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FRI
MARCH 28 2008
THRILLER
STILL SELLING!
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Thriller this week moves to No 14 in the U.K. chart.
In the world Global chart MJ stays at an invincible
number 4.
UK CHART : THRILLER. No 14
GLOBAL. No 4. SALES 160,000
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THURS
27th MARCH
2008
MICHAEL
JACKSON & NEVERLAND
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Moving vans were at Neverland over
the weekend. Michael Jackson regained control of the
ranch last week and there's speculation he's planning
to move back in.
YAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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FRI
21ST 2008
MJ THRILLING THE CHARTS
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Michael Jackson's Thriller add's another Million
sales to previous copies sold of his 25 year old album.
What's most shocking is that his sister Janet can
not even compete with Album sales and thats with her
NEW album that has just been released.
As Janet's album slowly departs from the charts Thriller
is still in the U.K. TOP 10.
The Figure of 1 million units sold comes from Global
Track Chart, the official global hitlist compiled
and provided by Media Traffic
Source: Global Track Chart.
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MARCH
16th 2008
THE
OBSERVER
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OUT TODAY!
The whole world in his hands
Such is the state of Michael Jackson's career 25 years
after the glittering success of Thriller that even
Neverland's future is in doubt. But with plans for
a new album and tour, could the former King of Pop
be on the verge of the comeback to end them all?
It is hard to remember, now, a time
when Michael Jackson existed as anything other than
a spectacle. We are used to his bizarre excesses,
to those blurry images of his blank, molten face obscured
by giant black Aviators. We are no longer taken aback
by his eccentric public appearances with his mouth
covered in a surgical mask, his children shrouded
in gauzy veils. We are accustomed to the oft-repeated
tales of Jackson's weirdness - that he slept in an
oxygen tank, that he dangled his baby over a Berlin
balcony, that his nose has to be stuck on with a plaster.
It has, all of it, become strangely
normal to us - just one more instance of his cartoon
madness, to be dismissed with a weary shrug. Perhaps
the worst thing you can say about Jackson, who once
so delighted in his own inventiveness, is that he
no longer surprises us.
But back before he became a pantomime myth of his
own creation, before he stepped over the gossamer
line that separates genius from freakery, before young
boys started spending the night in his bedroom and
the state judiciary put him on trial for child molestation,
Michael Jackson was the world's greatest pop star.
In his prime, he sold more than 750 million records,
collected 13 Grammys (eight of which were awarded
on a single night) and created Thriller, which remains,
25 years later, the bestselling album of all time.
Even now, with everything else that
has come and gone in the intervening years, people
still talk of Jackson's halcyon era with reverence,
remembering a time when an ambitious young black man
from Gary, Indiana, grabbed pop music with both hands
and shook it until the pips squeaked.
His influence is still felt by today's
new artists. Ne-Yo, the Grammy Award-winning singer
and songwriter whose first album, 2006's In My Own
Words, went platinum and sold over four million copies,
has often been touted as 'the new Michael Jackson'
- an accolade he describes as 'the greatest compliment
anyone could pay me'.
'Michael Jackson is the reason I sing,'
he said recently. 'I knew Off the Wall backwards,
forwards, where he took a breath - all that stuff.'
'Musically, he changed the game,' says
Paul McKenzie, the editor of urban music magazine
Touch. 'When I was growing up, everyone had their
favourite Michael Jackson track in the same way that
white, middle-class kids had a favourite Enid Blyton
book. His music gave you a sense that things were
possible.'
But whenever anyone talks about Jackson's
greatness, it is always in the past tense. His talent,
once the cause of such manic adulation, has become
a side-show. It is the single, memorable aria in the
broader operatic story of Jackson's shattering fall
from grace.
'I spend a lot of time feeling sorry
for Michael Jackson,' says Diane Dimond, the former
Court TV reporter who doggedly followed the Jackson
trial and wrote a bestselling book about it. 'I don't
think that he will ever be what he was.'
Later this year, Jackson turns 50. It
is an improbable coming of age for someone who modelled
himself on Peter Pan, who built a giant theme park,
peopled by children and a playful pet chimp called
Bubbles. It is an age that, for most people, would
prompt a period of reflection. For Jackson, the reality,
as always, is slightly different. Although he once
admitted to his former manager that he never wanted
to perform in public after his 40th birthday, Jackson
appears to have been forced by financial necessity
to contemplate what had previously seemed so hateful.
