca says. "They're very creative and groundbreaking, much like Michael was. They're also perfectionists, like Michael was."

Branca and McClain initially envisioned only a permanent show in Vegas based on Jackson's music, similar to Cirque's perennially sold-out "Beatles Love" concept at the Mirage Hotel, which began in 2006. But after lengthy talks, Lamarre and Cirque founder Guy Laliberte found that a permanent tech-heavy show would take years to create and that a global arena tour could be a lucrative endeavor in the meantime.

"In an ideal world, maybe we would've done both at the same time," Lamarre says. "But when doing a permanent show that will probably last forever in Las Vegas, you have to bring technology that is very complicated. We had to redo the theater at Mandalay Bay, which took almost two years. We couldn't resist the temptation of touring around the world."

Twenty months after the debut of "Immortal," the Jackson estate and Cirque, in partnership with MGM Resorts International, began previews of "One" on May 23. The show officially opened June 29. Cirque says it could sell more than 452,000 tickets from 270 performances by the end of 2013. (Numbers for "One" haven't been reported to Boxscore.)

Cirque and the estate each own 50% of "Immortal" and "One," and share equally in the cost of producing them. The estate receives royalties from the use of Jackson's music and other assets. Royalties also go to Sony for the use of his solo master recordings and to music publishers like Warner/Chappell (which administers Jackson's Mijac Music catalog) and Universal Music Publishing Group (which handles the catalog of songwriter Rod Temperton, who wrote hits like "Rock With You" and "Thriller").

Branca says the two-pronged Cirque deal plays "an important part of the earnings for the estate." But he wouldn't project where the shows rank among the estate's overall portfolio, in terms of revenue.

"These touring shows were created to generate long-term revenue," he says. "But the point of these shows is also to continue introducing Michael to new generations of fans. We're finding that not only existing Michael Jackson fans go to the shows, but also kids and new fans who come and become Michael fans."

BRANCA BELIEVED IT made sense to release an album in conjunction with the "Immortal" tour. So in November 2011, as part of its multimillion-dollar 10-album deal with the Jackson estate through 2017, Sony released the "Immortal" soundtrack on MJJ/Epic Records

The set features an alternative version of the Jackson 5 hit "ABC" and a series of mash-ups and remixes. The "Immortal" tour utilizes more than 60 songs from Jackson's catalog, but the album includes 15 tracks (the deluxe edition has 22). The soundtrack debuted at No. 24 on the Billboard 200 and has sold 202,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

Aside from the soundtrack, there aren't plans to release other albums or DVDs in conjunction with "Immortal" or "One." However, Cirque and the Jackson estate are exploring the idea of releasing a mobile app that provides a look into the show experiences, Branca notes.

Other albums released under the Jackson estate-Sony deal include Michael Jackson's This Is It (2009), Michael (2010) and the Bad 25th-anniversary edition (2012), which included a concert DVD and documentary directed by Spike Lee. They have collectively sold 2.4 million copies. Also released under the agreement was the three-disc DVD set "Michael Jackson's Vision" in 2010, which has sold 133,000.

"Michael Jackson is without question the most successful artist in the history of Epic Records," Epic chairman/CEO Antonio "L.A." Reid says. "His name is synonymous with our label and we take great pride in the fact that Epic has been his musical home for nearly 40 years. From a musical, emotional and business perspective, continuing our relationship with the Michael Jackson estate is paramount. It is a true partnership committed to furthering his legacy for generations to come."

Rumors continue to circulate about possible new Jackson music-both Brian May and Roger Taylor of Queen have said May has worked on tracks that Freddie Mercury and Jackson recorded in 1983-but neither Sony nor Branca would divulge any details about when fans might see the next album from the King of Pop.

