I love Michael Jackson

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July 24, 2012: Video: Jackson family dispute- Randy Jackson interviews with Al Sharpton: “The will is fake”


July 24, 2012 : Katherine is still missing! Michael Jackson Estate Plan To Remove Katherine’s Guardianship of MJ’s Kids.. J Family Plotting For Control $:


July 23, 2012: Deiter Wiesner interviewed by Wagner regaring Branca, Fake Will and letter


July 19, 2012 Discussing the FAKE Will on HLN with Beth Karas “There is NO Will”-John Branca 2005 “There is NO Will”- MJ 2005


♥ June 25, 2012…

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I miss you Michael


“People may forget what you said, but they will never forget how you made them feel.”


♥ The Message Of Michael Jackson ♥

“Lets love one another. Lets forget hatred and turn to those that are suffering. Not just today, but every day.”- Michael Jackson ~♥~


Pepsi Partners With Michael Jackson Estate for Commemorative Packaging

NO!!! Pepsi Partners With Michael Jackson Estate for Commemorative Packaging
Limited-Edition Package Coincides With 25th Anniversary of ‘Bad’

Pepsi is paying homage to the King of Pop one more time.

The brand is working with Michael Jackson’s estate to create a limited-edition package featuring the singer, according to an executive close to the company. The package coincides with the 25th Anniversary of the “Bad” album, which was released on Aug. 31, 1987.

The package will be a 16 oz. can available in convenience stores and grocery stores around Memorial Day, according to Beverage Digest. The can, said to have a blue background with an image of Mr. Jackson dancing, is expected to cost 99 cents. Pepsi declined to comment.

Pepsi sponsored the 1988 Bad World Tour. The tour spanned 16 months, with 123 concerts in 15 countries attended by 4.4 million fans. It was the largest-grossing tour in history and the one with the largest audience.

The brand’s relationship with Mr. Jackson dates to 1984 and the “New Generation” campaign. The singer’s hair caught fire during a commercial shoot that was part of that campaign. Mr. Jackson appeared in a number of ads for the brand over the years, performing versions of “Billie Jean” and “Bad,” among other songs.


Michael Jackson Mansion Unveiled: $23.9M Wanted for Home Where Singer Died

Michael Jackson Mansion Unveiled: $23.9M Wanted for Home Where Singer Died.


“Better On The Other Side” by The Game Ft. Chris Brown, P. Diddy, Boyz II Men, Polow Da Don, Mario Winans, Usher.. Tribute Song to Michael Jackson


Akon – “We Cry Out Of Joy” (Michael Jackson Tribute) 2009


Michael Jackson – Commemorated


“All In Your Name” (Official Video) Michael Jackson and Barry Gibb

“All In Your Name” [Official Music Video] – Michael Jackson Featuring Barry Gibb.

Released by Barry Gibb on Dec 19, 2011:

“Michael Jackson and I were the dearest of friends, thats simply what it was. We gravitated towards the same kind of music and we loved collaborating and he was the easiest person to write with. The more we got to know each other the more those ideas entwined and it all came to this song “All in Your Name”.
“All in Your Name” is infact the message that Michael wanted to send out to all of his fans all over the World that he did it all for them and for the pure love of music. I hope and pray that we all get to hear it in its entirety. This experience i will treasure forever.

Recorded & Filmed at Middle Ear Studios in December 2002. All footage was shot by Ashley Gibb on a high 8 camera. There is over 2 hours of footage.”- Barry Gibb


Paris Jackson on the “Ellen” (Degeneres) Show.. Thursday, December 15th, 2011


Conrad Murray Documentary MSNBC: “The Man Who Killed Michael Jackson” / “Michael Jackson And The Doctor”. Nov. 2011


‘Michael Jackson The Immortal World Tour’ Cirq on “Dancing With The Stars’ Nov. 8, 2011


Praying for Justice…

God, please give us strength to get through this heart wrenching trial and  fill the hearts of the jurors with love and truth.. for justice for Michael Jackson..

 


Michael Jackson THE IMMORTAL World Tour by Cirque du Soleil – OFFICIAL SHOW PREVIEW


New 2011 Pepsi Commercial featuring Michael.


2011 August: Prince, Paris and Blanket in Gary, Indiana for their father’s birthday celebration

 

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Michael Jackson’s Art and Studio, Revealed for the First Time- Aug 17, 2011

Michael Jackson’s Art and Studio, Revealed for the First Time

The interior of Michael Jackson’s art studio, which he shared with friend and artist Brett-Livingstone Strong

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See more photos in “Michael Jackson Art: An Exclusive Look at the Musician’s Drawings and Paintings.”

