Word: neverlands
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...With an inordinate number of young children, the baseball parks more closely resemble Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch than Yankee Stadium...
...play Peter Pan into a best-selling novel; McCaughrean has delivered Peter Pan in Scarlet in as many months and though she's sworn to secrecy, she's itching to talk about it. There will be flying and fairy dust, of course. But 20 years after their flight to Neverland, Wendy is married, Michael a train driver, Tootles a judge in a wig. Trouble is brewing in Neverland, but as grown-ups, they cannot go back there until they discover how to be children once more. Can McCaughrean make Peter Pan fly again? If you believe she can, clap your...
...impression that he was just a regular guy who was dating Brooke Shields -- but then came the summer of disaster. Charges of child molestation, criminal inquiries, an abandoned world tour, lawsuits, drug addiction, a bizarre disappearance and mysterious return have brought real- world, grownup horror to the owner of Neverland Ranch -- horror he eventually had to confront. In a four-minute televised statement broadcast around the world from Neverland last week, Jackson, voice quivering, called the sexual-abuse allegations ''disgusting,'' declared his innocence and said, ''I do try to be Godlike in my heart...
Jackson Speaks In a carefully staged four-minute live television address from his Neverland Valley Ranch in California, Michael Jackson came out of seclusion to declare that he is ''totally innocent'' of the ''disgusting'' child-molestation allegations that have been leveled against him and that he has been manipulated by the ''terrible mass media.'' Fighting back tears, he revealed that police, armed with a search warrant, last week photographed his genitals and buttocks in what he called ''the most humiliating ordeal of my life...
...last third of the film. Marc Foster’s otherwise gleaming resume, which includes “Finding Neverland” and “Monster’s Ball,” is sorely blemished by this enigmatically frayed thriller. Unlike “Finding Neverland,” “Stay” lacks a coherent storyline with relatable characters, failing to conjure the same substantial emotion. McGregor’s performance is, as usual, solid. His portrayal of the confused and increasingly terrified Dr. Foster is more than believable. In spite of this, the film?...