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I was a junior in highschool when my friend Michael Jackson asked me to go on tour with him. He was spending the summer in Europe staging the largest ever (at the time) rock tour for his latest album DANGEROUS. I begged and pleaded with my parents to let me go. We'd known Michael for a few years by then and grown quite close. He'd even come and stayed at our house in suburban Boston for a few days. Who could forget the time he clumsily tried to make his bed in the guestroom in the morning in an effort to impress my mother so he might be invited back? Or the ill-fated breakfast he tried to cook for my sister and I that we forced down our throats with strained smiles as he carefully watched us? Aside from being the biggest celebrity on the planet, he seemed like a pretty good guy so eventually my parents relented and let me go.

To describe it in one word: impossibly awesome (because one word is not nearly enough). To be seventeen and the sidekick of the greatest rockstar the world had ever known was indescribable. Paris, Rome, London, Munich, Athens and more. Every city we went to essentially shut down to host him. Where Michael roamed, a million cameras followed. A buzz reverberated and the bright light of fame trailed. And I felt the halo effect, often donning one of his iconic fedoras, his signature sunglasses, and one of the countless slick tour jackets Pepsi supplied us with. Private planes, police escorts, marching soldiers (an inexplicable MJ favorite), Michael was more than happy to share his celebrity because he had more than he'd ever know what to do with. He joked that I could ride "shotgun" with him anytime I liked. He knew I was living vicariously through him and he was happy for it.

Arriving to stadiums hours before showtime, while he'd have to go through elaborate pre-show routines and wardrobe sessions, I'd wander out onto the stage where dozens upon dozens of sound techs, engineers, and roadies would be rigging the massive stage and prepping the show. Even four or five hours before showtime, thousands of fans would push as far forward as possible so as to get as close to MJ when the show began. You've seen the videos of crazy fans, dehydrated and dazed, having to be dragged out of the crowd by hustling paramedics. I saw it up close and personal -- even got involved once or twice when fans started dropping by the dozens.

During the show itself, sometimes I'd hang around just off the stage watching Michael kill it. The man knew how to perform and it was like a meditation to just to witness it. At other times, I'd hang in his dressing room, outfitted to the nines with candy, orange juice, and video games.

After the show, Michael would retreat back to the dressing room too and then be forced to stand around awkwardly and greet VIPs, celebrity guests, sponsors and others who'd earned backstage privileges. It was easy to see that he was far more comfortable singing and dancing in front of a 100,000 strong than socializing with a dozen.

After those formalities, he and I would retreat back to his hotel, usually the biggest and best suite in the whole city. Michael almost always had the place stocked with old movies, more candy, and more orange juice. Even as thousands of adoring fans chanted his name from the streets below, we'd chat about music, movies, video games, girls, and occasionally the meaning of life.

But then something unexpected happened. The awesomeness wore off for me. Believe it or not, I started to get bored of sitting up in that suite with just MJ. And then I started to feel claustrophobic. I was seventeen years old, in freaking Europe, surrounded by a rock band, sexy dancers who could bend in all sorts of ways and backup singers who hit octaves I fantasized about. They liked to rage every night after the show and openly talked about their exploits the following day. Soon enough, I gained the courage to ask Michael if he minded if I slipped out with some of the others after his shows.

Not only did he say it was okay, he encouraged me. Outfitted with his fedora, sunglasses, and tour jackets, getting the best table at the best restaurants, into the VIP sections of the hottest clubs, and the adulation of all the local girls was easier than could be imagined. Often when I got back from a night on the town, Michael would call me in my hotel room and summon me. I'd head up to his suite and proceed to narrate my night's misadventures to him and debrief him on all the latest gossip surrounding his band. I didn't really need to dramatize my exploits, but I did anyway because I knew that he was living vicariously through me and I was happy for it.

It's a cliché to say that your highschool summers are the most memorable of your life, but I challenge anyone to say how mine could not be. For years, I wore the badge of that summer and my many exploits over it boldly and boastfully. Then of course, as time passed and Michael became embroiled in scandals involving teen boys, all of a sudden my summer as his teen sidekick didn't have the same glamour to it. Now it was a stigma, something I treasured but certainly did not tout.

Over the years my brotherhood with Michael evolved. When I went to college in NYC and lived uptown, he lived at the Four Seasons in midtown and I'd see him regularly, sharing with him collegiate exploits and adventures. Years later when he became a father, he invited me over to Neverland to see "the greatest thing he ever created" -- his son Prince. More time passed. I watched as he endured the agony of his dramatic fall from grace, his resurrection through his children Prince, Paris, and Blanket, and then once again the agony of his descent into the shadows of things he couldn't control.

During the last years of his life, I got to see his creativity up close and personal once again. He and I were working on a graphic novel together entitled THE FATED. He had big plans for it. One day he wanted to direct it as a film, impress his mentor Steven Spielberg, and have his favorite actor Will Smith be in it. It was classic MJ in terms of process, intense at times, with intermittent months of total inaction in between. The story of an iconic Rockstar worn out by the agony of his fame, driven to the most desperate measures, only to discover that his super-stardom has him "fated" for far more than just fame and fortune. Of course, I eventually realized Michael was giving me a window into his own personal allegory and I felt privileged to help record it. Sadly, we never were able to complete the story and I was left instead with an eerie tale without a proper ending (note: I hope with the assistance of Michael's Estate - in the hands of some very capable and conscious stewards - that we'll one day be able to share The Fated with all the dignity it and Michael deserves).

Like The Fated, we never got to see a proper ending to Michael's tale. Instead there's a tangled legacy, the bright light of fame shining over the tumbled necropolis of unfounded allegations twisted around the neverending tenderness for his own children. it's funny to me how in the last year, in death Michael has been canonized by many of the same commentators who were so relentless in tearing him down while he lived. He'd see the irony in it and call them bad names - the man could curse like a drunken sailor.