From the late 1990s, Jackson got into
the habit of spending $35m a year while his earnings
hovered around the $12m mark. Until very recently,
he was said to be on the brink of bankruptcy. He was
paying a rumoured 20 per cent interest rate on a huge
loan, believed to be worth around $300m, from the
Bank of America and sold onto Fortress Investments.
Last month it was reported that, after defaulting
on payments, his Neverland sanctuary in Santa Barbara
County would be sold at auction on 19 March unless
he raised the requisite $25m. If the coverage is to
be believed, it seems that the need for untapped sources
of income is pressing; yet he has produced no new
material since his trial three years ago. If he succeeds
in beating the odds and tours one last time - moonwalking
and thrilling us in equal measures - it looks set
to be the greatest comeback in musical history.
Jackson's trial, on 10 counts of child
molestation, attempted abduction and administering
alcohol to a minor, proved a tipping point. Although,
he was found not guilty on all charges, it was also
a public relations disaster. At his arraignment in
January 2004, he performed an impromptu dance on top
of a parked car, to the wild hysteria of the gathered
crowds. During the trial, he frequently turned up
late, on one occasion shuffling into court in pyjamas
and slippers after claiming he had a back injury.
Even at his lowest ebb, Jackson seemed
unable to grasp that his erratic behaviour and weirdness
were losing him sympathy rather than gaining it. 'I
was waiting for him to come to court one day and he
was running late, so I stepped out to make a call,'
says Dimond. 'There Michael Jackson was with his mother,
who was holding a picnic basket, and with his bodyguards,
and he looked right at me and made this violent slashing
gesture across his throat.' She laughs uneasily. 'And
I thought, "Whatever happened to that wispy little
voice?"'
The shrinking nucleus of his diehard
fans remained as loyal as ever. When news of the 'not
guilty' verdicts was relayed to a gathering crowd
outside court, one woman, bathed in the ecstatic zeal
of an Old Testament prophet, symbolically released
10 doves into the Californian skies. But his supporters
appeared increasingly to be a lunatic fringe and the
public airing of such uncomfortable allegations left
Jackson reeling. It was, perhaps, the first time he
had been confronted with the disparity between the
way he saw himself and how the public saw him.
As the jurors filed out to give their
press conferences and sign exclusive publishing deals,
Jackson and his three children boarded a private jet
to Bahrain. It was the beginning of his nomadic phase
of Garbo-esque solitariness. He spent six months as
the guest of Sheik Abdullah bin Hamad Al Khalifa,
the son of Bahrain's king and one of the few men rich
enough to subsidise Jackson's entourage for weeks
on end.
Although he claimed that he liked Bahrain
because he could wear an abaya, the traditional dress
of a Muslim woman, and go out to shopping malls incognito,
some suspected that there was a rather more prosaic
reason for his sudden disappearance from the States:
Jackson was in a serious financial pickle.
During his extended sojourn at the Sheikh's
expense, Jackson allegedly signed a six-year agreement
with his host to record two albums, produce a live
musical show and write an autobiography. In return
for his signature, the Prince built Jackson his own
recording studio in the royal palace and advanced
him $7m. But with the money in (gloved) hand, Jackson
flew out of the country. This time, there was no private
plane - Jackson took a business-class commercial flight
to Germany. To add to his monetary woes, Prince Abdullah
announced his intention to sue the singer in the High
Court.
'You ask yourself why a man who has
just been found innocent would want to travel the
world like that,' says one former employee who was
cut adrift without pension or pay-off after several
years' service. 'The answer is: he's trying to escape
his debts - huge debts and lots of them. He had no
idea of how to save money. For Michael, it was always
spend, spend, spend. He didn't know what money was
worth.'
A cursory examination of Jackson's labyrinthine
finances proves almost as confusing as seeking to
understand the video for 'Earth Song'. On the surface,
it looks as though his income and assets - his half
ownership of the Sony/ATV music catalogue including
251 Beatles songs estimated to be worth $1bn, the
royalties from album sales, the lucrative merchandising
and sponsorship deals - would more than cover his
outgoings. But this would be to underestimate the
extraordinary largesse that is Michael Jackson Inc.
For several years in the run-up to the trial, Jackson
put up the Beatles catalogue, as well as copyrights
to his own songs, as collateral for roughly $270m
in bank loans, which he used to fund his increasingly
regular spending sprees.
'I once saw him looking through a magazine
and ordering almost everything he saw,' a source told
an American journalist in 2002. "'I want that
motorcycle. That bike. This. That..." It was
like one of those shows where the contestant has five
minutes to run through a store and fill up as many
shopping carts as possible. It was crazy.'
Then there are the other costs: the
out-of-court settlements totalling $25.5m with the
families of boys who had accused him of child abuse
and the upkeep of Neverland - $2m a year to cover
the annual staff budget, a further $3m to maintain
and guard the sprawling territory.
After the trial, Jackson kept spending,
but he failed to produce any new material and his
record sales were declining. He was forced to take
out new loans to pay off the interest on old ones
- in 2005, he was rumoured to be making monthly payments
of $4.5m.
A year later, while Jackson was still
abroad, Sony agreed to negotiate more favourable terms
from a loans company in return for the right to buy
half of Jackson's 50 per cent stake in the Beatles
catalogue. But the restructuring only held for so
long in the face of continuous lawsuits from former
employees. Thirty of his Neverland personnel were
suing the singer for $306,000 in unpaid wages, while
California state officials fined him a further $69,000
for failure to provide employment insurance in 2006.
So perhaps it was unsurprising that
Jackson felt the need to get away from it all, but
when he did so, it was in his usual inimitable style.
After Bahrain, he went on a brief sojourn to Europe
before shoring up in Dubai in November and checking
into a $9,000 a night luxury suite in the Burj Al
Arab hotel. Again, Jackson took to wearing traditional
Arab female dress, at one point walking into a women's
public lavatory to the astonishment of onlookers.
As his bank accounts dwindled, he became
like a fevered showbiz version of Blanche DuBois and
was increasingly dependent on the kindness of strangers.
In June 2006, he decamped to Ireland, taking up residence
in the vast Irish mansion of Riverdance impresario
Michael Flatley in Co Cork before moving into nearby
Luggala Castle, renting the 6,000-acre property (complete
with minstrels' gallery) for around £15,000
a week.
Three months later, he popped over to
St Tropez for a sunshine break with his children in
tow and was pictured by the paparazzi wearing a woman's
floppy sunhat and high heels. In December 2006, he
resurfaced in Las Vegas, renting a modest, single-floor
house in the suburbs, where he is still partly based.
'He was in talks with a major casino in Vegas about
putting on a live show,' says Matt Fiddes, a close
personal friend and former bodyguard. 'He's not short
of offers, I know that.'
But the show never came off. Last March,
Jackson was spotted in Japan, signing autographs for
£600 a throw. In August, he moved his travelling
troupe into the modest family home of his long-time
friends, Dominick and Connie Cascio, in Franklin Lakes,
New Jersey where he was seen two months later buying
Hallowe'en costumes.
His friends say that he has assumed
the role of globe-hopping house-guest in order to
escape unwanted press attention and that he has to
wear these improbable disguises as a matter of necessity.
'Mikey can never stay in one place for too long because
he will be mobbed,' says Fiddes. 'He has to swap hotels
week after week. I've known him to get to one city
where he's booked two hotels for a week just in case
he's spotted in one and needs to move to the other.
He changes telephone numbers almost weekly. It's not
a good life, it's very lonely.' Another source says
that of his three children, Jackson appears closest
to his youngest, Prince Michael Jackson II, aka 'Blanket',
who often accompanies him to meetings.
Not even Jackson can keep moonwalking
away from his problems for ever. With the threat of
his home being sold from under him, he seems finally
to have accepted the need to develop a financial rescue
plan - and fast.
Since the tail end of last year, there
has been an incremental public relations drive to
refocus Jackson's core fanbase and to cement his position
as a global superstar. It has been pushed largely
by Raymone Bain, Jackson's spokeswoman, a razor-sharp,
micro-miniskirt-wearing partner at a Washington-based
PR firm.
In December, she negotiated Jackson's
first press interview since the trial with Ebony magazine,
the biggest-selling African-American glossy. In it,
Jackson portrayed himself as a civil rights pioneer,
opening the door for other black artists to have their
songs played on MTV: 'They [black artists] came to
me so many times and said, "Michael, if it wasn't
for you, there would be no MTV." They told me
that, over and over, personally.' Ironically, the
photographs depicted Jackson with an almost entirely
white skin-tone, the airbrushed smoothness of his
face broken only by a pronounced Travolta-esque chin
cleft.