Until now, Michael Jackson’s art collection was shrouded in mystery. It was said to be stuck in a legal dispute over possession. Then, people speculated that buyers such as Cirque du Soleil’s Guy Laliberté were interested. It’s been valued at the staggering (and slightly unbelievable) sum of $900 million.

One crucial fact: Jackson’s art collection isn’t art by other people — it’s mainly drawings and paintings that he created himself. So what does that art look like?

Yesterday, LA Weekly was the first to visit the (until now) top-secret Santa Monica Airport hangar that Jackson used as his studio and art storehouse. The collection is currently owned by Brett-Livingstone Strong, the Australian monument builder and Jackson’s art mentor through the years, in conjunction with the Jackson estate.

Though the entire art collection has been mired in disputes and battles for rights, Strong claims that he is working with everybody — the family, the estate, as well as others — to exhibit and publish as much of Jackson’s work as possible.

According to Strong, he and Jackson formed an incorporated business partnership in 1989, known as the Jackson-Strong alliance. This gave each partner a fifty-percent stake in the other’s art. In 2008, Strong says, Jackson requested that his attorney sign the rights to Jackson’s portion of the art over to Strong. Now, Strong is beginning to reveal more and more of the art as he goes ahead with Jackson’s dream of organizing a museum exhibit.

Some of Jackson’s original drawings hanging on the wall. Prints of these were donated to the L.A. Children’s Hospital.

Strong gave us a tour of the hangar, beginning with the Michael Jackson monument that Strong and Jackson co-designed several years ago. It’s perhaps bombastic, but designed with good intentions and the rabid Jackson fan in mind. Strong explains, “He wanted his fans to be able to get married at a monument that would have all of his music [in an archive, and playing on speakers], to inspire some of his fans.”

The current design is still in the works, but it’s conceived as an interactive monument — fans who buy a print by Jackson will receive a card in the mail. They can scan this card at the monument, and then have a computer organize a personal greeting for them, or allow them to book it for weddings. Jackson initially thought it would be perfect for Las Vegas, but Strong says that Los Angeles might have the honor of hosting it — apparently, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa recently paid a visit and made a few oblique promises.

As for Jackson’s art, the contents of the hangar barely scratched the surface of the collection, as Strong estimates Jackson’s total output at 150 to 160 pieces. A few large pieces hanging on the walls had been donated as reproductions to the L.A. Children’s Hospital last Monday, along with other sketches and poems.

In all of his art, certain motifs kept cropping up: chairs (usually quite baroque), gates, keys and the number 7. His portrait of Bubbles, his pet chimpanzee, shows a monkey-like face vanishing into a cushy, ornate lounge chair. “He loved chairs,” says Strong. “He thought chairs were the thrones of most men, women and children, where they made their decisions for their daily activity. He was inspired by chairs. Rather than just do a portrait of the monkey, he put it in the chair. And you see, there are a few sevens — because he’s the seventh child.”

Jackson, who was a technically talented artist — and completely self-taught — fixated on these motifs, elevating everyday objects into cult symbols. Strong added that Jackson’s sketchbooks are completely filled with studies of his favorite objects, in endless permutations.

MJ’s portrait of George Washington — he initially planned to do a series of all of the presidents, but never continued it.

But Jackson also created portraits: a small sketch of Paul McCartney, and a large drawing of George Washington, created as Strong was working with the White House to commemorate the bicentennial of the Constitution back in 1987. He also sketched self-portraits — one as a humorous four-panel drawing charting his growing-up process, and a darker one that depicts him as a child cowering in a corner, inscribed with a sentence reflecting on his fragility.

As an artist, Jackson preferred using wax pencils, though Strong adds, “He did do a lot of watercolors but he gave them away. He was a little intimidated by mixing colors.” Some surviving pencils are archived in the hangar; Strong moves over to a cabinet on the far wall of the hangar and pulls out a ziploc bag containing a blue wax pencil, a white feathered quill and a white glove that Jackson used for drawing.

Jackson turned to art as times got hard for him. “His interest in art, in drawing it, was just another level of his creativity that went on over a long period of time,” Strong says. “It was quite private to him. I think he retreated into it when he was being attacked by those accusations against him.” The sketches and drawings certainly reveal an extremely sensitive creator, though it’s clear that Jackson also had a sense of humor.

Jackson’s art was kept under wraps for such a long time simply because of the scandal, which erupted right around the time that he was looking for a way to publicize the works. “A lot of his art was going to be exhibited 18 years ago. Here’s one of his tour books, where he talks about exhibiting art. He didn’t want it to be a secret,” Strong says, pointing at a leaflet from the 1992 Dangerous World Tour.

