Michael Jackson Tribute Thread (MJ Lovers Only no Haters PLEASE)

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Supposedly Randy Jackson is on twitter. Twitter.com/randyjackson8. I signed up to follow him. Looks like he just signed up too. I hope this is real.
 
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(it's not that bad of a picture, but I never really know what gets points and what doesnt.)

I'm not sure what gets naught points either but I this pic sent my mind back into the gutter. :lmao:
 
http://www.perezhilton.com/




MJ's Kids In Therapy (Thankfully)


Amidst all the controversy and chaos surrounding Michael Jackson's death, it seems that sometimes people forget he was a father to 3 young children who must miss him terribly.

Sister LaToya Jackson has revealed that Michael's kids, Prince, Paris and Blanket, are all in therapy to help them cope with their father's death.

LaToya says that Prince "just doesn't want to speak about it" while Paris "thinks and talks about her father all the time. She's doing very well, writes a lot and she wears his shirts every day. They still smell of him and it helps her feel close to him."

That makes our heart break!

And what about little Blanket?

"[He] is just a very sad, shy little boy. He cries — he really does cry. It's so painful for him. No one can bring his daddy back and it hurts so much."

The rest of the Jackson family are all helping to raise the kids as Michael would want them to be raised allowing only 2 hours of either the Disney Channel or Nickelodeon a day and planning a big traditional Christmas celebration like they ones shared with their father.

But LaToya speaks brightly about their future:

"Paris doesn't know it but she has all the makings of a star. If she wants to go into showbiz I can see that happening. The boys like the idea of directing, which is what Michael wanted to do. Kids are resilient. He gave them so much love and that is helping them.”

We hope the kiddies are just taking it one day at a time. Losing a parent is incredibly difficult to overcome, but it sounds like they have a great support system.


:guilty:

I feel so bad for all of them but especially Blanket. He is so young, when he's older I wonder how much he will really remember his Daddy. :sad1:
 

http://larrykinglive.blogs.cnn.com/...ve-miko-brando-on-this-is-it-its-all-michael/



October 26, 2009
LKL Web Exclusive: Miko Brando on "This Is It" - It's All Michael
Posted: 06:29 PM ET
Note: Miko Brando, son of actor Marlon Brando, was a personal assistant and long-time friend of Michael Jackson. He will be our guest tomorrow night to discuss the premier of "This Is It." His blog is an LKL Web Exclusive.

A few weeks ago I got a call from Dame Elizabeth Taylor. She asked if I wanted to go see Michael's new movie, "This Is It," at the Sony Studios lot. Well, how do you turn down an invitation like that?

Before I go into the movie, let me say it was an honor to be invited by Dame Elizabeth. She looked great, and it was really nice to see her. Michael had her over all the time, and we got to spend a lot of time together. She's about as good as they come, and she and Michael were great friends. They shared a mutual love, respect and admiration for each other.

Now, the movie. Dame Elizabeth loved it, and so did I. It was like he was still here, which made it a little bit eerie for me, and very emotional. Thank God I had my Kleenex handy.

The movie follows Michael through the last few months at rehearsals for the "This Is It" concerts. It's a lot of backstage footage of him through the process.

Michael's fans will really enjoy this movie. His creative brilliance comes out in the film. It will prove he was ready to go - he was there, just days away from going to London and doing these 50 shows. He was 50 years-old, and he looked and sounded amazing - a genius to the end.

I'm not trying to sell anything to anybody, but this movie shows Michael was a normal person. He went to work, and did his job, his job was just a bit different. It will also show he was great, up to the very end.

My favorite part of the film was when Michael performed "Human Nature." It's a hard song for me to hear it on the radio or on CD, but to see him perform it on stage - it gets to me. I'm not sure why that song more than any other, but I always enjoyed the way he performed it on stage. It did something for me then, and it still does.