But the 19-page interview and Jackson's
highly publicised return from exile proved so successful
that one American TV pundit was moved to exclaim it
was 'the biggest comeback since Lazarus'. Rumours
started to seep out from the Jackson camp that, for
the first time in almost 10 years, he was working
again. 'He's back in the studio, working his guts
out on new material,' confirms Fiddes. 'He's his own
competition. He wants to beat the Thriller album and
that's what he's working on now.'
His management is said to be in weekly
negotiations with the O2 arena in London to stage
a series of concerts later this year - the last offer
from AEG Live, the consortium that owns the Millennium
Dome, was believed to be a £5m guarantee for
10 nights, with a maximum of 30 nights adding up to
£15m. The involvement of Kevin Wall, the Emmy
award-winning producer who created the Live Earth
music concert and who produced the spectacular 'Michael
Jackson: Live from Bucharest' in 1992 - a television
special that gave the HBO network its highest ever
ratings - is apparently also likely. But Jackson is
said to be wary of returning to do live shows without
having new material to perform. Despite being hotly
tipped to appear at the Grammys last month, negotiations
floundered at the final hurdle (amid rumours that
Jackson demanded to be referred to as the King of
Pop throughout the show).
One of the reasons for his no-show is
said to be that Jackson has been discussing his future
with pop impresario Simon Fuller, the chief executive
of 19 Entertainment and creator of Pop Idol, who recently
flew to Jackson's semi-permanent base in Las Vegas.
Fuller is understood to be hesitant for Jackson to
sign up to any public performance that simply re-hashes
old hits, instead looking for more novel ways to return
to the public arena. Jackson himself may well want
to produce some substantial new material before staging
a complete comeback some way down the line.
Increasingly, Jackson's inner circle
is shrinking down to a core group of key advisers.
Mindful of having taken bad advice in the past, he
now relies on the select counsel of a handful of eminences
grises. One of them is the suave Peter Lopez, a highly-regarded
entertainment lawyer with excellent Hollywood credentials
- he is married to Catherine Bach, the actress best
known for playing Daisy Duke in the television series
Dukes of Hazzard. Lopez confirms that Jackson is in
'continued dialogue' with AEG Live and that there
have been a number of 'informal conversations' with
both Fuller and Wall over the course of the past year.
'All of these I would categorise as preliminary, ongoing
discussions,' he says, over the phone from his office
in Los Angeles. 'Michael is very excited to be moving
forward.'
Lopez also insists that talk of a financial
crisis is 'hogwash'. 'Neverland is not being auctioned
off, it's simply that Michael has changed lenders.
This talk emerges from several journalists in the
US who love to spin things in the most negative way
possible. The facts are the facts and he's had some
cash flow issues in the past, but it's all under control
now.'
With the financial situation on a comparatively
stable footing, Jackson has been able to concentrate
on recording new songs, many of them executive produced
by Will.i.am, Rodney Jerkins and Teddy Riley. According
to those who have heard them, the tracks are near
pitch-perfect pop songs for a new generation.
Certainly, it seems that in spite of
his advancing years, Jackson's marketing operation
is keen to target a younger fanbase. Official Michael
Jackson profile pages have popped up on social networking
sites such as Bebo and MySpace and ringtones of all
the original Thriller tracks have been created for
download. Pepsi are using 'Thriller' as the backing
song for a new advertising campaign for the SoBe Life
Water drink and there is even talk of the Jackson
5 reforming to take part in an autobiographical stage
musical.
A 25th anniversary edition of Thriller
released last month showcased new collaborations with
Kanye West and Akon. Speaking recently, Akon said:
'Just to be in the same room [with him], I felt everything
I wanted to accomplish in life has been achieved.
Some artists think regional, some think national,
I was thinking international. He thinks planets. It's
on another level.'
Would a comeback be an assured success?
Interest in the King of Pop has declined sharply -
when a Los Angeles casino auctioned off 1,100 lots
of Jackson memorabilia last May, there were barely
any takers. His last live performance was at the World
Music Awards in November 2006 when he disappointed
fans by singing just a few lines of 'We Are the World'.