Prior to that period, Jackson and Strong had met and become fast friends. This marked the beginning of Strong’s mentorship, in which he encouraged Jackson to create bigger paintings and drawings, and exhibit his work. The idea behind their Jackson-Strong Alliance was that Strong would help Jackson manage and exhibit his art. Notably, the alliance birthed Strong’s infamous $2 million portrait of Michael Jackson entitled The Book, the only known portrait Jackson ever sat for.

In 1993, everything blew up. At the time, Jackson and Strong were both on the board of Big Brothers of Los Angeles (now known as Big Brothers Big Sisters), a chapter of the national youth mentoring organization established in L.A. by Walt Disney and Meredith Willson. They had planned out a fundraising campaign involving Jackson’s art. Strong explains, “We thought that if we would market [his art] in limited edition prints to his fans, he could support the charities that he wanted to, rather than have everybody think that he was so wealthy he could afford to finance everybody.” When the scandal erupted, Disney put a freeze on the project. The artwork stayed put, packed away from public eyes in storage crates.

As for the spectacular appraisal of $900 million for Jackson’s art collection, Strong says that it derives from the idea of reproducing prints as well. The figure was originally quoted by Eric Finzi, of Belgo Fine Art Appraisers. “The reason somebody came out with that was because there was an appraisal on if all of his originals were reproduced — he wanted to do limited editions of 777 — and he would sell them to his fan base in order to build his monument, support kids and do other things. You multiply that by 150 originals, and if they sold for a few thousand dollars each, then you would end up with 900 million dollars.” Fair enough, though now Strong says he has gone to an appraiser in Chicago to get that value double-checked, and they arrived at an even higher estimate.

The story of Jackson’s art ends up being quite a simple one, though confused by so much hearsay and rumor. Strong and the Jackson estate will slowly reveal more works as time passes, and an exhibit is tentatively planned for L.A.’s City Hall. Negotiations with museums for a posthumous Jackson retrospective are still underway, but Strong has high hopes. He’s even talking of building a Michael Jackson museum that would house all of Jackson’s artwork.


Jackson’s sketch of the White House doors, to which he added the following quote from John Adams: “I pray heaven to bestow the best of blessings on this house and all that shall inhabit it. May none but honest and wise men [MJ’s addition:] or women rule under this roof.”

We’ll leave you with Strong’s own description of Jackson at work, during the time where they shared a studio in a house in Pacific Palisades:

He was in a very light and happy mood most of the time. He would have the oldies on, and sometimes he’d hear some of his Jackson Five songs. He’d kind of move along to that, but most of the time he would change it and listen to a variety of songs. He liked classical music. His inspiration to create was that he loved life, and wanted to express his love of life in some of these simple compositions.

I came to the studio one day, and we had a Malamute. I came into the house, and I heard this dog barking and thought, Wow, I wonder what that is. I go into the kitchen, and I couldn’t help but laugh when I see Michael up in the pots and pans in the middle of the center island. He’s holding a pen and paper and the dog is running around the island and barking at him, and he says, “He wants to play! He wants to play!” He’s laughing, and I’m laughing about it as I’m thinking to myself, “I’m wondering how long he’s been up there.”

Michael Jackson’s dedication to art: so strong that he’ll end up perched on a kitchen island.


Michael’s art was donated to LA’s Children’s Hospital

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13 Sketches by Michael Jackson as well as a signed portrait, now decorate the walls of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

Michael Jackson’s three children — Prince 14, Paris 13, and Blanket 9 — were present at a private ceremony to unveil the donated artwork. The children selected which art pieces would be donated, including a dozen sketches drawn and signed by Michael and a photographed portrait of him.

 The works depicting Mickey Mouse, furniture, his moonwalk and other objects were donated by Brett Livingstone-Strong, an artist and friend of Jackson’s.
~

“To the wonderful children and families who are loved and cared for by the children’s hospital LA.
On behalf of our dear and greatly missed father Michael.
We love you all and wish you all to be in the best of health and have a very happy life with love. from our family ~ Prince Jackson”

“May the very special memory of my beautiful loving father be always in our world forever… ~ Paris Jackson”

“My fathers art and music will always make everyone happy. Blanket Jackson. I love you daddy”


‪Michael Jackson And Barry Gibb – “All In Your Name”


In 2002, Michael Jackson and Barry Gibb worked on a song “All In Your Name”.  It was never released.  Barry Gibb released the song June 2011, in tribute to Michael.


July 22, 2011 LaToya Jackson : Michael’s death a conspiracy

July 22, 2011: Latoya Jackson was on HLN discussing Michael’s murder: