Word: birth
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...doubt Michael Jackson fans the world over (and there are many, to be sure) eagerly anticipate the release of the King’s forthcoming album as they would the birth of their own child. But the support of those die-hard fans is assured. It is the imaginations and hearts (and pocketbooks) of the new generation that Jackson needs to conquer. The dilemma lies in assuring the world that Michael Jackson is still as relevant today as he was 20 years...
...dismissal of the criminal case, where Jackson once drew adulation and love from the world, there was now revulsion. Jackson was no longer the King, he was the butt of countless jokes. While his fame still persisted around the world, he was a pariah in the land of his birth. In an effort to combat this, Jackson spent an unprecedented sum of money to force open the arms of the world to receive him again. 1995 saw the biggest publicity campaign ever mounted, Jackson’s deep-seated insecurities once again driving him to create an over...
...surprisingly, health-care companies have been the early adopters of work-force lactation programs. Cigna's Working Well Moms program is considered a benchmark. It offers moms-to-be consultation with a professional breast-feeding expert, known as a lactation consultant, before and after they give birth. When the new mom returns to the bosom of corporate life, Cigna provides access to a private room with a hospital-grade pump, a carrying case to discreetly transport the pumping paraphernalia and expressed milk, plus bottles and access to a refrigerator...
...also expected to campaign. "Sometimes there would be 1,000 people, and they would show me to a stage to make a speech," she recalls. "The first time I had to speak, I was so nervous I started to cry." Within three years, Miyamoto had given birth to two sons. "My life was like this: campaign, have baby, campaign, have baby," she says. It wasn't to last...
...communicate, and we decided that we would look after Milo 50-50, and that is what we are still - more or less - doing." A 1998 Dutch law enables unmarried and separated partners to officially register as co-parents of a child, which Pullara and Stefan did soon after the birth of Milo. "This gives us equal legal status, which is good in case something happens to one of us," she explains. "At the same time, we owe a lot to our network of family and friends. In our view, a family is not a closed unit anymore, but an open...