But given that the Spice Girls grossed £100m
on their recent comeback tour, it's not surprising
that one insider privy to Jackson's deal-making says
'we're sure he could dwarf that'. That same source
is confident that Jackson would be physically robust
enough to tackle a world tour. 'I met him recently,
and while he is very skinny, he's not frail - he's
not the zonked-out, doddery character you might imagine
by any stretch of imagination.'
In spite of the obvious risks, it is
hard not to be caught up in the fairytale that Jackson
has spent his life creating. Whatever his dissenters
might say, he remains one of the greatest icons in
pop history, a man touched with musical genius, who
revels in the razzle dazzle of his self-created pageantry.
If his life so far has been an unforgettable performance,
the finale promises to be show-stopping. There is
no one who could stage a comeback quite like Michael
Jackson. After all, not even Lazarus knew how to moonwalk.
Jacko's greatest hits
Michael Jackson's 1982 album Thriller
remains the bestselling LP of all time, with more
than 3.7 million sales in the UK alone (over 50 million
worldwide). The follow-up, 1987's Bad, is actually
only 130,000 sales behind in the UK, with 3.57 million.
1991's Dangerous managed just under 2 million and
1995's HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book 1 sold
1.5 million.
The several compilations released since
his last studio album, 2001's Invincible, have had
mixed fortunes. 2001's Greatest Hits History: Vol.
1 sold 245,000 and only reached number 15 in the charts;
2003's Number Ones sold 1.5 million and, appropriately,
went to No.1; while 2005's The Essential sold 275,000
and reached number two.
· All figures for UK sales unless
otherwise stated. Information supplied by the Official
UK Charts Company
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited
2008
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THURS
MARCH 13th 2008
Lawyer:
Neverland Ranch Saved
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Michael Jackson has refinanced Neverland ranch in
time to save his famed California spread from a public
auction that was scheduled for later this month.
Jackson attorney L. Londell McMillan told The Associated
Press on Thursday that the pop star has worked out
a "confidential" agreement with Fortress
Investment Group, LLC. The deal allows him to retain
ownership of the famed property in Los Olivos, Calif.
"Neverland and MJ are fine," McMillan said.
An auction date had been set for March 19 because
of $24.5 million the singer owed on the 2,500-acre
spread northwest of Santa Barbara.
A source close to the singer who requested anonymity
because of the sensitivity of the matter said it's
not clear whether Jackson will keep Neverland. Jackson
has not lived there since his acquittal on child molestation
charges in 2005.
SOURCE : AP
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WED
MARCH 12th 2008
Woman Arrested For Trespassing At Michael
Jackson's Ranch
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LOS OLIVOS, Calif. -- A woman who has
long claimed to be Michael Jackson's wife has been
arrested for trespassing at the entertainer's Neverland
Ranch.
Santa Barbara County sheriff's deputies
were called to the Santa Ynez Valley ranch on Monday
night after Neverland security officers detained Billie
Jean Jackson on the property.
Sgt. Martin Eberling said the 60-year-old
Santa Maria woman claimed she was the pop star's wife
and Neverland was hers, too.
The woman was arrested and booked at
Santa Barbara County Jail for investigation of trespassing.
Bail was set at $2,500.
SOURCE : http://www.knbc.com
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MARCH
11th 2008
MJ
on the cover.
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Michael will feature in this weeks Sunday
Observer Magazine.
The Observer is NOT a tabloid so we
expect a review of Michael's music without the usual
here say stories.
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TUESDAY
MARCH 11th 2008
PLAYMOBIL
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TUES
MARCH 11th 2008
BEATLES
NOT FOR SALE
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The company that owns the rights to
a vast majority of The Beatles music catalog has
questioned reports that the Fab Four have cut a
deal with Steve Jobs.
Sony/ATV Music Publishing, the joint
venture owned by Sony and singer Michael Jackson,
has thrown cold water on newspaper stories out of
London that The Beatles catalog would soon be available
on iTunes. A spokeswoman for Sony/ATV Music Publishing
told CNET News.com that the reports are "untrue."
Sony/ATV is a pretty good source.
While EMI Group owns the recording rights to The
Beatles catalog, Sony and Jackson own the rights
to the vast majority of the catalog's publishing
rights. Had a deal been cut, Sony/ATV would "absolutely
be informed," the Sony/ATV spokeswoman said.