"There's definitely music coming, but I can't reveal when we think it's coming," says Branca, who also declined to reveal whether any other Jackson-related projects are in the works beyond album releases. "Michael had a policy that we try to follow-not to talk about things until they're ready to be released. We like to keep things under wraps until we're ready to go with everything. We have ideas and things we're working on, but nothing that we're ready to announce."

http://www.billboard.com/...page=0%2C1

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Reply #129 posted 11/08/13 4:46pm

HAPPYPERSON

Cirque du Soleil's Michael Jackson Tour Adding Arena Dates in 2014

By Mitchell Peters, Los Angeles | November 08, 2013 11:24 AM EST

Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour
A scene from Cirque du Soleil's "Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour" OSA Images

"Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour" returns to North America for 40 more dates next year, looking to sell another 120,000 tickets

"Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour," which recently became the ninth-top-grossing tour in history, will return to North American arenas in 2014, Billboard can exclusively reveal.

This Story First Appeared in the New Billboard -- Click Here to Buy This Issue

SubscribeBuy a CopyBillboard on iPad

"We're in the process of fiercely booking it," Cirque du Soleil senior VP of touring shows Finn Taylor says. "We're mostly trying to do new markets so we can bring the show to new audiences, but there are some repeats of our more successful markets from the first tour."

Created in a partnership between the Michael Jackson estate and Cirque, "Immortal" will visit small to full-size arenas in the United States, Canada, Mexico and perhaps South America, beginning in March. The Cirque-promoted North American tour will perform in about 40 cities, but specific routing details weren't available at press time.

John Branca, who serves as co-executor of the Jackson estate with John McClain, says the upcoming "Immortal" performances could be slightly different from what audiences have already seen.

"I could see retooling the show in some ways and switching up some elements, but overall the format would stay very similar," Branca says. "There are certain numbers we might redo, but I don't think we would change the entire format."

In August, "Immortal" will once again visit Mexico City's Palacio de los Deportes, where it experienced some of its most lucrative business after grossing $13.2 million from 14 performances in 2012, according to Billboard Boxscore.

"We're positive we can sell another maybe 120,000-140,000 tickets in a second run," says Renato Herrera, executive VP at concert promoter OCESA, which operates the venue.

Herrera says there are also talks about taking "Immortal" to smaller arenas in such South American markets as Colombia, Argentina and Brazil.

Additionally, Cirque is in discussions with international promoters about bringing "Immortal" back to various parts of the world. With 407 shows under its belt, the trek has visited 25 countries on four continents. International dates haven't been confirmed beyond a lengthy run in Dubai, which goes through mid-January 2014.

"It's very tough to do one-offs with this show, because we have to bring all of the equipment with us," Taylor says. "We have to work on establishing some kind of regional leg or regional tour before we can get anywhere. There might be one or two Asian cities that want us, but we need six or seven to make it worthwhile."

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Reply #130 posted 11/08/13 5:23pm

Cloudbuster

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Reply #131 posted 11/08/13 5:48pm

NaughtyKitty

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@2:37, outtakes from the Oprah interview--MJ and Oprah cracking up about something

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Reply #132 posted 11/10/13 8:01am

bigd74

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PatrickS77 said:

A strange concept, but some fun songs, like this one:







More links here:



http://www.blabbermouth.net/news/audio-guns-n-roses-motorhead-testament-ex-iron-maiden-members-pay-tribute-to-michael-jackson/










I'm getting this
She Believed in Fairytales and Princes, He Believed the voices coming from his stereo

If I Said You Had A Beautiful Body Would You Hold It Against Me?
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Reply #133 posted 11/10/13 9:52am

alphastreet

I never found the idea of a metal tribute strange, both mj`s musical and heavy metal are largely inspired by elements of classical music and opera at times, and the chord progressions are not that different from mj and metal. Evanescence has listed MJ as an influence, so something like this was long overdue if you ask me. I remember playing TDCAU on my Yamaha keyboard in the 90`s and setting it to a metal beat accompaniment and it worked really well, and I didn`t even listen to it that time at all. I love this remix and may get the album if I like the rest.

[Edited 11/10/13 9:53am]

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Reply #134 posted 11/10/13 4:10pm

NaughtyKitty

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Reply #135 posted 11/11/13 10:53am

Scorp

this was a beautiful song

should have been released as a single when INVINCIBLE premiered

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Reply #136 posted 11/11/13 3:12pm

Scorp

2:30-2:45......

Michael hit that note......that came from the heart...I hadn't heard him break it down like that in a long time.......

and I love that ending....

