There are movie promo campaigns, and then there’s the already-iconic Michaelpromo campaign which brought together the baddest bands in the Land to honor the King of Pop while commemorating Black History Month ahead of the buzzy biopic‘s release this Spring.
Source: Lionsgate Pictures
Renowned for their precision, showmanship, and dazzling musical prowess, FAMU‘s Marching 100, Southern University‘s Human Jukebox, and Jackson State University’s Sonic Boom of the South shined in cinematic videos featuring each band performing timeless classic “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough” with their signature sound.
Source: Lionsgate Pictures
Check out the must-see videos below:
In the viral videos trending across social media, the bands can be seen embodying Michael Jackson’s pop culture transcendence with slick nods, clever homages, and moonwalks as part of the Michael Celebrates: Legacy, Artistry, Culture series that honors the enduring relationship between the HBCU community and Michael’s timeless music.
Source: Lionsgate Pictures
Now, communities around the world are invited to join the celebration with their own performances of “Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough” by posting their own video on social media using the hashtags #MichaelLegacy and #MichaelMovie.
Source: Lionsgate Pictures
“For Michael’s fans everywhere, his legacy of performance and artistry is enduring. That legacy lives powerfully within HBCU communities, where music, movement, and excellence have long been expressions of culture, pride, and identity,” said Briana McElroy, Head of Digital Marketing for the Lionsgate Motion Picture Group.
“This initiative is deeply personal to me — I grew up listening to these bands, who represent Black excellence, community, and creativity. Partnering with these HBCUs is about honoring that legacy while creating space for the next generation to lead, perform, and inspire.”
Source: Lionsgate Pictures
In Michael, audiences will experience the beloved icon’s journey from the discovery of his extraordinary talent as the lead of the Jackson Five, to the visionary artist whose creative ambition fueled a relentless pursuit to become the biggest entertainer in the world,” per the official synopsis.
Check out the trailer below:
With mounting hype across the globe, Michael moonwalks into theaters April 24!
Could holograms remake Las Vegas Shows and entertainment? Michael Jackson and Whitney Houston have performed in Las Vegas posthumously. And someday the biggest stars in Sin City might not even be real. So This Week in Gambling, we’re looking at past, present, and future holographic shows and projects headed to Sin City!
What people define as entertainment is changing. These days, artists who no longer perform live or are no longer with us can still fill concert halls. But let’s be clear, these shows are not actually real holograms created with split laser beams, even though that is how they’re being promoted. Instead, they are ghost images, movies projected onto sheer fabric or holographic bands.
Before anyone considered the technology for Las Vegas Shows, this form of entertainment debuted at the 2012 Coachella Music Festival when Tupac appeared on stage 15 years after his death. That same technology called a pepper ghost illusion was much improved by October of 2021 when Harrah’s opened An Evening with Whitney, which used a base hologram method called direct projection with powerful lasers beaming images onto transparent mesh.
The results were good but not perfect. Some described the show as off while others loved it saying that it made the hair on their arms stand on in. But if you’ve ever seen the Cirque show Michael Jackson ONE, then you know that today the hologram image of Michael Jackson looks much better due to updated CGI and high-powered projections making images sharper and more realistic.
Aside from these current and past hologram shows, there are plans to bring other performers back to Las Vegas soon, like ABBA and even Elvis. More on those shows in just a moment because holographic images are being used across Las Vegas in other ways right now, specifically at the Sphere where the Wizard of Oz is playing. After the show, holographic bands are used to create a giant interactive floating Wizard head in the atrium.
At the Rio, another of the Las Vegas Shows using holograms is the the Wow Vegas Spectacular, which uses curtains of falling water and high-powered 3D projections to create holographic effects of mermaids floating in midair. And a new attraction just opened in Las Vegas, the hologram experience, displaying what they call the art of holography, offering a hologram zoo and a hologram room as part of the experience.
Finally, this week, Elvis may have left the building, but there are plans to bring him back with the Elvis Evolution holographic show, but you might want to temper your excitement. This show opened in London in July of last year to less than enthusiastic reviews. People in the audience were not impressed as the show was more of a documentary than a concert. Some demanded their money back and even the BBC described it as atrocious and misleading, especially when costing over $400 a ticket.
However, ABBA Voyage received rave reviews for its custom arena and for employing industrial light and magic who worked on Star Wars to create what they call Avatars using motion capture with actual members of the group. While no opening date is set just yet, there are plans to bring ABBA Voyage to Las Vegas hopefully before the end of this year or perhaps in early 2027. With Resorts World being floated as a likely venue.