The Beatles' official Web site (Credit: Apple Corps)
Stories about the Fab Four heading to iTunes crop
up every few months, it seems, and rumors and unconfirmed
reports have been circulating for years. This time,
the story appeared to have legs as it was reported
by three large British newspapers. They all cited
unnamed sources.
Under media scrutiny, the stories
began showing cracks on Sunday. One of the newspapers
reported that Apple was willing to pay the Beatles
about $600 million. The blog Silicon Alley Insider
noted that Apple, which grosses about 33 cents for
every song sale, would have to sell 1.8 billion
Beatles songs to break even.
A high-level music industry source
said an agreement between The Beatles and Apple
could still get inked in 2008. They emphasized,
however, that the British papers were wrong to say
the deal was finalized.
Representatives for EMI and Apple
declined to comment for the story.
Beatles-iTunes partnership would make
sense
One has to wonder why these rumors
and unconfirmed reports continue to crop up. Is
it a case of wishful thinking on the part of Beatles
fans or Apple?
The availability of The Beatles, the
best-selling band of all time, on iTunes would send
the most dramatic signal to date that digital downloads
are an integral part of mainstream music, said Susan
Kevorkian, a music analyst with research group IDC.
"It's important for iTunes and
online music services in general because it legitimizes
IP-based music services," Kevorkian said. "It
also points to the fact that digital music services
are maturing when important groups that have been
high-profile holdouts come onboard."
In the last several years, Madonna,
Led Zeppelin, and Metallica--artists who once spurned
Internet sales of their music--reversed themselves
and embraced iTunes.
Earlier Monday, Chris Castle, a music
lawyer and former record label executive predicted
that a Web-based Beatlemania would be big for iTunes
and Beatles fans alike.
He said The Beatles could release
formerly unreleased music "that they might
have lying around," and the offering could
also include some kind of video element. Even though
The Beatles broke up nearly 40 years ago, Castle
said Apple Corps, the band's media company, would
find a way to "dress up the offering"
so that it would create excitement even among longtime
Beatles fans.
Jeff Jones, the new head of Apple
Corps, "is known as a catalog genius,"
Castle said. "If there is anybody that can
figure out how to make this work it's him. I would
expect to see some pleasant surprises from Jeff."
Castle said that what fans likely
won't find with a Beatles offering on iTunes is
a discount.
"This is a band that has sold
music at premium prices for four decades,"
Castle said. "They've never been discounted.
I would be shocked to see any competition on price.
Think about it. The Beatles have kept (their brand)
precious and popular for a long time. They've done
this by knowing how to treat their fans and knowing
what didn't work for them."
The Beatles were unlikely candidates
to join iTunes. Apple Corps had a series of trademark
disputes with Apple Inc. going back to 1976 when
Beatle guitarist George Harrison saw an ad for the
then Apple Computer. The band thought the new company
had infringed on their trademark and sued. The case
was settled out of court.
There were other legal skirmishes
along the way but last year, Paul McCartney told
reporters in Great Britain that he thought a deal
with Apple CEO Steve Jobs was close to being finalized.
If and when The Beatles arrive at
iTunes, there'll be plenty of people who will ask,
"Why all the fuss?" The music has been
available for free on peer-to-peer sites for years.
According to Castle, The Beatles were
an unprecedented combination of talent and timing,
and even after all this time, still possess an enormous
following of people who will be willing to pay.
"You had the musical genius,
business genius, and extraordinary popularity that
crossed all genres and formats," Castle said.
"You've never had that before or since."
SOURCE : http://www.news.com
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FRI
07th MARCH 2008
MICHAEL
JACKSON’S “THRILLER”
VIDEO STARS YOU AS PART OF THE 25TH ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION!
|
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Seminal Video from the 20th Century
is Enhanced by Breakthrough Technology for the Next
Century.
For the first time ever and through
the magic of technology, anyone can now star in
the greatest music video of all time – Michael
Jackson’s Thriller - as part of the album’s
worldwide 25th anniversary celebration! Michael
Jackson and Epic/Legacy Recordings (Sony BMG) have
partnered with innovative media company Big Stage
and YouTube to bring this landmark entertainment
experience to the world.
