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Michael Jackson Biography
Jun 26th
Michael Joseph Jackson (August 29, 1958-June 25, 2009) Died June 25th, 2009
Was an American Pop Icon known as the king of pop. He was born into the Jackson family as the 7th child of Joseph Jackson. When Michael Jackson was very young, 11 years old, he and 4 of his siblings began a band with their father Joseph Jackson as the manager. The band was called “the Jackson 5″ and the group attained much commercial success. It was not until 1971 that Michael Jackson left the Jackson 5 and began his solo career. He went on to become one of the most famous recording artists of all time and eventually became the “king of pop” a title he bestowed upon himself. His solo albums hold many titles for their astounding number of sales. 5 of his albums hold records for number of sales.
His career really began to take off in the early 1980′s. and he was one of the first and most popular black artists to gain a prominent following on MTV. This was due in large part to the huge budget and extravagant budgets of his music videos for his songs. Songs with record holding videos include: Beat it – Billie Jean – and Thriller. Some of these videos are so influential that they are credited with changing music videos from a recording of the song into mini movie works of art. This led further to Michael Jackson’s popularization of amazing and complicated dance choreographing and musical numbers. This dancing featured prominently in his live shows. His record breaking live shows earned him enormous amounts of money.
Some of the dances moves popularized at these live shows include the robot and the moonwalk. Michael Jackson’s musical influence stretched across many musical genre’s including hip-hop, pop and R&B in part because of his eccentric and distinct style of vocals and music.
One thing that many do not know about Jackson is that he raised and donated MILLIONS of dollars to over 39 charities for a multitude of causes through his namesake foundation. This is often overlooked due to his appearance and increasingly bizarre and changing appearance. Not to mention a string of child molestation accusations.
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Farewell Michael Jackson Died
Jun 25th

Michael Jackson was born on August 29, 1958. He died on June 25, 2009.
Michael Jackson’s death comes as a shock to the entire world.
“Michael Jackson” was the first great pop star whose career was shaped by television — not merely showcased by it, like those of Elvis Presley and the Beatles, but inseparable from the medium. He was indebted to it and influenced it in turn. Across his four-decade career, he was often someone to listen to, but he was always — for better and sometimes for worse — something to see. A lifetime of pictures came back into focus on the day of his death, as cable news outlets ran bits of old videos and Facebook bloomed with links to YouTube clips.
He first appeared on TV in 1969, on “The Hollywood Palace” and “The Ed Sullivan Show” at the time of the Jackson 5′s debut single, “I Want You Back.” The sound of that single is astounding — like Jackson’s moonwalk, it seems to deform time. But the song told only part of that story: There is the dancing and the colorful funk of the costumes, and above all there is the face of Michael Jackson, the face of Things Beginning. The song is about a loss, but there is only elation in his performance. Watching that “Ed Sullivan” appearance now, he looks fearless, clear-eyed, beautiful and in charge. That he was only 11 years old — you couldn’t ignore it, and it was completely beside the point.
A family-friendly family band then, before they became a thing of tabloid fascination — expressed in a 1992 TV movie, “The Jacksons: An American Dream” — the Jacksons were made for television, and appeared there often in the twilight of variety. (They also became an animated cartoon, like the Beatles before them.) But as time went on, as Michael grew taller and unpredictably different, they seemed momentarily to fade. Things were changing, but you couldn’t see where it would lead.
That was settled on the night of the 1983 TV special “Motown 25: Yesterday, Today and Forever,” in which he appeared with his brothers, but also, for five minutes, claimed the stage for himself — performing a song not released on Motown, “Billie Jean,” seizing upon the occasion to remake himself utterly. (He had already begun to remake himself physically.) The appearance replayed the look and moves of the song’s video; he wore a suit of spangles, a fat white glove, pants cut short to show his ankles and make his long legs look even longer. The dancing was encyclopedic, one move following hard on another: spins, crouches, kicks, Bob Fosse angles, Gene Kelly silhouettes, and of course the brand-new moonwalk. But the smile of the happy kid or the earnest entertainer was gone, replaced by a pleading anger that would thereafter become the dominant note in his self-presentation. It was a beginning, and it was also somehow the beginning of the end.
His influence and importance were still to grow, nevertheless. Fame multiplying into superstardom, Jackson not only broke the color line at MTV, which, having styled itself as a visual version of white FM radio, had declined to play videos by black artists, he changed music video itself. He amplified its scale, with ambitious, long-form, cast-of-dancing-dozens mini-movies whose influence is still seen today. You can argue the artistic merits of “Thriller,” with its corps of zombies, or “Beat It,” with its “West Side Story” rumble, but they brought storytelling and Hollywood production values to what had been a medium of glorified infomercials.
As his personal strangeness began to eclipse his music, as his public career diverged from his private life, he became a person seen and not seen. The videos showed you a person in control, or at least desperately asserting it; the news clips showed you a man in a mask, running scared. A 30th anniversary CBS special in 2001 showed bursts of energy, but he had become ghostly long before he died, pale and paper-thin and skeletal.
And yet the spirit of that first “Ed Sullivan” date sustains: On Monday night’s premiere of the fourth season of “America’s Got Talent,” the EriAm Sisters offered “I Want You Back” as an audition piece, with 11-year-old Haben Abraham taking the lead, alive and excited and at the beginning.
Farewell Michael Joseph Jackson, the KING of POP! If you wish to say something to Michael please use the comment section.
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Michael Jackson Isn’t dying
Dec 22nd
~Michael Jackson, Is “Michael Jackson Dead?”, “Michael Jackson sick”, Youtube Video of Michael Jackson Heal the world, and more Michael Jason ill Details…
Where do these people come up with these things? Michael Jackson is not dead, he is not ill, and he doesn’t need a lung transplant.
All the false rumours of Michael Jackson being sick were leaked by a Tabloid. The name of the publication is called, “The Sun”. It is equivalent to the National Enquirer. So before you help spread false information, get the facts.
Many blogs are listing the king of pop as being dead. Absurd. Michael Jackson was just seen two days ago visiting his dermatologist. The last time I checked, these people were skin doctors.
Stop the Lies….Michael Jackson Is not dead! Michael Jackson is not Sick! And Michael Jackson does not need a lung transplant. In a few days you will see Michael Jackson make a public appearance. He will be wearing a new outfit, and may do something crazy!
Help spread this article around to combat the lies.