As much as I enjoyed the movie, it was hard for me to watch. I still don't watch movies of my dad. It's just too tough. I have the same feelings about seeing Michael on screen. It's hard to watch someone I've spent so many years with - someone who was such a part of my life - look so vibrant on screen, and know he's not with me anymore. I've had so many losses in the last few years, they're stacking up for me.

I'm told some are speculating there was a Michael "double" in parts of the movie. I can tell you that is simply NOT TRUE. I was there for all the rehearsals. That's all Michael. It's Michael Jackson, and only Michael Jackson. They just want to make a stupid story out of nothing.

I think people will leave the theater after seeing "This Is It" saying "WOW!" Wow because he was about as close to genius as you can get, and the film gives us a rare look at that genius. You can't take your eyes off of him because he's so electrifying. I'm proud of it, and I'm sure he would be too.
 
Nice article. I know its going to be great. I know it will be emotional... its already starting to feel that way. sniff-sniff. :sad1:
I just watched a clip on MSN (that I cant find the link for) that at the end they show him when he in his 30s or so, saying somethign like "I love it here, I hate to leave". Well let me tell you.... :sad:
 
/
aaaahhhhggg 1 more day for this is it!!! cant wait till 6 p.m tomorrow:cool1:
 
Jackson's Kids Get Private Movie Screening
Posted Oct 27th 2009 2:12PM by TMZ Staff

TMZ has learned that Michael Jackson's kids will see "This Is It" tonight -- in their own private screening


Sources close to the family tell TMZ the kids were invited by Sony to see a screening of the movie tonight on the Sony lot in Los Angeles. We're told the kids have been sick with the flu all week, but still plan on making the screening tonight.


Read more: http://www.tmz.com/#ixzz0VAWhkKPn
 
Jackson's Kids Get Private Movie Screening
Posted Oct 27th 2009 2:12PM by TMZ Staff

TMZ has learned that Michael Jackson's kids will see "This Is It" tonight -- in their own private screening


Sources close to the family tell TMZ the kids were invited by Sony to see a screening of the movie tonight on the Sony lot in Los Angeles. We're told the kids have been sick with the flu all week, but still plan on making the screening tonight.


Read more: http://www.tmz.com/#ixzz0VAWhkKPn

I'm so glad. I hope this is true.
 
I wish I didn't have to work tomorrow... this is playing at the drive-in here tonight at midnight! I would so love to see it there at midnight. The drive-in is where I spent many nights in the 80's when he was in his hey-day. I'm sure it will be a great movie!
 
I wish I didn't have to work tomorrow... this is playing at the drive-in here tonight at midnight! I would so love to see it there at midnight. The drive-in is where I spent many nights in the 80's when he was in his hey-day. I'm sure it will be a great movie!

A drive in would be fun... but Id want to see it in a theater for the sound quality once too. I wouldnt be against seeing it twice ;)
I almost wish I would have bought midnight tonight seats. But my kids are going and we have school tomorrow. Crud, I still should have. For goodness sakes, we homeschool! I could always say school starts at noon! :rotfl2: (but that doesnt solve the GRUMPY BUTT SYNDROME that they'd both have all day.)
 
When do they close threads with lots of pics? Anyone know how that works?
We need to be sure to get whatever pics we want before that happens and we start a new one.
 
When do they close threads with lots of pics? Anyone know how that works?
We need to be sure to get whatever pics we want before that happens and we start a new one.

I wondered if there was a limit since we are getting pretty high on the number of posts. Didn't realize it had to do with pics too.
 
A drive in would be fun... but Id want to see it in a theater for the sound quality once too. I wouldnt be against seeing it twice ;)
I almost wish I would have bought midnight tonight seats. But my kids are going and we have school tomorrow. Crud, I still should have. For goodness sakes, we homeschool! I could always say school starts at noon! :rotfl2: (but that doesnt solve the GRUMPY BUTT SYNDROME that they'd both have all day.)

You guys all have to post tomorrow so I can hear all about it. I don't go til Saturday. :mad: I should have taken the day off and gone tomorrow myself.
 
