Weekends Daily News July 24 - 26 Steve Harvey tribute + much more

Birth certificates found for Michael Jackson's children

Sunday July 26, 2009

Categories: Celebrities
by Lynn Hayes

TMZ has posted copies of the birth certificates of Michael Jackson's children. Many will say that this is an abhorrent violation of the right to privacy of children who have done nothing to put themselves in the spotlight, and I agree. On the other hand, for an astrologer to have verified birth dates and times is an exciting event, so I felt I had to take advantage of it and make note of a few interesting things about the charts of the two kids.


From a psychological perspective, it is fascinating to note that the older son's name is Prince Michael Joseph Jackson. Not Michael Joseph Jackson Jr,. MJ's full name, but Prince Michael. MJ was a master of disguise and illusion with a conjunction of Jupiter and Neptune in his chart that likely sat in the Fifth House of creativity and self-expression. He lived in a placed called Neverland. His son became the royal figure that MJ always longed to be. MJ's daughter, Paris Michael Katherine Jackson, absorbed the identity of his beloved mother into his own identity. I suspect that for Michael Jackson, these children were not only an extension of his reality but they probably became his actual reality.


Both of the kids have stressful aspects from Saturn to Mars, suggesting a sense of confinement and inability to express their needs and desires, but they are both people of significant strength of personality despite that. Where Prince Michael has a stellium of five planets in Aquarius, Paris Michael has four planets in Aries (although Saturn is one of them, dampening the enthusiasm and vigor of the Aries planets somewhat). Prince Michael is likely to be extremely creative and with Pluto on the Ascendant he has the potential to be quite powerful in his own right. Paris is far more sensitive and her sensitivity will struggle with the force of her Aries planets and I suspect that she will have a more difficult time. The two children are obviously very connected, with Paris's Venus conjunct Prince Michael's Sun, and their Moons forming a nearly exact sextile.


Hopefully these children can survive the circus of litigation that is springing up around the death of their father and go on to live relatively normal lives.

http://blog.beliefnet.com/astrologicalmusings/2009/07/birth-certificates-found-for-m.html
 
Birth certificates found for Michael Jackson's children

Not Michael Joseph Jackson Jr,. MJ's full name, but Prince Michael. MJ was a master of disguise and illusion with a conjunction of Jupiter and Neptune in his chart that likely sat in the Fifth House of creativity and self-expression. He lived in a placed called Neverland. His son became the royal figure that MJ always longed to be.

Or, ... he just named him after his grandaddy.

:smilerolleyes:
 
Hey guys. Just thought I could update the news for a little bit :)



Luxury PR Splurge Roundup: Jay Leno $2 Million Bertone Mantide, Michael Jackson Valued $10 Million for Andy Warhol

Happy to report some good news on the luxury PR splurge roundup! Forget all the negative media surrounding luxury! SALE is still a bad four letter word when it comes to luxury so please stop discounting luxury goods and services. Thanks!
Michael%2BJackson%2BAndy%2BWarhol.jpg

Andy Warhol’s portrait of Michael Jackson auction has been put on hold because of all the popular demand. The portrait is expected to be sold for as much as $10 million dollars and starting bidding for the silent auction will be $800,000 extended date August 18, 2009.

Jay Leno adds a $2 Million Bertone Mantide to his luxury car collection.
Luxury is alive and well!

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_CtW3fpAe3...-VI_0/s1600-h/Michael+Jackson+Andy+Warhol.jpg




There are also several articles today about Omer Batthi, and according to a source, he have claimed to say that he's not his child. We all should know by now that Omer is not Michael Jackson's biological child, but a close friend and family member. I do not trust the daily mail and all those other tabloids right now, therefor we should not read so much into them.

Maybe in time, Omer will have his own say if he choose to talk more about his relationship with Michael. Until that, we should all respect his privacy and his mourning for the loss of his friend.




Getting on board with Jackson tour bus

* Bus tours of places connected to Gary's famous family have begun.

GARY -- If you can't exactly walk in the house at 2300 Jackson St. -- the one made famous by Michael Jackson and the Jackson 5 -- you can get the experience in the exact replica right across the street.
For the first 50 tourists to take the inaugural Michael Jackson-Gary tour, it was a reminder of the humble beginnings of the King of Pop.

To get the full feel, JWR Tour proprietors Denise Jordan-Walker and Tecora Rogers allowed 11 people at a time into the five-room house at 2303 Jackson St. Eleven is the magic number, because it represents the two Jackson parents and their nine children.

It took maybe a second to dawn on the tourists how stifling living conditions might have been.

"I would've moved up out of here at 11 people, too," said Bonika Crump of Chicago, who brought friend Tecora Marshall, 11, along on the tour with her. "You see the house on TV, and it looks small, but I didn't think it was this small. I remember seeing the movie and the house wasn't even this small."