So, Elvis Evolution is being planned for one of the new hologram Las Vegas Shows… for what that’s worth. The Abba Show will hopefully arrive this year or early next year. And the MJ1 show that’s still playing at Mandalay Bay. Will holograms take over Las Vegas Entertainment? While impressive, they still have a long way to go. Perhaps in another five, maybe 10 years. But for now, I don’t think real live performers have anything to worry about. And hey, if you enjoyed this show, be sure to drop us a like and subscribe if you want updates whenever we publish new videos.
Michael Jackson: The Trial has landed on Channel 4 and, once again, the spotlight is firmly on the King of Pop and his most famous home.
And viewers are already asking what really became of Neverland.
The opening episode of the four-part series returned repeatedly to Michael’s sprawling ranch, using previously unheard audio recordings to paint a deeply unsettling picture.
Fans heard Michael speak about Neverland as a place where children could ‘remain young forever’, echoing his long held obsession with Peter Pan.
The programme also revisited his friendship with 10-year-old cancer patient, Gavin Arvizo.
Neverland Ranch features heavily in Michael Jackson: The Trial (Credit: Splashnews.com)
Michael regularly invited Gavin and other children to stay at Neverland, presenting it as a magical refuge inspired by fantasy.
As the documentary makes clear, that dreamlike vision later became inseparable from the serious child abuse allegations made against him.
Michael Jackson: The Trial continues tonight, with scenes showing police raiding Neverland after Michael admitted to sharing his bed with children.
As the story unfolds, many viewers are asking the same question. What actually happened to Neverland?
Michael Jackson: What happened to Neverland?
Neverland Ranch has remained a source of fascination long after Michael Jackson’s death in June 2009.
The vast estate in Santa Barbara County, California, served as both his private home and a personal amusement park from 1988 until 2005.
The ranch has been thrust back into public view by Michael Jackson: The Trial. In its opening moments, sombre music underscored its isolation across 3,000 acres.
In previously unheard recordings, Michael described the privacy the land gave him and his desire to recreate the childhood he felt he had missed.
“Peter Pan knew what the real golden magic of childhood was all about,” he said, describing children staying young forever at Neverland.
Tonight’s episode will show the police raid that marked a turning point for the property.
Neverland also featured heavily in the 2019 documentary Leaving Neverland, in which Wade Robson and James Safechuck alleged they were groomed and abused there as children.
Old footage from Neverland Ranch features in Michael Jackson: The Trial (Credit: Channel 4)
Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch and its changing name
Michael Jackson bought Neverland Ranch in 1988, but it had already gone through several identities.
When it was built in 1980, it was known as Zaca Laderas Ranch.
Developer William Bone purchased it in 1981 and renamed it Sycamore Valley Ranch. That changed again when Michael bought the property in 1988 for around $17 million, according to The New York Times.
Michael renamed it Neverland after the fictional island in Peter Pan. He first visited the ranch in 1983 while meeting Sir Paul McCartney, who was staying there during the filming of Say Say Say.
When did Michael Jackson leave?
Michael left Neverland in 2005 following allegations of sexual abuse involving children.
Four years later, the fairground rides and most of the animals were removed, leaving only the llamas behind.
He never returned to live there but continued to own the estate until his death in 2009, aged 50.
In 2015, Forbes reported that the ranch was put on the market for $100 million. Interest was limited and the name was changed back to Sycamore Valley Ranch to attract buyers.
In 2020, businessman and family friend Ronald Burkle bought the property for $22 million (£16million), according to The Wall Street Journal.
The price was $88 million below the original asking figure.
Ronald is believed to have restored much of the fairground, installed new rides and refilled drained swimming pools. The small zoo is also thought to have been reinstated.
In 2024, the ranch was evacuated as the Lake Fire burned 38,664 acres in Santa Barbara County and spread close to the estate.
Michael’s ranch sold for £16million in 2020 (Credit: Splashnews.com)
Is Neverland in the Michael Jackson biopic?
The upcoming film, Michael, is set to be released worldwide this April and will chart the singer’s life from the Jackson 5 to the weeks before his death.
Michael will be played by Jaafar Jeremiah Jackson, the son of his brother Jermaine. Actor Miles Teller takes on the role of lawyer John Branca, co-executor of the Michael Jackson estate.
Miles has confirmed that scenes were filmed at Neverland for Antoine Fuqua’s biopic.