"I'LL BE THEEERREEE......AND I'LL WILL BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE"....

he made beautiful music in his lifetime


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Reply #137 posted 11/12/13 3:39pm

HAPPYPERSON

How Michael Jackson's Estate Earns $145 Million a Year[img:$uid]http://www.billboard.com/files/styles/promo_650/public/media/michael-jackson-quincy-jones-650-430.jpg[/img:$uid]This article first appeared in Billboard Magazine -- subscribe here and buy this issue here.In June 2010, a year after Michael Jackson’s death, Billboard looked at the estate’s music-based revenue streams and estimated that some $1 billion of gross revenue flowed into it. Through interviews with industry experts and our own number-crunching, Billboard examined the revenue that Jackson generated in 2012, as well as that to date in 2013, and also estimated the earnings that revenue generated for the estate. The results don’t match those of 2010, when Jackson’s loss was still fresh, but they remain impressive: 2012 music-based revenue of $544.6 million, with the estate’s earnings at $121 million. Estate sources suggest the full earnings total is closer to $160 million, which would leave $39 million in merchandising, film and TV licensing, DVD sales and other licensing deals.MUSIC SALES AND STREAMING2012 revenue: $51 millionJackson estate share: $22.4 millionIn 2012, Jackson sold almost 819,000 album units in the United States and 2.8 million tracks, according to Nielsen SoundScan. The estate has said that his U.S. album sales are 30% of global album sales, and Billboard estimates the artist’s U.S. track sales at 48% of global sales, which extrapolates to total global album sales of 2.7 million units and 5.8 million track sales for a total revenue of about $39.2 million. Meanwhile, the Jackson 5’s total U.S. sales were 155,000 album units and 422,000 tracks. Using the same calculation, that would be 518,000 global albums and 880,000 tracks for a total of $7.2 million. In 2012, streaming was 12% of sales, which means the Jackson catalog generated another $5.5 million in streaming revenue, bringing total music revenue to $52 million. If Jackson gets a superstar 50% royalty rate (and one-fifth of the Jackson 5’s 20% royalty), then his estate’s share of that would be $22.7 million.To date in 2013, Jackson’s 482,000 U.S. album sales (as of Oct. 27) and 1.9 million in track sales extrapolates to a global 1.6 million album units and nearly 4 million track sales, generating $23.7 million. The Jackson 5’s U.S. sales of 48,000 album units and 248,000 tracks extrapolate to 161,000 global albums and 516,000 track sales, or $2.5 million. Billboard estimates streaming in 2013 at about 15% of sales, or another $4 million, for a total of $30 million, with the estate earning $14 million.TOURING/LICENSING2012 revenue: $150.6 millionJackson estate share: $30 million“Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour” pulled in $150.6 million in 2012. Estimating the costs of staging that production at $90 million, that would leave $60 million to be split between Cirque du Soleil and the Jackson estate, or $30 million earnings for the latter.So far this year, that show has pulled in $124.3 million. A new live-performance revenue stream has been added: “Michael Jackson One,” the residency at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas. Billboard estimates that “One” is generating approximately $2.5 million per week in box office, or $45 million since its opening on May 23. That puts total touring/licensing revenue at about $170 million. If the cost is about $100 million, that would leave $70 million to be split evenly, with the Jackson estate earning $35 million.RECORDING CONTRACT2012 revenue: $31 millionJackson estate share: $31 millionIn 2010, Sony Music Entertainment reached a deal with Jackson’s estate to release 10 albums of the singer’s music through 2017, with the estate guaranteed between $200 million and $250 million for the deal. That works out to $31 million per year, with the last release being the 25th-anniversary edition of Bad in September 2012.MUSIC PUBLISHING2012 revenue: $312 millionJackson estate share: $38 millionWhen a Sony Corp. of America-led consortium of investors bought EMI Music Publishing, Sony’s share amounted to 38%, of which Jackson owns one-quarter, or 9.5%. Since it paid $2.2 billion for the company and divested song catalogs worth about $90 million, that means the Jackson estate’s share is worth $206.8 million. In its most recent public numbers for the year ended May 31, 2012, EMI Music Publishing generated $211 million in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, but with costs associated with the acquisition and closing of the deal, and then layoffs, there probably wasn’t any payout to shareholders in 2012. This year, Jackson’s payout, after debt service, could be worth about $9 million.The Jackson estate also owns half of Sony/ATV, which has been valued at about $1.6 billion, which means *Jackson’s portion is worth about $800 million. According to recently released financial data, at midyear fiscal 2013, Sony/ATV had revenue of $315 million. If it earns the equivalent revenue in the other half of the year, Sony/ATV’s annual revenue should be about $630 million, and through the first 10 months that would equal $525 million. If the *company’s EBITDA hits the same 30% of revenue that EMI achieved, that should give the company $157.5 million to date in 2013. Sony Corp. put up about $300 million in equity toward the purchase price, probably put on the Sony/ATV books as a loan, which at 5% probably has about $15 million in annual debt service and $12.5 million through the end of October. That leaves earnings of $145 million. All of which means that if that’s split among shareholders before taxes, Jackson’s share would come to $72.5 million. As it is, the Jackson estate is guaranteed an annual payment of at least $23 million.Billboard values Jackson’s Mijac Music catalog at about $150 million. Assuming the standard 10 times multiple on publishing, that yields about $15 million a year in royalties. Overall, Billboard estimates the valuation of Jackson’s publishing assets at $1.2 billion.http://www.billboard.com/biz/article...million-a-year
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Reply #138 posted 11/12/13 3:57pm

