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MICHAEL PAGO 1 MILLON $ A M.Brandon por el MSG//Roger Friedman , anuncia revelaciones

((ATENCION A LA PARTE FINAL) Thursday, July 18, 2002
By Roger Friedman

You wonder how people spend their money.

Well, Michael Jackson, currently in financial distress and taking a beating in the press from Sony Music's Tommy Mottola, doesn't know the bounds of generosity. I'm told by reliable insiders that Jackson paid aging genius actor Marlon Brando $1 million last fall to be in his famous 30th anniversary show at Madison Square Garden.

You remember Brando at the Garden, don'tcha? He waddled onto the stage like a lost circus elephant, took his place in a living room set and put the audience to sleep with a half-hour filibuster on why he loves Jackson.

The performance was so boring it had to be cut from the televised show.

A week or so later, when the money was counted, Brando was sent a $1 million, according to my sources. Even with ticket prices for the best seats going for an average $500-$800 — and top seats at $5,000 — it would have been hard for Jackson to cover Brando's nut (so to speak).

CBS paid Jackson $2 million for the broadcast of the show, so that would have helped.

When I called Brando yesterday for confirmation or denial of this, he got on his house phone, wheezed, said, "I don't talk to the press!" then slammed the phone down.

Neither Creative Artists Agency or International Creative Management still represent him, so they couldn't help out in exacting more information.

A friend of Brando's who's in touch with him (but didn't give me his number), said: "A million dollars? It's not so much these days, considering." He wouldn't confirm the story, but he said he couldn't deny it either. Another Jackson associate told me: "A million bucks. Yeah, I heard that. That's why Michael has so little cash for himself."

We wondered what was going on that night with Brando. Wearing sunglasses and looking like a Blues Brother, he expounded for a ghastly 10 minutes on subjects of little or no interest to the pumped-up audience. He said, "You may be thinking, 'Who is that old fat fart sitting there?'" At one point he actually removed his wristwatch and said, "In the last minute, 100,000 children have been hacked to death with a machete." He concluded by instructing the audience to go to michaeljackson.com and donate money. The audience — many of whom came from Los Angeles in wheelchairs or on walkers — booed and booed — and with good cause.

Brando's last movie was The Score, with Robert De Niro and Edward Norton. He made a cameo appearance and the movie failed to score with audiences. If Brando has many sources of income besides acting, it's unknown. But his gig at the Garden looks like it might have been his most profitable one in years.


P.S. If you're tired of these Michael Jackson stories, so am I. Tomorrow I'll have some final — I hope for now — revelations about Michael's situation with Sony and where he will go from here. www.foxnews.com/story/0,2...63,00.html
 
Que me parto!!!!!! Dice que Brando estuvo media hora hablando....a este tio se le hizo más largo el discurso que a mi :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

En fin...a mi me moló los cojones que tuvo el tio....se sienta, mira el reloj...no habla...y dice, en este tiempo que he estado callado, han muerto nosecuántos niños en todo el mundo...Es el padrino!!! A pesar de que el pobre está hecho polvo...

Todavía recuerdo como a oscuras entre dos personas le traian, medio arrastras. Le sientan , le ponen las gafas, y le dan el micro... Y salta Toni: " Ese quién es, Ray Charles???" :lol: :lol:

Me partía, pero es que es verdad, parecía que traían un ciego, colocandole las gafas, etc...

Y de Friedman, podemos esperar cualquier barbaridad....:mad:
 
¿y que mas da que sea positivo????? al menos para mi lo que diga ese tío me la s***.

Just because you read it ............
 
TRADUCCION:

"Os preguntaréis en qué se gasta el dinero la gente.

Bueno, Michael Jackson, actualmente en problemas financieros (y dale :mad: ) y golpeando la prensa con Sony Music y Mottola, no parece conocer límites para la generosidad. Me han dicho fuentes fiables (y venga con no decir quienes son sus fuentes, si es que existen :mad: ) que Jackson pagó al viejo genio Marlon Brando un millón de dólares el otoño pasado para estar en su show de 30 aniversario en el Madison Square Garden.

Os acordáis de Brando en el Garden, no? Se arrastró al escenario como un elefante de circo, tomó su lugar en el decorado de una sala de estar y puso a dormir al público durante su filibustero discurso de media hora de porqué le encanta Jackson. La actuación fue tan aburrida que la tuvieron que quitar del show televisado.

Una semana o así despues, cuando se contó el dinero, a Brando le habían enviado 1 millon de dólares, según "mis fuentes" :mad: Incluso teniendo las entradas un precio medio de 500 a 800 dólares, y las más caras 5000, hubiera sido duro para Jackson pagar el rollo de Brando.

CBS pagó a Jackson 2 millones por emitir el show, así que eso ayudó.

Cuando llamé a Brando ayer para que me confirmara o negara esto, se puso al teléfono y dijo "!Yo no hablo con la prensa!" y me colgó. [Marlon Brando :enamorado :urule: ]

Ya no es representado por la Creative Artists Agency ni por la International Creative Management, así que no me pudieron ayudar a detallar más información.

Un amigo de Brando que está en contacto con él (pero no me dió su número) dijo: "Un millon de dólares? Eso no es mucho hoy día, la verdad". No me pudo asegurar que fuera verdad, pero me dijo que tampoco la podía negar. Otro asociado de Jackson me dijo: "Un millon de pavos, sí, algo he oido. Por eso Michael no tiene dinero" (Pero mira que son pesaos joder, parece que todavia no se ha enterado de lo del cheque de 500 millones! :mad: )

Nos preguntamos qué pasaba esa noche con Brando, llevando gafas oscuras, con pinta de Blues Brother, tirandose 10 minutos hablando de cosas de poca o ninguna importancia :ein: para la animada audiencia. Dijo "Tal vez estéis pensando, quien ese viejo culo gordo ahí sentado?" En un momento dado se quitó el reloj y dijo "En el último minuto, cien mil niños han sido acuchillados con machetes hasta morir". Concluyó diciendo a la gente que fueran a michaeljackson.com :toma: y donaran dinero. El público asistente -muchos de los cuales venian en silla de ruedas y andadores desde Los Angeles- le abucheaban sin parar, y tenían razon.... :ein:

La ultima pelicula de Brando fué The Score, con Robert De Niro y Edward Norton. Hizo una breve aparición y la pelicula fué un fracaso de publico. Si Brando tiene otras formas de hacer dinero aparte de salir en peliculas, no se sabe cuales serán, pero su aparición en el Garden tiene pinta de ser por lo que más ha cobrado en los ultimos años

PD: Si estáis hartos de artículos sobre Michael Jackson, que sepáis que yo también. Mañana tendréis algunas últimas -espero- revelaciones sobre la situación de Michael con Sony y qué hará a partir de ahora.

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Por mí como si das la receta de una tarta de calabaza, payaso :toma:
 
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Será o no verdad, pero lo que si está claro q MJ no para de derrochar dinero a punta pala... Señal q la tiene $$$...
 
Simplemente una apreciación.

Tabloid Killer, un periodista tiene perfecto derecho a no revelar sus fuentes, haciendo uso del "secreto profesional". Gracias al secreto profesional se han descubierto auténticos noticiones que, de otra manera, nunca habrían salido a la luz. El secreto profesional beneficia tanto a la fuente, como al periodista, como al público.

Otra cosa es que, aunque no quiera decir sus fuentes, el periodista tiene obligación de contar siempre hechos verídicos, algo de lo que posiblemente este personaje no pueda presumir.

Nada más (perdón por mi clase de Periodismo). :p
 
teh apnther que beuno vvolerte a evr proq ui se echban de emno tus psot de slo ams argumentaods que existen
 
Re: TRADUCCION:

Escrito originalmente por Tabloid Killer!!!
"Os preguntaréis en qué se gasta el dinero la gente.


Un amigo de Brando que está en contacto con él (pero no me dió su número) dijo: "Un millon de dólares? Eso no es mucho hoy día, la verdad". No me pudo asegurar que fuera verdad, pero me dijo que tampoco la podía negar. Otro asociado de Jackson me dijo: "Un millon de pavos, sí, algo he oido. Por eso Michael no tiene dinero" (Pero mira que son pesaos joder, parece que todavia no se ha enterado de lo del cheque de 500 millones! :mad: )


Que Cheque de 500 millones :eek: Enterame :eek:
 
500 millones?????..supongo que hablaras de pesetas y no dólares..de no ser así creo que ahora son otros los que exageran demasiado..:meparto:
Ni George Lucas ni Spielberg juntos pueden pagar tanto (ellos están en el Top 20 de las personas del entretenimiento mas poderosas económicamente..lista en la cual no aparece MJ)
 
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Este es el articulo de hoy de Roger Friedman, en el dice que michael recuperarará los masters de sus discos antes de los siete años que pone por contrato porque a sony no le interesa que se le haga una auditoria. Además dice que está hablando con otras compañias como dreamworks o universal.Michael Jackson | Dana Giacchetto


Jacko Will Get His Albums Back After All

I was a little off about a salient part of Michael Jackson's now-ended deal with Sony Music. I said Jackson would leave Sony without the masters to his famous albums Thriller, Off the Wall, Bad, etc.

I stand corrected. According to very solid information I obtained this week, Jackson negotiated in the early '80s for the reversion of the rights to his masters. He will get them back in about seven years or so.

He might have had them sooner if he hadn't called Tommy Mottola a racist. But there were Al Sharpton and a cheering crowd and people waving signs — even Michael can get caught up in the moment. I'm sure he regrets all of that now.

What's more, I am told that Jackson is talking to a number of big record companies, and there's some hope of making a deal when all the Sony dust has settled. Certainly his manager, John McClain, who is also an executive at DreamWorks Records, would like to have him come aboard.

One hitch is that David Geffen, one of DreamWorks' founders, is an ally of Tommy Mottola in the often brutal, warlike atmosphere of the record industry.

But that may not be a problem if Geffen decides to side with Jackson. He's shrewd enough to see that Jackson would put DreamWorks on the map. Also, Jackson has a long friendship with another DreamWorks founder, Steven Spielberg.