Speaking on Watch What Happens Live, he said: “I play John Branca, his entertainment lawyer. We filmed at Neverland. It was wild.”
He added that while the property had changed ownership after 2005, it was transformed again for filming.
Social media is buzzing over Oscar-nominated actor Colman Domingo‘s mind-blowing transformation into the infamous Joe Jackson in a stunning reveal at the center of the highly anticipated new trailer for Michael.
In the now-viral first look, Domingo disappears under extraordinary prosthetics and makeup to become the famed Jackson patriarch whose controversial tactics helped his son ascend into his very own realm of superstardom.
Check out the trailer below:
Directed by Antoine Fuqua—the second highest grossing Black director of all-time, Michael stars MJ’s nephew Jaafar Jackson (Jermaine’s son) as the King of Pop in the cinematic portrayal of the life and legacy of one of the most influential artists in the history of forever.
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Bustling with a special kind of nostalgia, the film “tells the story of Michael Jackson’s life beyond the music, tracing his journey from the discovery of his extraordinary talent as the lead of the Jackson Five, to the visionary artist whose creative ambition fueled a relentless pursuit to become the biggest entertainer in the world,” per the official synopsis.
Source: Lionsgate Pictures
Delving into his off-stage life between some of the most iconic performances from his early solo career, the film gives audiences a front-row seat to Michael Jackson as never seen before.
Source: Lionsgate Pictures
Naturally, social media erupted with starry-eyed reactions to the long-awaited biopic which trended worldwide in the midst of Grammy night hysteria.
At one point, the film was rumored to be FOUR HOURS long before later being teased as a potential 2-part event.
When asked by an analyst about part two of the film, Lionsgate Motion Picture Chair Adam Fogelson teased that “more Michael” could be announced right after the first film is released, per World of Reel.
“…we’ve had the great pleasure of seeing the director’s cut of the first film, and it is exceptional,” he said on a recent earnings call.
“While we’re not yet ready to confirm plans for a second film, I can tell you that the creative team is hard at work making sure that we’re in a position to deliver more Michael soon after we release the first film.”
What are you wearing to the theater on premiere weekend? Tell us down below and peep the social media hysteria over Colman’s stunning transformation on the flip.
Welcome to 2026, honeybees! New year, same old habits—doomscrolling on TikTok and saving our favorite audios every day. This week, Black artists from the ’70s and the early 2000s are topping the TikTok viral charts, and we’re loving every moment.
From Michael Jackson to Lenny Kravitz, here’s what’s trending on TikTok right now:
‘You Rock My World’ By Michael Jackson
Any trend that allows us to make TikToks with our best friend is a trend we want to be a part of. Michael Jackson’s 2001 ‘You Rock My World’ is the cutest bestie trend we’ve seen on our FYP in a while. Start off the new year right with this iconic 2000s MJ banger!
Another 2000s banger coming right up! Jordin Sparks was one of our inspirations growing up, and now we’re hearing ‘No Air’ up and down our timeline these days. If you were (and still are, obviously) a Jordin Sparks fan like us, we want to know which one of her hits you’d like to hear go viral!
The ’70s were some of the best times for music, and Cheryl Lynn’s ‘Got To Be Real’ is up there. When we hear this song, we can’t help but get up and dance (and also press that shiny red record button on TikTok). I mean, come on, those vocals go crazy.
With the finale of Stranger Thingshitting our screens on New Year’s Eve, Diana Ross’ ‘Upside Down’ is all anyone can sing. It’s the most perfect song for the last season of the show, let alone one of our favorite Diana Ross songs. Our FYP is burnin’ up with bangers this week!
When is PinkPantheressnot trending on TikTok?! She’s the queen of knowing what her fans want to hear, and that includes the recent remix of ‘Stateside’ featuring our Midnight Sun princess, Zara Larsson. We never thought PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson would team up on a song, but this remix has been playing nonstop both on our FYP and on our day-to-day playlists.
Our FYP has to have a sad song or two, and this week it’s Lenny Kravitz’s ‘It Ain’t Over ‘Til It’s Over.’ Lenny Kravitz is one of those artists who just stand out from the rest—he’s a genius in R&B, soul, rock, and funk genres—and our FYP seems to agree!
Which of these trending TikTok audios have you been hearing the most? Let us know by dropping a comment or by buzzing with us on @thehoneypop, Facebook, and Instagram.