This first visit -- only a month after Michael Jackson's death at age 50 and following Joe Jackson's comments Friday about fledgling plans for a Jackson museum in Gary -- might be the first real sign that the city can benefit from its favorite son.
To be sure, the attraction was real enough for the tour guides and their 50 newest friends.

Gary leaders have long talked about -- and doubters have longed scoffed at -- the idea of Gary becoming a destination visit for Jackson fans.
Jordan-Walker and Rogers had been planning to add a Jackson History Tour to their portfolio for some time, but the urgency became paramount once Michael Jackson died. Since putting the tour together and advertising it on their Web site, they have reservations booked through August for "intimate" 50-person tours Thursday through Sunday.

Their tour -- $55 for adults and $45 for children ages 6 to 12 -- starts in Chicago and takes fans past U.S. Steel Gary Works, where Joe Jackson worked; Roosevelt High School, from where eldest siblings Maureen (also known as Rebbie) and Jackie graduated; the defunct Beckman Middle School, the last school in Gary that Michael attended; and several other well-known places where the Jacksons got their start, according to Jordan-Walker and Rogers.

"We've heard from people from Japan, Ohio, Africa," Rogers said as the group snapped pictures of the iconic house. "This tour is going to be around for a while. I don't see it dying out."
Mayor Rudy Clay, who stopped by the house an hour before the tour arrived, seemed to sense that, too.

Although he's been in talks with the Jackson patriarch as well as officials in Elvis Presley's hometown, Tupelo, Miss., to determine how Gary could turn the Jackson house into a proper memorial, the moment seems right for his dream even if the impetus is tragic.
Clay and his predecessors have longed talked about ideas, from a Jackson museum to a civil rights museum, to help the beleaguered city.

Then on June 25, Michael died. Without planning or special funds or consultants, people started arriving on their own.
And they continue to come.

Clay has marveled at the amount of people who are still coming.

"I think people will be touring the house forever; it'll go on for years and years to come," said Clay, who didn't wait for the bus's late arrival. "We've been looking at using CBDG (Community Block Development Grant) money to turn this area into a cultural and historical landmark -- including Roosevelt High School. We would make the house a shrine, but the museum would be somewhere else."

William Salaam and Roderick Taylor, who own the house the JWR group toured, have seen the steady flow of fans for weeks since Jackson's death. Salaam is still amazed.

"People are coming to a house where a little boy slept 40 years ago and they leave him a gift," Salaam said. "I know I don't know that kind of love and I don't think many people do."

http://www.post-trib.com/news/1685145,mjtour0726.article


Today in
Michael Jackson History

1968 - The Jackson Five signed a one-year contract with Motown.

1997 - "The Best of Michael Jackson And The Jackson 5" hit #5 in the U.K.

2004 - A motion was unsealed by Santa Barbara County Superior Court Judge Rodney Melville in the Michael Jackson child molestation case. The motion, filed and sealed on July 13, was a call from Jackson's defense team to delay the trail four months. The motion was unsealed a day before a hearing was to be held on the motion.

jackson5.jpg
 
Last edited:
I am so glad for that tour. I went to house and took picture but my film got mess up. Now I can go again.
 
CELEBRITY SCALES: Michael Jackson, the Wounded Messenger: Star-Studded Legal Commentary for the Celebrity Obsessed

By Matt Semino, ESQ. • on July 18, 2009
With the mask finally removed, her tearful goodbye humanized him in the eyes of millions of adoring fans and even skeptical detractors across the globe. Paris Jackson was the poignant conclusion to her father Michael’s celebrated memorial service. At the same time, her few words served as a painful reminder of the conflicted legacy that, as some proclaim, the greatest entertainer of all time leaves behind in the wake of his sudden, tragic and mysterious death. In Michael Jackson’s passing, this international icon casts as many if not more unanswered questions about the out of the ordinary life he led behind the curtain of his private stage.
Michael Jackson at the White [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]House[/COLOR][/COLOR] in 1984