Central to the tribute is the ability
for fans to easily create a life-like 3-D version
of themselves that literally replaces the role of
Michael Jackson in the music video. This cutting
edge technology was developed by Big Stage and is
currently in Beta. The campaign begins today at
http://www.MichaelJackson.com/mythrillervideo
With Big Stage’s 3-D capture
technology, users take three simple pictures of
themselves with a digital camera and upload them
to the Web, where they will be quickly converted
into a life-like 3-D avatar called an @ctor™.
Big Stage’s proprietary technology will automatically
map the contours of a user’s face to generate
an incredibly accurate replica of the user, fully
equipped for animation. In under a minute, your
@ctor will be born and fully alive through realistic
movement and gestures. Users can then style it with
a host of accessories, from hair to eyeglasses,
tattoos, hats and more.
After users create and style their
@ctors, they can drop them into the library of Big
Stage-enabled user and professionally created content
or Scenes. These highly personalized Scenes can
then be shared by users across everything from famous
movie scenes, TV shows and video games, to music
videos, short video clips, virtual worlds, still
images, user-generated content, instant messages,
e-mails, social networks and more.
SOURCE : SONY
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FRI
07th 2008
ENCINO HOME SIDESTEPS FORECLOSURE?
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Michael Jackson's Encino home is
no longer under threat of foreclosure, according
to gossip columnist Janet Charlton.
As previously reported, E! Online
got its hands on newly disclosed public records
that showed the singer owed $153,000 to mortgage
lender Indymac Bancorp as part of a $4 million loan
he took out on the property.
The Web site further stated that
the Pasadena-based company originally issued a notice
of default to Jackson, but then vacated it.
According to Charlton, "the
family compound has narrowly avoided foreclosure
several times before," and mortgage payments
were made "at the LAST minute" this time
as well.
Meanwhile, Jackson's Neverland Ranch
in Santa Barbara is still on the verge of being
auctioned off on March 19 if he fails to come up
with $24.5 million owed to San Francisco-based lender
Financial Title Co.
SOURCE: E ONLINE - EUROWEB
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MARCH
04 th 2008
Lawyers
awarded millions in suit over Michael Jackson
taping
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The owner of a Santa Monica-based air charter service
was ordered to pay attorney Mark Geragos and an
associate several million dollars for ordering the
secret videotaping of Michael Jackson and the lawyers
as they flew with the pop star to his surrender
on molestation charges in 2003, according to court
papers obtained Monday.
Superior Court Judge Soussan G. Bruguera ordered
XtraJet owner Jeffrey Borer and his company to pay
Geragos at least $10 million and possibly up to
$18 million in compensatory and punitive damages,
depending on how the ruling is interpreted. Geragos'
colleague Pat Harris was awarded between $1.25 million
and $2.25 million in damages.
The ruling dispute centers on whether both the
company and Borer are separately responsible for
punitive damages, or just Borer. Geragos' legal
team claims the former. Borer's attorney, Lloyd
Kirschbaum, claims the latter.
"In any case, any award against XtraJet is
irrelevant because the company is bankrupt,"
said Kirschbaum.
A court spokeswoman wasn't immediately able to
clarify.
"Defendant Borer was the mastermind behind
a scheme to desecrate and exploit sacred attorney-client
communications for personal profit," Bruguera
wrote in the 21-page judgment filed Friday.
Geragos' and Harris' attorney Brian J. Kabateck
said he was pleased with the decision.
"This is an important day for lawyers who
generally represent celebrities and high profile
people," he said.
Kirschbaum said his Borer will appeal. He contended
the attorney-client relationship could not have
been breached because the video recording did not
have sound.
"There wasn't any sound," he said. "You
can't intercept a communication without sound."
Borer and co-defendant Arvel Jett Reeves pleaded
guilty last year to felony counts of conspiracy.
They acknowledged they installed two digital video
recorders in a Gulfstream jet that flew Jackson
from Las Vegas to Santa Barbara.
Reeves was sentenced to eight months in prison.
Borer was sentenced to six months home detention
rather than prison because he said he was the caregiver
for his wife, who had chronic health problems. He
spent part of that confinement at the Ritz-Carlton
hotel in Marina del Rey, saying his house had a
mold problem and his wife was allergic.
The damages resulted from an invasion-of-privacy
lawsuit filed by Geragos and Harris. Jackson, who
was initially a plaintiff in the civil lawsuit,
later dropped out of the case.
The pop singer was acquitted of the molestation
charges in 2005.
SOURCE:http://www.timesdaily.com