One night while on that tour with him, toward the end when I was getting ready to go back to school and the real world, Michael asked me if I was glad that I had come, even though I couldn't stay for the whole tour. He knew I was sad that I wouldn't get to stay until the very end. Still, it was an insane question and I told him so. "Are you kidding?" I said. "Every second I was here with you was a privilege. Thank you for letting me ride shotgun even for a little while."
posted by Cecilholmes
12 year investigation PROVES Michael Jackson faked his death; it's all smoke and mirrors, illusions, tricks and of course lies must have been told over and over by family members who were all motivated to save their loved one's life.

In an 115000 word Emoviebook published May 2010, 4 documentaries:

Alive! Is Michael Jackson Really Dead? (2010)
Alive 2 Michael Jackson The Great Xscape (2016)
Alive III Michael Jackson The Living Dead (2017)
Alive 4 Michael Jackson The Missing Pieces (2020)

and

the short film "A Prisoner of Fame" (2021) encompasses the Alive Docu-series that has 5 star ratings on amazon and highly acclaimed reviews on vimeo.com


Watch this to get started learning that Michael Joe Jackson faked his death: link based on facts from specifically Alive 2 Michael Jackson The GREAT Xscape which is just one documentary in the 4 part Alive docu-series. Go to www.MichaelJacksonInsider.com
posted by MJBabbies1958
July 3 1982

Before we got out the car Michael said to me “listen, I love you I don’t want you to feel like your a groupie or something” “Michael, it’s not that I don’t love you, it’s just that I’ve been with guys before and they’ve broken my heart it’s just made it hard for me to give myself to anyone” I replied “ So, you’re a virgin” “Yeah” I said shyly. Michael smiled and said “ that’s great and I will take it slow so whenever your ready”. Just then the driver opened the door, Michael opened the door and held his hand out to help me. When else were finally...
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posted by MJBabbies1958
July 1, 1982

I woke up to my alarm clock disappointed because Michael never responded, which I didn't expect him to so I don't know why I'm surprised. I grabbed a white pair of shorts and black my Jackson 5 shirt and under clothes. I went downstairs to get a rag and towel to wash off and looked on the table to see a envelope with my sisters name on it and it had Michael's name on it as well. I quickly ran to the table and ripped it open:

"Dear, Zoey first I would like to say happy belated birthday, sorry it took me two days to respond I had loads of fan mail. Your letter really stood out to me,...
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posted by saeraghunanan
In my opinion about Michael Jackson, he is one of few musicians who has a successful career despite whatever problems or mistakes he may have done in the past.

You have to understand that when he and his siblings form 'The Jackson 5', he became a favorite musician worldwide. I have listen some of his earliest songs to his last album when he passed away in 2009.

I am not a major fan of Michael Jackson, but he is one of many musicians that I listen to now and again whenever I am on YouTube.

You can also search some of his dance moves on YouTube by YouTubers who had tried out his moves, such as 'The Moonwalk', The Thriller', 'The Lean' and many more that I have not heard of myself.

There are a few songs that I do like from Michael Jackson when he was alive before his death.

Thriller, Billie Jean, Smooth Criminal, Earth Song, They Don't Care About Us, Black or White and Man in the Mirror
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Three weeks later on the eve before Michael leaves to finish the last leg of his tour with his brothers, Michael and Holly have been desperately trying to pretend everything is normal. But when Holly sees Michael pull out his suitcase to start packing as she starts cooking dinner she gets a sickening feeling in the pit of her stomach. When he started this tour, it wasn't that big of a deal because they weren't living together, but now that they were things were different. Both of them didn't want to admit how quickly they got used to seeing each other every night and having the comfort of knowing...
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The next morning, Michael and Holly sit outside on their private balcony having breakfast in the warm sunshine. Both of them are silent but are saying so many things by the expressions on their faces. Periodically one will look up at the other over their coffee cups with a sly smile or a giggle, or give a subtle touch of the hand that makes shivers run up each other's spines. Michael and Holly feel so happy and content that it almost feels unreal or suspicious. To know both can go home together and face the harsh realities of life and their careers make getting up in the morning now seem easier...
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Two months later, Holly has still been suffering from migraines. It always seems when she does she always finds a way to stay at Michael’s house because it makes her feel more comforted than her mom. Within a short amount of time so much has changed in the William household and at some moments Holly can’t handle the pressures, especially with her mom. One slow Thursday morning after Holly is finishing up her schooling at the dining room table, Mrs. Williams walks in with a brown moving box in her hands. “Holly, later today I’m going to need you to be scarce in the house as the movers...
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One month later Holly is visiting Michael and his brothers at their variety show in Los Angeles. Since the visit at Michael’s house, Mrs. Williams has been pushing for Holly to visit Michael as much as he would permit, which would be all the time if Michael he could have it his way. But inviting her to the variety show is always a way to get Mrs. William to say yes. Within only a short amount of time, Holly has taken quickly to Michael. Now it would be unusual for Holly not to call him every night after his work to see how his day was. Her young innocence is a breath of fresh air for Michael,...
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Less than a week has passed since The Mike Douglas Show and Michael cannot get Holly out of his mind. Her bold yet angelic voice is still ringing in his ears. No matter what he has been doing she somehow manages to pop back into his mind where he tries desperately to shake it off, but to no avail. He was hoping she would stop by for a visit like he suggested, but nothing. Perhaps it was too forward of him? Maybe his niceness was misconstrued as creepy to Mrs. Williams. The thought has made him scratch his head multiple times. Luckily he has been working on songs to keep him occupied till the...
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