Intense speculation over the star’s actual cause of death has ranged from an accidental overdose to explosive allegations from some family members of foul play and even murder. In the later stages of his life, Jackson was caught in a downward spiral of prescription [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]drug [COLOR=#0000ff! important]abuse[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR] fostered through a tangled web of star-struck enablers and unscrupulous members of the medical establishment. As in his life, Michael Jackson was engulfed by complex legal and ethical dilemmas even at the precise moment of his death. Questions concerning the custody of Jackson’s three children, whether those children are connected to him biologically, control over and division of his complex estate, burial procedures and a final resting place for the star’s remains, use of Los Angeles public funding for a celebrity laden memorial service at the Staples Center and countless more controversial issues moved in swiftly like an ominous and heavy fog in the days and weeks following June 25th.
Upon his death, the Pandora’s box that is Michael Jackson’s secretive but highly scrutinized life burst open once again and the media as well as the public’s insatiable appetite for all of the juicy details immediately became palpable. The daily headlines read like vivid medical records. ‘Michael Jackson’s Autopsy [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]Photo[/COLOR][/COLOR],’ ‘Michael Jackson’s Hair on Fire,’ ‘Michael Jackson’s Leg Wounds and Needle Marks,’ and ‘Michael Jackson was Sterile’ are just a few. Only the most imaginative fiction writer could create a story with such high drama and sordid twists and turns. Even with all of its tabloid entertainment value, it is a monumental disservice to Michael Jackson’s memory that a thoughtful analysis of his significant cultural contributions, particularly in the realm of human rights and social justice, are being obscured in the process of examining his death and now his corpse.
Through his prolific body of work, advocacy initiatives and multi-million dollar charity efforts, Michael Jackson raised international awareness and support for some of the most complex and timeless issues confronting the human condition. AIDS, cancer, famine, homelessness, gang violence, racism, totalitarianism, [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]environmental[/COLOR][/COLOR] degradation, child abuse, violations of animal rights, restrictions on freedom of speech and other infringements upon basic civil liberties are just some of the difficult subjects Jackson tackled by leveraging the power of his celebrity. Michael Jackson’s intuitive understanding of the problems besetting the human ecological system was uncanny and uncharacteristic for any entertainer close to his magnitude.
Many have been so dazzled by Jackson’s masterful showmanship and the consistent controversy surrounding his life and death that it would be easy not to recognize the overarching social and political themes embodied in his music, videos and public interviews. The intense emotional pull, messages and raw feelings that reverberate through the lyrics and sometimes disturbing video imagery of songs such as “They Don’t Care About Us,” “Heal the World,” “Earth Song,” and “Man in the Mirror” are gut-wrenching. A deeper analysis of Michael Jackson’s work reveals an individual with a burning concern for improving the lives of the disadvantaged and persecuted around the world. The passion and verve with which Jackson digs his hands into the soil and grasps the [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]trees[/COLOR][/COLOR] in his video for “Earth Song,” an operatic piece where he addresses environment and animal welfare, is a reflection of a leader of humanity who cares deeply about the issues he is challenging.
Global events in the weeks surrounding Jackson’s death alone directly mirror the complex problems for which he attempted to raise international awareness. In Iran and before the world’s eyes, civilian demonstrations were squashed and innocent victims like the young Neda Agha-Soltan brutally murdered by instruments of a totalitarian state. In Washington, D.C., a white supremacist motivated by pure hate attempted a killing spree at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, murdering an African American security guard in his rampage. In North Korea, U.S. journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee were unjustly sentenced to twelve years of hard labor to merely serve as international bargaining chips for an evil dictator. Michael Jackson spoke out loudly against these forms of racism and repression and attempted to ignite our passion to prevent the continuance of such abuse, neglect and discrimination. How are we now missing this message when it is even more crucial for it to be absorbed into the public mind? Not only do Michael Jackson’s cries of awakening continue to be ignored but his reputation continues to be smeared.
With the current fixation on the gruesome details surrounding Jackson’s physical demise, we have lost focus on the social relevance of Michael Jackson in our cultural timeline. Jackson’s symbol has the power to force what might be a difficult and uncomfortable period of public self-reflection. What progress has been made on the global humanitarian and civil rights issues that Jackson brought to light for the masses? What realistically still needs to be accomplished in each of these realms to actually make future progress? These are the crucial questions that need to be contemplated in the context of Michael Jackson’s death.