More likely is a deal with Doug Morris and Universal Music Group. Morris has already rescued Mariah Carey from Mottola. If he takes Jackson too, the Japanese owners of Sony could just buy UMG and make Sony Music a division. That would be a funny ending. Morris, a less flamboyant presence in the business than most, would finally get his due.

Is Michael completely broke? The answer is no, but it's complicated. With all the music catalogs, he might be worth $750 million on paper.

"I didn't say he was floating in cash, though," cautions my source on this, who knows the numbers better than most anyone.

What about the million dollars I reported that Jackson gave to Marlon Brando for appearing in his Sept. 7 Madison Square Garden carnival?

"That's the problem," says my source.

Says another, separate source: "Michael put $1.75 million into Neverland Valley Entertainment with that porno guy, Marc Schaffel. He immediately disbursed a million to Brando, then the rest to others within a short time. He knows how to spend."

Schaffel, through friends, tells me that he has not received money for What More Can I Give?, the charity single. He insists that the funds he got from a Japanese outfit paid off the $2 million loan (this is a separate chunk of money from the funds Jackson invested in Neverland Valley) he took from Royalty Advance Funding — which I first reported here in April.

That left a balance of expenses totaling nearly $300,000. The Japanese money paid those bills. Schaffel says through pals there are more bills. He says if Jackson's people were correct in a Los Angeles Times story, and he had pocketed $500,000, Schaffel would just walk away from the project.

(For an interesting take on the whole Schaffel business, check out Tony Ortega's well-researched story at New Times Los Angeles online.)

So much confusion, so many names. But Michael Jackson's great flaw in all this is that he has been easily swayed by dealmakers, con men and charlatans.

Schaffel aside, Jackson was taken in by Shmuley Boteach. He went into a nutty deal with two guys named Derek Rundell and Cort Coursey for an online ticket sales venture. Last winter he announced a movie company with an actor no one's ever heard of.

He's vulnerable to all kinds of come-ons. Jackson is still involved in a long-running suit with the former head of his company, a man named Myung-Ho Lee. David Gest, who produced Jackson's 30th anniversary shows, became famous on Jackson's coat tails and married Liza Minnelli.

One source told me this week: "I've heard him say, 'Let's make a deal, don't tell my lawyers.' Then the lawyers find out and have to clean up the mess."

Well, we won't feel too bad for the lawyers. Jackson's primary attorney, John Branca, knows his efforts will pay off one day. His firm, Ziffren, Brittenham, Branca & Fischer, has a 5 percent stake in Sony/ATV Music Publishing, in which Jackson himself is a 50 percent owner.

"That's how they bill most of their clients, on a 5 percent basis," says one observer. You'd think that Ziffren et al. would want the publishing company to be sold for hundreds of millions, but my source says: "It's not going to be sold. And Sony will not foreclose on it. They don't have the right to take it from Michael. They simply guaranteed a loan."

Jackson also employs at least two other law firms. The second one, which handles litigation (lawsuits) is Lavely & Singer, run by the notorious celebrity-defending bulldog Martin Singer.

When Schaffel was "rubbing people the wrong way" last fall, Branca called Brian Wolf at that firm, and Wolf sicced a private eye on Schaffel to get the goods. When the P.I. turned up the news that Schaffel made adult videos, another firm stepped in. That was the one run by Zia Modabber, another celebrity defender.

Everyone in the chain has a purpose. The only one not always in lockstep, unfortunately, is Michael Jackson.

So what happens next?

I am told that Michael had a long friendship with Sony Japan President Akio Morita, who passed away in 1999 at age 78. The relationship translated down to his son, Masao Morita, who is the head of Sony Entertainment Worldwide and loves Jackson.

The word is that Mr. Morita, as Jackson calls him, was busy working on a video game with Michael using the Invincible songs. Neither of them bothered to tell Mottola this. When things went crazy here in New York between Mottola and Jackson, Morita was not pleased.

Martin Singer is now threatening to bring a lawsuit against Sony. Trust me, this will not come to court. If Singer makes enough noise about a forensic audit, Sony will go into a bookkeeping frenzy. This is one thing they do not like over there.

I know artists who recorded for Sony 25 years ago who are still not earning money from their hits because Sony says the artists owe them money. A court-mandated investigation into Sony's accounting practices is something Sony will avoid at all costs.

Singer knows that. Expect Michael to get his masters back sooner than in that seven-year period, and take his catalog of albums to a new recording company.

"Sometimes Michael is his own worst enemy," a Jackson insider concludes. "The racism thing wasn't smart. But he feels betrayed by Sony. He's been a good friend to Tommy, done a lot of things for him personally."

"Once Invincible came out, he wouldn't take Michael's calls," the source continues. "It was just bizarre. They would only do one video from the album, and it's sold seven million copies worldwide. And Michael is paranoid about Sony wanting the catalog. But they've been told it's absolutely never going to happen."


También dice que Masao Morita, la cabeza de sony en el mundo, estaba trabajando en un videojuego con las canciones de invincible.
 
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