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Friday, June 26, 2009

Michael Jackson’s influence on pop, rock, r&b Top Videos

While he was known to the world as the “King of Pop”, Michael Jackson’s influence on pop, rock, r&b, and disco earned him two inductions into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Jackson was inducted with his brothers as a member of the Jackson 5 in 1997 and as a solo performer in 2001.
Few performers reached Jackson’s level of stardom. His popularity matched that of Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra and The Beatles.
There is no other member of the Hall of the Fame who made an impact in the music business at such a young age.

Michael Jackson is seen in file pictures from top left, 1971, 1977, 1979, and bottom left, 1983, 1987, and 1990. Jackson died in Los Angeles at age 50 on Thursday, June 25, 2009. (AP Photo)

“Michael Jackson was one of the most creative and successful recording artists of the last 40 years. He became an instant star when he was only 11 years old, fronting the Jackson 5,” said Jim Henke, vice president of exhibitions and curatorial affairs at the Rock Hall of Fame and Museum. “Few other artists of his era reached the peaks that he did, both in terms of sales and critical acclaim. His legacy will live on for a long, long time.”
Jackson died at the age of 50 of cardiac arrest on June 25th just weeks before he was supposed to embark on his final tour.
Michael Jackson 25th Anniversary Thriller Teaser Video


Michael Jackson 25th Anniversary Thriller Teaser Video


Michael Jackson - Thriller [FULL VERSION part 2/2]

Michael Jackson would wake up dead

Michael Jackson's death came as a shock yesterday - but to some, the real surprise was that he made it to 50.

For much of his adult life, he seemed to be disintegrating before our eyes - gaunt, pale, in a wheelchair or bandaged from yet another surgery.

He battled an addiction to painkillers and could barely sit up straight at times during his 2005 child molestation trial.

The London Sun said Jackson's collapse yesterday came after injecting Demerol.

The Jackson family lawyer, Brian Oxman, said he warned the pop star about his misuse of prescription drugs.

"I have warned that one day Michael Jackson would wake up dead, and that I would not be silent if that was the case, because of the misuse of medications. I have made that statement to family members and I told them I would not be still," he said last night outside UCLA Medical Center.

The star suffered cardiac arrest, a condition that can lead to death if not treated within five minutes, according to doctors.

"Cardiac arrest refers broadly to when your heart just no longer pumps blood," said Dr. Jeffrey Moses, director of the center for interventional vascular therapy at New York-Presbyterian Hospital Columbia. In most cases, the heart beats so chaotically it stops functioning, leading to unconsciousness. Sometimes it gets extremely weak and quivers uselessly.

Last month, promoters assured a skeptical press that Jackson was robust after the first dates of his comeback tour were postponed. London newspapers reported he had skin cancer. "There's nothing going on with his health," said Randy Phillips of promoter AEG Live.

The assurances clashed with photos of Jackson - his face covered by a surgical mask - that suggested a mystery malady.

Last July, photographers snapped his children rolling him through a Las Vegas bookstore in a wheelchair, clad in the costume of a convalescent: pajamas and slippers.

It was never completely clear what ailed Jackson, who was badly burned during the filming of a Pepsi commercial in 1984.

Denying reports he bleached his skin, he insisted he had vitiligo, a pigmentation disorder. He admitted to only two plastic surgeries, but experts speculated he had repeatedly gone under the knife and that his nose had been permanently damaged.

He got hooked on prescription pills - including Xanax and painkillers - and his family reportedly flew to his home in Bahrain for an intervention.

He made at least one trip to rehab, and in 2007 admitted in a sworn deposition that four years earlier he was often - but not always - "impaired" by pill popping.

"It comes and goes, not all of the waking hours," he told a lawyer for his former manager.

A long list of health problems often held up Jackson's 2005 trial on child molestation charges - and created a crazy court spectacle. The pop star threw up on the way to court for jury selection, was rushed to the emergency room for back problems and showed up wearing pajamas.





Monday, April 6, 2009

Britney Spears's No-Show at Club

TMZ reports that an Atlanta club is suing a talent agency that apparently promised the Britster would show up after her concert in the city last month.

The lawsuit says the agency collected $15,000 from the club on the premise that they could get Britney to come to the nightclub, and said they were acting on her behalf. The suit alleges that's not true, however, prompting the club to sue for about $100,000 in damages.