Many may ask why this controversial figure, a man who has been the subject of intense criticism and public backlash, should be given such gravity in framing public discourse over the day’s most important topics. Sometimes it takes one person, not just a political or spiritual leader, who stands out symbolically from the rest of society, to make that society reflect on the principles that it follows and the values it embraces. Jackson, throughout his life and in his death, has been ridiculed and revered, vilified and vaunted. In many respects, his story represents the highest possible highs and the lowest possible lows that life can present to a human being. Michael Jackson’s tremendous talent, success, wealth and public adoration were at odds with his extreme loneliness, fear, addiction and destruction of reputation by public opinion. In the end though, Michael Jackson was much more than an entertainer. His contributions to the entertainment field are no doubt profound. However, it is his broad cultural impact that truly transcends economic, social, political, racial, religious and generational barriers. Jackson rose from being simply a magical performer into becoming a humanitarian of historic import. He was a modern day messenger, a visionary storyteller who raised the level of consciousness for citizens across national boundaries. This level of contribution is what the social contract demands of those who are blessed with natural gifts, power and wealth. Shouldn’t we then embrace and support people who are destined for this life mission instead of deriding them? As history progresses and Jackson’s symbol and work are analyzed in conjunction with the unfolding of human events, the important cultural relevance of his persona will be uncovered. Like a piece of classic Greek literature that embodies timeless themes of human striving and suffering, Michael Jackson’s [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]canon[/COLOR][/COLOR] and celebrity will come to hold a similar place in the modern day cultural pantheon. Why then was it necessary to shoot the messenger?
Martin Bashir’s highly controversial 2003 TV documentary, ‘Living with Michael Jackson’ is just one of the many examples of the ways in which Jackson was unfairly portrayed in the media. The documentary was a PR nightmare for the star. Bashir’s video interviews and commentary were cleverly edited as to purposely [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]paint[/COLOR][/COLOR] Jackson as a megalomaniac child molester. The film focused, in a highly negative manner, on the abuse Jackson suffered as a child at the hands of his father, the rumors behind his drastic physical transformation, his intense friendships with young boys, the nature of his past romantic relationships and questions concerning the genetic lineage of his children, among other sensitive topics. Bashir conveniently cut out footage that presented a countervailing impression of Jackson. Bashir’s documentary and Michael Jackson’s subsequent rebuttal, in the form of a TV special hosted by Maury Povich, provide a candid, never before seen glimpse into what made this man tick. In many respects, Michael Jackson was a lonely soul who found the greatest comfort isolated behind the gates of his Neverland ranch and in the company of animals, children, carnival rides and opulent possessions. In the last years of his life, Jackson became reclusive to the point that he was unable to function even within celebrity society due to the immensity of his fame and the parasitic attention drawn by even the briefest public appearance. Examining these interviews, it becomes clear that Michael Jackson is one of the most misunderstood figures in modern day popular culture.
The incessant media backlash against Michael Jackson throughout his career and now in his death is driven by the fact that Jackson, as a symbolic figure, forces us to look in the mirror and face the difficult and sometimes intractable problems of our society and in ourselves that we may not want to acknowledge. How dare he? Jackson brilliantly shines light on civilization’s accomplishments and failures in their most extreme forms. To be repulsed by the drastic transformation of his face was to simultaneously recognize the excessiveness of a beauty obsessed culture that allows money to change even the most fundamental components of our DNA. When looking and commenting on his mask, weren’t we also secretly acknowledging both the literal and figurative masks that we sometimes hide behind? Ironically, Michael Jackson’s physical changes led him to be branded as an “oddity” or “freak” by a media culture that promotes physical perfection through any means necessary. As Jackson proclaimed during his interviews with Bashir, “Plastic surgery was not invented for Michael Jackson!”
The child molestation charges brought against Jackson first in 1993 and again in 2005, for which he was skewered and roasted by the media and public, were baseless extortion attempts fueled by the petty greed and jealousy of his accusers. Despite settling the 1993 case and being acquitted of the 2005 charges, Michael Jackson’s commercial appeal and public image were severely damaged by the allegations. The child molestation charges against Jackson represented a modern day witch hunt in its most base form. Unfortunately for Jackson, the hunt was not localized to Salem but played out globally through the aid of modern media technology. The molestation charges were fueled by likely feelings of inadequacy in the parents of the alleged child victims who were so enamored by Jackson. Perhaps these parents did not believe that they could compete with the love and material fantasy that Michael Jackson provided to their children which caused them to lash out in desperation. Jealousy combined with greed is highly combustible. The media’s depiction of Michael Jackson as a plastic surgery obsessed eccentric made him an easy target and an unsympathetic victim. It just wasn’t believable that someone that acted and looked like him could be kind, sensitive, compassionate and loving. What was the motivation behind it all? What was wrong with him? There had to be something askew. What if Michael Jackson’s motivation was simply to give hope to those less fortunate? Was all of this then just the senseless destruction of a human being to satisfy our insecurities and quell our fears of the unknown and misunderstood.
As we reflect upon Michael Jackson’s life and now death, it is difficult not to feel sad for the man and view him in a tragic light. With all of his power, wealth and fame, he now lies before us like a bird crushed after being pelted repeatedly by outsized stones. Dejected, Jackson continued to turn inward, fearful of what the world he cared so deeply about changing for the better was throwing at him. The drugs just served as an opiate to the pain of an artist and humanitarian that was overburdened by a mission that he didn’t believe he accomplished. Addicted, it was the greed of those surrounding Michael Jackson who continued to indulge his desires out of self-preservation. The numbness of the painkillers relieved the ache caused by knowing that despite what he sought to give and change in the society around him, the burden of his creations and the scathing critique it engendered had become too overwhelming for one person to sustain. Michael Jackson was a modern Sisyphus, the loin clothed man condemned to repeatedly pushing a rock up a mountain only to see it roll back down. Sadly though, our Sisyphus collapsed under the weight of his struggle.
Michael Jackson was inflated to the position of a pop deity, a mythical figure, only to be crucified and stoned by the media gods who created his success. His bold eccentricities lied outside of the norm of standard, socially acceptable behavior but were they necessarily illegal or wrong? No. Most of Michael Jackson’s actions were unconventional yet, at the same time, wasn’t the grandeur of his celebrity and global status beyond anything that modern day culture has ever witnessed? His grandeur, his eccentricity, each influenced and exaggerated the other.
It is undeniable that Michael Jackson’s immense celebrity and wealth allowed him to remove himself from mainstream society and observe the world from a privileged [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]vantage [COLOR=#0000ff! important]point[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR]. Sometimes though, it takes that fortunate but isolated position to be able to make the least polluted social observations and ultimately produce the most effective societal commentary through art. Throughout history, the work and lives of multiple artists have been ridiculed and scorned by the public during their heyday, only to be placed posthumously into the canon of the Greats. It is without doubt that Michael Jackson will, in due course, garner this same level of critical acclaim as an artist and most importantly, as a humanitarian.
Matt Semino is a New York attorney and legal commentator. He is a graduate of Columbia Law School , Cornell University and is a Fulbright Scholar.
Follow Matt Semino on Twitter: @MattSemino