NaughtyKitty

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Reply #139 posted 11/12/13 4:01pm

NaughtyKitty

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One day, Michael decided he wanted a llama. He asked me to take him to nearby Agora and we ended up at this lot packed with hay and horse trailers. From the car, we eyed four llamas out back. I parked between two trailers, unintentionally shielding my Mercedes from view. It was the only parking spot available. When we walked into the office – two kids dressed casual but smart in T shirt and jeans – this guy, bent across a counter doing some paperwork, didn’t even look up when he said, “We’re not hiring.”

“We ain’t looking for no job,” said Michael, wearing his shades. “We’re here to buy a llama.”

The man looked up. Not a flicker of recognition on his face. It took me about two seconds to know that his musical taste ventured nowhere near the Thriller album. “We don’t have any llamas,” he said. The look on his face said it all: you can’t afford it.

“You have four of them out back,” I said, trying to keep calm.

“You know how much they cost?”

Michael smiled. “We know how much they cost.”

Then came an incredible bombardment of questions, fired by the man’s prejudices and assumptions. “Can you afford a llama? What do you boys do to afford a llama? Where will you keep it? Have you ever thought about this?”

Ever patient, Michael explained that we had a house with grounds and were serious customers. “I know how to look after all kinds of animals,” he added.

The man begrudgingly asked to see some ID. Michael handed over a bank card. I handed over my driving license. And then night became day.

“You’re those Jackson boys?” said the man, his face lighting up. He began to back-pedal about how he had to be careful and he couldn’t sell to just anyone; you understand how it is. Bu we didn’t understand: we saw right through him.

“So you’re happy to accept me because now you know who I am?” Michael asked. The biggest misconception people had about my brother was that his legendary shyness made him timid, but he was a man of principle, especially where his roots as a proud black man were concerned and he wasn’t afraid to speak up on this when riled.



Michael took back his ID and came right out with it: “You are an ass, and we don’t want to spend our money in here any more.”
Then we walked out to the Mercedes the man had failed to spot when we arrived.

- Jermaine Jackson, You Are Not Alone

http://liberian--girl.tum...a-llama-he


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Reply #140 posted 11/13/13 12:36am

dag

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NaughtyKitty said:



One day, Michael decided he wanted a llama. He asked me to take him to nearby Agora and we ended up at this lot packed with hay and horse trailers. From the car, we eyed four llamas out back. I parked between two trailers, unintentionally shielding my Mercedes from view. It was the only parking spot available. When we walked into the office – two kids dressed casual but smart in T shirt and jeans – this guy, bent across a counter doing some paperwork, didn’t even look up when he said, “We’re not hiring.”

“We ain’t looking for no job,” said Michael, wearing his shades. “We’re here to buy a llama.”

