Word: jacksonã
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Dates: during 2001-2001
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...Jackson??s message was not only one of caution. He urged the country to “rally under the flag”—and to remember that “Muslims, Sikhs and those who look like Muslims” are Americans too and must not be persecuted...
...Jackson??s worldwide popularity seemed as strong as ever, he was estranged from his own country. In his rare interviews, he often cited his desire to leave America behind forever. After Princess Diana’s untimely death in 1997, he appeared on 20/20 with Barbara Walters to discuss life under intense media scrutiny. Moved to tears, he pleaded in his characteristic soft tones to be treated with the decency due any normal human being. “I’m not a Jacko. I’m Jackson....Wacko Jacko, where did that come from...
...begin the composition of a new song, “What More Can I Give,” to raise funds for the survivors and the families of the victims lost in the tragedy. Music celebrities are already lining up to contribute to the song, reminiscent of Jackson??s similar 1985 effort, “We Are The World,” which has raised over $65 million for victims of starvation in Africa. As the King stated in a related interview...
...wait is almost over. And Michael Jackson is ready to prove the naysayers wrong. The boy in the man is back in the spotlight, with increasingly unconventional promotional events. On his 43rd birthday, Jackson was on hand to open NASDAQ trading. Jackson??s surprise appearance at the 2001 VMAs drew wild applause, and his recent tribute concerts in Madison Square Garden featured an array of celebrities and the much-hyped reunion of the Jackson Five (although his sister Janet, currently on tour, was notably absent). MTV has been airing Jackson??s past hits, while...
...women, or anything very much beyond sinister apocalyptic omens, is vague at best; the song is perhaps more a tribute from Tori’s days in her early metal band Y Kant Tori Read. The album’s closing track is a gender-bending version of Joe Jackson??s “Real Men,” in which the question about “who the real men are” becomes yet more doubtful in Tori’s endlessly transforming, role-playing world...