Contact Matt Semino at Matt@MattSemino.com


http://elitestv.com/pub/2009/07/cel...d-legal-commentary-for-the-celebrity-obsessed
 
Jackson continues to rule albums chart

Sunday, July 26 2009, 19:00 BST
By Nick Levine, Music Editor
160x120_michael_jackson_3.jpg
WENN

Michael Jackson has extended his posthumous reign over the UK albums chart to five weeks.
His two-disc compilation The Essential notches up a fourth week at number one, having previously replaced another Jackson collection, Number Ones, in the top spot.
A total of nine Jackson albums appear in this week's top 40 - the same number as last week - three of which appear in the top ten.
Elsewhere on the albums chart, Florence and the Machine's Lungs remains at two, while Lady GaGa's The Fame rebounds from five to three.
Meanwhile, Jordin Sparks just misses out on a top ten debut, landing at eleven with second album Battlefield.
The top ten albums in full (click where possible for our reviews):
1. (1) Michael Jackson: 'The Essential'
2. (2) Florence and the Machine: 'Lungs'
3. (5) Lady GaGa: 'The Fame'
4. (6) Paolo Nutini: 'Sunny Side Up'
5. (8) La Roux: 'La Roux'
6. (3) Michael Jackson: 'Thriller'
7. (4) Michael Jackson & The Jackson Five: 'The Motown Years'
8. (13) Black Eyed Peas: 'The E.N.D.'
9. (16) Noisettes: 'Wild Young Hearts'
10. (11) Kasabian: 'West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum'
Source: Official Chart Company


http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/music/a167396/jackson-continues-to-rule-albums-chart.html
 
one saturday as I was listening to my regular radio station...the female DJ just finished playing a MJ song and said this..

"the media is all over the story on Michael Jackson.. but I don't care what they find... I have loved Michael Jackson and will always love Michael Jackson and that'sit"...then she played another song...

anyway this week I saw this same radio station is having a big B-day bash for Michael at a really trendy nightspot call Karu & Y.. not far from South Beach...its on 28th Aug so they can ring in his B-day at Midnight 29Aug.... from the radio ads......it sounds like fun...with each room in the club representing a different album and era of Michael..

Date:08/28/09 Venue:Karu & Y (map)Event URL:http://www.karu-y.com/
Start Time:8:00PM End time:12:00AM Description:
rememberthetimes_header_o.jpg

Tickets are $10 in advance and $20 per person

Listen for your chance to win free tickets, plus your chance to get in early before the crowds!

Call 305-567-5708 for more information.

Tickets on sale soon!



Contests throughout the night
  • Best Dressed Michael Jackson (from his Off the Wall Days up until his recent passing)
  • Best MJ Dance Moves
  • Winners get cash & other prizes

 
Wow, what an article! I'm going to save this & contact the author, thanks! :) You see, this is the kind of thing that Newsweek & Time should have done. Once upon a time, they would have.