Roger Ebert movie review of This Is It !! :thumbsup2

http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20091027/REVIEWS/910289999

This Is It
/ / / October 27, 2009

by Roger Ebert

"This is it," Michael Jackson told his fans in London, announcing his forthcoming concert tour. "This is the final curtain call." The curtain fell sooner than expected. What is left is this extraordinary documentary, nothing at all like what I was expecting to see. Here is not a sick and drugged man forcing himself through grueling rehearsals, but a spirit embodied by music. Michael Jackson was something else.
The film has been assembled from rehearsals from April through June 2009 for a concert tour scheduled for this summer. The footage was "captured by a few cameras," an opening screen tells us, but they were professional high-def cameras and the sound track is full-range stereo. The result is one of the most revealing music documentaries I've seen.

And it's more than that. It's a portrait of Michael Jackson that belies all the rumors that he would have been too weak to tour. That shows not the slightest trace of a spoiled prima donna. That benefits from the limited number of cameras by allowing us to experience his work in something closer to realistic time, instead of fracturing it into quick cuts. That provides both a good idea of what the final concert would have looked like, and a portrait of the artist at work.

Never raising his voice, never showing anger, always soft-spoken and courteous to his cast and crew, Michael with his director, Kenny Ortega, micro-manages the production. He corrects timing, refines cues, talks about details of music and dance. Seeing him always from a distance, I thought of him as the instrument of his producing operation. Here we see that he was the auteur of his shows.

We know now that Michael was subjected to a cocktail of drugs in the time leading up to his fatal overdose, including the last straw, a drug so dangerous it should only be administered by an anesthesiologist in an operating room. That knowledge makes it hard to understand how he appears to be in superb physical condition. His choreography, built from such precise, abrupt and perfectly-timed movements, is exhausting, but he never shows a sign of tiring. His movements are so well synchronized with the other dancers on stage, who are much younger and highly-trained, that he seems one with them. This is a man in such command of his physical instrument that he makes spinning in place seem as natural as blinking his eye.

He has always been a dancer first, and then a singer. He doesn't specialize in solos. With the exception of a sweet love ballad, his songs all incorporate four backup singers and probably supplementary tracks prerecorded by himself. It is the whole effect he has in mind.

It might have been a hell of a show. Ortega and special effects wizards coordinate pre-filmed sequences with the stage work. There's a horror-movie sequence with ghouls rising from a cemetery (and ghosts that were planned to fly above the audience). Michael is inserted into scenes from Rita Hayworth and Humphrey Bogart movies, and through clever f/x even has a machine-gun battle with Bogie. His environmental pitch is backed by rain forest footage. He rides a cherry-picker high above the audience.

His audience in this case consists entirely of stagehands, gaffers, technicians, and so on. These are working people who have seen it all. They love him. They're not pretending. They love him for his music, and perhaps even more for his attitude. Big stars in rehearsal are not infrequently pains in the ***. Michael plunges in with the spirit of a co-worker, prepared to do the job and go the distance.

How was that possible? Even if he had the body for it, which he obviously did, how did he muster the mental strength? When you have a doctor on duty around the clock to administer the prescription medications you desire, when your idea of a good sleep is reportedly to be unconscious for 24 hours, how do you wake up into such a state of keen alertness? Uppers? I don't think it quite works that way. I was watching like a hawk for any hint of the effects of drug abuse, but couldn't see any. Perhaps it's significant that of all the people in the rehearsal space, he is the only one whose arms are covered at all times by long sleeves.

Well, we don't know how he did it. "This Is It" is proof that he did do it. He didn't let down his investors and colleagues. He was fully prepared for his opening night. He and Kenny Ortega, who also directed this film, were at the top of their game. There's a moving scene on the last day of rehearsal when Jackson and Ortega join hands in a circle with all the others, and thank them. But the concert they worked so hard on was never to be.

This is it.
 
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