The man looked up. Not a flicker of recognition on his face. It took me about two seconds to know that his musical taste ventured nowhere near the Thriller album. “We don’t have any llamas,” he said. The look on his face said it all: you can’t afford it.

“You have four of them out back,” I said, trying to keep calm.

“You know how much they cost?”

Michael smiled. “We know how much they cost.”

Then came an incredible bombardment of questions, fired by the man’s prejudices and assumptions. “Can you afford a llama? What do you boys do to afford a llama? Where will you keep it? Have you ever thought about this?”

Ever patient, Michael explained that we had a house with grounds and were serious customers. “I know how to look after all kinds of animals,” he added.

The man begrudgingly asked to see some ID. Michael handed over a bank card. I handed over my driving license. And then night became day.

“You’re those Jackson boys?” said the man, his face lighting up. He began to back-pedal about how he had to be careful and he couldn’t sell to just anyone; you understand how it is. Bu we didn’t understand: we saw right through him.

“So you’re happy to accept me because now you know who I am?” Michael asked. The biggest misconception people had about my brother was that his legendary shyness made him timid, but he was a man of principle, especially where his roots as a proud black man were concerned and he wasn’t afraid to speak up on this when riled.



Michael took back his ID and came right out with it: “You are an ass, and we don’t want to spend our money in here any more.”
Then we walked out to the Mercedes the man had failed to spot when we arrived.

- Jermaine Jackson, You Are Not Alone

http://liberian--girl.tum...a-llama-he


Funny. I haven't read Jermaine's book cause I just can't stand this guy since MJ's death, but this is a cute story.

"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 #141 posted 11/13/13 12:41am

dag

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NaughtyKitty said:

http://itsjustdesire.tumb...-just-solo

Have you got the middle picture bigger? It's just hot.

"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 #142 posted 11/13/13 7:40am

KCOOLMUZIQ

NaughtyKitty said:

I always wondered why Janet & Mj were the only ones gifted with the dancing gene in the Jackson family!?

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #143 posted 11/13/13 10:08am

NaughtyKitty

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KATHERINE JACKSON

APPEALS MICHAEL JACKSON WRONGFUL DEATH VERDICT

EXCLUSIVE

1113-katherine-michael-jackson-getty
The fight over Michael Jackson's death is NOT over, because Katherine Jackson has just appealed the jury's verdict ... TMZ has learned.

As you know, the jury ruled AEG was NOT responsible for MJ's death, concluding the company was not wrong in hiring Dr. Conrad Murray.

Katherine and MJ's 3 kids sued for more than $40 billion, claiming Michael's loss devastated their lives.

It's very difficult and even borderline impossible to overturn jury verdicts in civil cases, but it can happen ... especially if the judge screwed up an important ruling.



Read more: http://www.tmz.com#ixzz2kYBSkWaj

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Reply #144 posted 11/13/13 10:10am

NaughtyKitty

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dag said:

NaughtyKitty said:

http://itsjustdesire.tumb...-just-solo

Have you got the middle picture bigger? It's just hot.

I wish I knew how too because that's my favorite pic too drool But there doesnt seem to be a way to enlarge it unfortunately

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Reply #145 posted 11/13/13 3:11pm

LovesexyIsThe1

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NaughtyKitty said:

I wish I knew how too because that's my favorite pic too drool But there doesnt seem to be a way to enlarge it unfortunately



Lovesexy Funkateer
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Reply #146 posted 11/13/13 8:10pm

alphastreet

dag said:



NaughtyKitty said:



http://itsjustdesire.tumb...-just-solo



Have you got the middle picture bigger? It's just hot.



I knowwwww, and the bottom left!!!! So cute
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Reply #147 posted 11/13/13 8:23pm

NaughtyKitty

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LovesexyIsThe1 said:

NaughtyKitty said:

I wish I knew how too because that's my favorite pic too drool But there doesnt seem to be a way to enlarge it unfortunately



Thank YOU Lovesexyisthe1!!! biggrin *right click, save*

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Reply #148 posted 11/13/13 9:23pm

NaughtyKitty

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^From this:

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Reply #149 posted 11/13/13 11:16pm

dag

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NaughtyKitty said:



^From this:

Cute.

"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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