CELEBRITY SCALES: Michael Jackson, the Wounded Messenger: Star-Studded Legal Commentary for the Celebrity Obsessed

By Matt Semino, ESQ. • on July 18, 2009
With the mask finally removed, her tearful goodbye humanized him in the eyes of millions of adoring fans and even skeptical detractors across the globe. Paris Jackson was the poignant conclusion to her father Michael’s celebrated memorial service. At the same time, her few words served as a painful reminder of the conflicted legacy that, as some proclaim, the greatest entertainer of all time leaves behind in the wake of his sudden, tragic and mysterious death. In Michael Jackson’s passing, this international icon casts as many if not more unanswered questions about the out of the ordinary life he led behind the curtain of his private stage.
Michael Jackson at the White [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]House[/color][/color] in 1984

Intense speculation over the star’s actual cause of death has ranged from an accidental overdose to explosive allegations from some family members of foul play and even murder. In the later stages of his life, Jackson was caught in a downward spiral of prescription [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]drug [COLOR=#0000ff! important]abuse[/color][/color][/color] fostered through a tangled web of star-struck enablers and unscrupulous members of the medical establishment. As in his life, Michael Jackson was engulfed by complex legal and ethical dilemmas even at the precise moment of his death. Questions concerning the custody of Jackson’s three children, whether those children are connected to him biologically, control over and division of his complex estate, burial procedures and a final resting place for the star’s remains, use of Los Angeles public funding for a celebrity laden memorial service at the Staples Center and countless more controversial issues moved in swiftly like an ominous and heavy fog in the days and weeks following June 25th.
Upon his death, the Pandora’s box that is Michael Jackson’s secretive but highly scrutinized life burst open once again and the media as well as the public’s insatiable appetite for all of the juicy details immediately became palpable. The daily headlines read like vivid medical records. ‘Michael Jackson’s Autopsy [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]Photo[/color][/color],’ ‘Michael Jackson’s Hair on Fire,’ ‘Michael Jackson’s Leg Wounds and Needle Marks,’ and ‘Michael Jackson was Sterile’ are just a few. Only the most imaginative fiction writer could create a story with such high drama and sordid twists and turns. Even with all of its tabloid entertainment value, it is a monumental disservice to Michael Jackson’s memory that a thoughtful analysis of his significant cultural contributions, particularly in the realm of human rights and social justice, are being obscured in the process of examining his death and now his corpse.
Through his prolific body of work, advocacy initiatives and multi-million dollar charity efforts, Michael Jackson raised international awareness and support for some of the most complex and timeless issues confronting the human condition. AIDS, cancer, famine, homelessness, gang violence, racism, totalitarianism, [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]environmental[/color][/color] degradation, child abuse, violations of animal rights, restrictions on freedom of speech and other infringements upon basic civil liberties are just some of the difficult subjects Jackson tackled by leveraging the power of his celebrity. Michael Jackson’s intuitive understanding of the problems besetting the human ecological system was uncanny and uncharacteristic for any entertainer close to his magnitude.
Many have been so dazzled by Jackson’s masterful showmanship and the consistent controversy surrounding his life and death that it would be easy not to recognize the overarching social and political themes embodied in his music, videos and public interviews. The intense emotional pull, messages and raw feelings that reverberate through the lyrics and sometimes disturbing video imagery of songs such as “They Don’t Care About Us,” “Heal the World,” “Earth Song,” and “Man in the Mirror” are gut-wrenching. A deeper analysis of Michael Jackson’s work reveals an individual with a burning concern for improving the lives of the disadvantaged and persecuted around the world. The passion and verve with which Jackson digs his hands into the soil and grasps the [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]trees[/color][/color] in his video for “Earth Song,” an operatic piece where he addresses environment and animal welfare, is a reflection of a leader of humanity who cares deeply about the issues he is challenging.
Global events in the weeks surrounding Jackson’s death alone directly mirror the complex problems for which he attempted to raise international awareness. In Iran and before the world’s eyes, civilian demonstrations were squashed and innocent victims like the young Neda Agha-Soltan brutally murdered by instruments of a totalitarian state. In Washington, D.C., a white supremacist motivated by pure hate attempted a killing spree at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, murdering an African American security guard in his rampage. In North Korea, U.S. journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee were unjustly sentenced to twelve years of hard labor to merely serve as international bargaining chips for an evil dictator. Michael Jackson spoke out loudly against these forms of racism and repression and attempted to ignite our passion to prevent the continuance of such abuse, neglect and discrimination. How are we now missing this message when it is even more crucial for it to be absorbed into the public mind? Not only do Michael Jackson’s cries of awakening continue to be ignored but his reputation continues to be smeared.
With the current fixation on the gruesome details surrounding Jackson’s physical demise, we have lost focus on the social relevance of Michael Jackson in our cultural timeline. Jackson’s symbol has the power to force what might be a difficult and uncomfortable period of public self-reflection. What progress has been made on the global humanitarian and civil rights issues that Jackson brought to light for the masses? What realistically still needs to be accomplished in each of these realms to actually make future progress? These are the crucial questions that need to be contemplated in the context of Michael Jackson’s death.

Many may ask why this controversial figure, a man who has been the subject of intense criticism and public backlash, should be given such gravity in framing public discourse over the day’s most important topics. Sometimes it takes one person, not just a political or spiritual leader, who stands out symbolically from the rest of society, to make that society reflect on the principles that it follows and the values it embraces. Jackson, throughout his life and in his death, has been ridiculed and revered, vilified and vaunted. In many respects, his story represents the highest possible highs and the lowest possible lows that life can present to a human being. Michael Jackson’s tremendous talent, success, wealth and public adoration were at odds with his extreme loneliness, fear, addiction and destruction of reputation by public opinion. In the end though, Michael Jackson was much more than an entertainer. His contributions to the entertainment field are no doubt profound. However, it is his broad cultural impact that truly transcends economic, social, political, racial, religious and generational barriers. Jackson rose from being simply a magical performer into becoming a humanitarian of historic import. He was a modern day messenger, a visionary storyteller who raised the level of consciousness for citizens across national boundaries. This level of contribution is what the social contract demands of those who are blessed with natural gifts, power and wealth. Shouldn’t we then embrace and support people who are destined for this life mission instead of deriding them? As history progresses and Jackson’s symbol and work are analyzed in conjunction with the unfolding of human events, the important cultural relevance of his persona will be uncovered. Like a piece of classic Greek literature that embodies timeless themes of human striving and suffering, Michael Jackson’s [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]canon[/color][/color] and celebrity will come to hold a similar place in the modern day cultural pantheon. Why then was it necessary to shoot the messenger?
Martin Bashir’s highly controversial 2003 TV documentary, ‘Living with Michael Jackson’ is just one of the many examples of the ways in which Jackson was unfairly portrayed in the media. The documentary was a PR nightmare for the star. Bashir’s video interviews and commentary were cleverly edited as to purposely [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]paint[/color][/color] Jackson as a megalomaniac child molester. The film focused, in a highly negative manner, on the abuse Jackson suffered as a child at the hands of his father, the rumors behind his drastic physical transformation, his intense friendships with young boys, the nature of his past romantic relationships and questions concerning the genetic lineage of his children, among other sensitive topics. Bashir conveniently cut out footage that presented a countervailing impression of Jackson. Bashir’s documentary and Michael Jackson’s subsequent rebuttal, in the form of a TV special hosted by Maury Povich, provide a candid, never before seen glimpse into what made this man tick. In many respects, Michael Jackson was a lonely soul who found the greatest comfort isolated behind the gates of his Neverland ranch and in the company of animals, children, carnival rides and opulent possessions. In the last years of his life, Jackson became reclusive to the point that he was unable to function even within celebrity society due to the immensity of his fame and the parasitic attention drawn by even the briefest public appearance. Examining these interviews, it becomes clear that Michael Jackson is one of the most misunderstood figures in modern day popular culture.
The incessant media backlash against Michael Jackson throughout his career and now in his death is driven by the fact that Jackson, as a symbolic figure, forces us to look in the mirror and face the difficult and sometimes intractable problems of our society and in ourselves that we may not want to acknowledge. How dare he? Jackson brilliantly shines light on civilization’s accomplishments and failures in their most extreme forms. To be repulsed by the drastic transformation of his face was to simultaneously recognize the excessiveness of a beauty obsessed culture that allows money to change even the most fundamental components of our DNA. When looking and commenting on his mask, weren’t we also secretly acknowledging both the literal and figurative masks that we sometimes hide behind? Ironically, Michael Jackson’s physical changes led him to be branded as an “oddity” or “freak” by a media culture that promotes physical perfection through any means necessary. As Jackson proclaimed during his interviews with Bashir, “Plastic surgery was not invented for Michael Jackson!”
The child molestation charges brought against Jackson first in 1993 and again in 2005, for which he was skewered and roasted by the media and public, were baseless extortion attempts fueled by the petty greed and jealousy of his accusers. Despite settling the 1993 case and being acquitted of the 2005 charges, Michael Jackson’s commercial appeal and public image were severely damaged by the allegations. The child molestation charges against Jackson represented a modern day witch hunt in its most base form. Unfortunately for Jackson, the hunt was not localized to Salem but played out globally through the aid of modern media technology. The molestation charges were fueled by likely feelings of inadequacy in the parents of the alleged child victims who were so enamored by Jackson. Perhaps these parents did not believe that they could compete with the love and material fantasy that Michael Jackson provided to their children which caused them to lash out in desperation. Jealousy combined with greed is highly combustible. The media’s depiction of Michael Jackson as a plastic surgery obsessed eccentric made him an easy target and an unsympathetic victim. It just wasn’t believable that someone that acted and looked like him could be kind, sensitive, compassionate and loving. What was the motivation behind it all? What was wrong with him? There had to be something askew. What if Michael Jackson’s motivation was simply to give hope to those less fortunate? Was all of this then just the senseless destruction of a human being to satisfy our insecurities and quell our fears of the unknown and misunderstood.
As we reflect upon Michael Jackson’s life and now death, it is difficult not to feel sad for the man and view him in a tragic light. With all of his power, wealth and fame, he now lies before us like a bird crushed after being pelted repeatedly by outsized stones. Dejected, Jackson continued to turn inward, fearful of what the world he cared so deeply about changing for the better was throwing at him. The drugs just served as an opiate to the pain of an artist and humanitarian that was overburdened by a mission that he didn’t believe he accomplished. Addicted, it was the greed of those surrounding Michael Jackson who continued to indulge his desires out of self-preservation. The numbness of the painkillers relieved the ache caused by knowing that despite what he sought to give and change in the society around him, the burden of his creations and the scathing critique it engendered had become too overwhelming for one person to sustain. Michael Jackson was a modern Sisyphus, the loin clothed man condemned to repeatedly pushing a rock up a mountain only to see it roll back down. Sadly though, our Sisyphus collapsed under the weight of his struggle.
Michael Jackson was inflated to the position of a pop deity, a mythical figure, only to be crucified and stoned by the media gods who created his success. His bold eccentricities lied outside of the norm of standard, socially acceptable behavior but were they necessarily illegal or wrong? No. Most of Michael Jackson’s actions were unconventional yet, at the same time, wasn’t the grandeur of his celebrity and global status beyond anything that modern day culture has ever witnessed? His grandeur, his eccentricity, each influenced and exaggerated the other.
It is undeniable that Michael Jackson’s immense celebrity and wealth allowed him to remove himself from mainstream society and observe the world from a privileged [COLOR=#0000ff! important][COLOR=#0000ff! important]vantage [COLOR=#0000ff! important]point[/color][/color][/color]. Sometimes though, it takes that fortunate but isolated position to be able to make the least polluted social observations and ultimately produce the most effective societal commentary through art. Throughout history, the work and lives of multiple artists have been ridiculed and scorned by the public during their heyday, only to be placed posthumously into the canon of the Greats. It is without doubt that Michael Jackson will, in due course, garner this same level of critical acclaim as an artist and most importantly, as a humanitarian.
Matt Semino is a New York attorney and legal commentator. He is a graduate of Columbia Law School , Cornell University and is a Fulbright Scholar.
Follow Matt Semino on Twitter: @MattSemino

Contact Matt Semino at Matt@MattSemino.com

http://elitestv.com/pub/2009/07/cel...d-legal-commentary-for-the-celebrity-obsessed
 
there was an Ireporter on CNN inside the Staple Center reporting back to a CNN journalist on what was going on inside the center...the guy got tickets with his Mom and he was saying on air who he saw walk past.... and he noted that Minister Farrakhan attended....

then I saw this and so I am posting it..

[FONT=verdana,arial]You
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[FONT=Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]For Immediate Release
July 23, 2009

Farrakhan speaks on Crucifixion of Michael Jackson
CHICAGO (NOI.org) - The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan is scheduled to deliver a major address on the death of Michael Jackson, Sunday, July 26, at 10 a.m. CST from Mosque Maryam, the Nation of Islam headquarters, located at 7351 South Stony Island in Chicago.
Minister Farrakhan's subject is titled, "The Crucifixion of Michael Jackson and All Responsible Black Leadership." The media and the public are invited to attend. Doors will open at 9 a.m.
The Minister's address will be broadcast live via world wide webcast at http://www.noi.org/webcast. Viewers are encouraged to login in early at http://www.noi.org/webcast to test their systems to properly receive the webcast.
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and no ... I am not muslim...and if I was SO WHAT..

 
JACKSON BREAKS 2009 CHART RECORD

Late superstar MICHAEL JACKSON has become the longest-serving artist at the top of the British charts this year (09) - with his THE ESSENTIAL collection holding onto number one for another week.
The King of Pop's greatest hits CD has topped the U.K. album chart for the fourth week, equalling Lady Gaga's The Fame for time spent at the top.
But Jackson's Number Ones hits package also topped the countdown after the star's tragic death last month (Jun09) giving him a total of five weeks at number one - the most for any artist this year (09) so far.
Jackson now has 10 albums in the top 50 - five of which are in this week's (beg20Jul09) top 20.
Florence & The MAChine's debut Lungs sits at number two, followed by Lady Gaga's The Fame at three and Sunny Side Up by Scottish singer Paolo Nutini at four. The top five is rounded out by La Roux's self-titled debut album.
In the singles chart British boyband JLS hang on to the number one slot for a second week with their first single Beat Again, narrowly keeping Kanye West's protege Mr Hudson from the top with his track Supernova.
The Black Eyed Peas are a new entry at three with I Gotta Feeling, followed by Cascada's Evacuate the Dancefloor at four and Bulletproof by La Roux at five.


http://www.contactmusic.com/news.nsf/article/jackson-breaks-2009-chart-record_1110874
 
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