MTV launched on Aug. 1, 1981. “Video Killed the Radio Star” from The Buggles played first, changing how music reached people. The channel turned music videos from throwaway promotions into creative mini-movies that influenced television, fashion, and what was popular throughout the 1980s and 1990s.
The channel announced at the end of 2025 that it was shutting down all of its 24-hour music-only channels worldwide, marking the end of an era that began when artists realized simple lip-sync videos wouldn’t cut it anymore.
Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” represented the full evolution of the music video as an art. Director John Landis created the 13-and-a-half-minute horror-themed production for $500,000 at a time when most videos cost around $50,000. “For a while there, you couldn’t turn on the television without seeing ‘Thriller,’” Landis told Today.com.
Peter Gabriel’s “Sledgehammer” won nine Video Music Awards using stop-motion animation, a painstaking process that required Gabriel to lie under a glass sheet for 16 hours while animators moved objects around his face frame-by-frame.
ZZ Top reinvented itself for the MTV generation with three interconnected videos. “Gimme All Your Lovin’,” “Sharp Dressed Man,” and “Legs” featured a 1933 Ford Coupe called the Eliminator. The clips helped the Eliminator album sell more than all the band’s previous releases combined.
Run-DMC and Aerosmith collaborated on “Walk This Way” in 1986, breaking down barriers between rock and hip-hop in ways that still matter today. Cyndi Lauper’s “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” won a Moonman trophy at the Video Music Awards and featured wrestler “Captain” Lou Albano as her father.
By the 2000s, MTV began having more success with reality programming such as The Osbournes, 16 and Pregnant, and Jersey Shore. Hit police drama Miami Vice was nicknamed “MTV cops” for imitating the quick-cut, glossy look of music videos during the channel’s peak years.
The Justice Department released thousands of files relating to Jeffrey Epstein on Friday, including photos featuring people like former President Bill Clinton and Mick Jagger. However, survivors are concerned with how much information was redacted from the files.
Many familiar faces and names are mentioned or pictured in the redacted documents, among them former President Bill Clinton, Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor (formerly known as Prince Andrew, until he was recently stripped of his royal titles in connection with the Epstein scandal), and even Winnie the Pooh and Piglet (one victim claimed that Epstein took her to Disneyland, and photos are included in the data dump).
Michael Jackson, Bill Clinton and Diana Ross.Department of Justice.
Forget Mariah Carey defrosting the minute the ghouls start swapping their capes for tinsel boas—J.I. Case High School junior and YouTuber Grayson Kirch had his own holiday-season glow-up. His reimagining of Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller’ clawed its way to nearly 40,000 views and even snatched the attention of CBS 58. The plot twist? Grayson didn’t just direct the video—he produced it, starred in it, and basically ran the whole thing like a one-teen multimedia empire. The result was such a hit that he and his crew are already back in the lab, this time cooking up a Christmas sequel soundtracked by Mariah’s ‘All I Want for Christmas Is You.’ We caught up with the budding filmmaker to get the inside scoop before the elves leak it on TikTok—and to hear what he wishes Hollywood understood about young creatives who are, frankly, out here doing the most.
Okay, Grayson, origin story time—when did you first realize video and film were your thing? Like, what kicked off the obsession? As a kid, I loved to make iMovies on my phone with my friends. Me and my cousins would go over to my grandparents’ house after school, and we would make these little videos. I would film, direct, and edit the videos. I guess I really just never grew out of that phase, and I feel like it’s something that will always stick with me.
You’re a junior at J.I. Case—is there a teacher or mentor who hypes you up or inspires your media-making brain? I definitely get hyped up a lot at school – the staff at school loved the video, and they hype me up for it all the time! I have been recognized for it quite a few times now.
Your first reimagined video was Fetty Wap’s ‘Trap Queen.’ Looking back, what’s the biggest glow-up in your skills since then that helped you take on Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller?’ Hahahaha, I can not believe you guys found that! My first music video recreation that I uploaded on YouTube was a school project. I didn’t really think much about it and kind of just posted it for my friends to see. Thriller is definitely a lot better on the production value side. A lot more thought was put into it as well. That first video was filmed in maybe two class periods, while Thriller took months. Thriller is also the first video that I really put my business sense into. I really pushed and marketed this video, which is something I’ve never done before.
You weren’t even born when ‘Thriller’ dropped, but music lives forever. Do you remember the first time you actually heard the song? Yes. I was probably 3 years old – I remember hearing the song and being terrified of Vincent Price speaking at the end. For like 4 years, I wouldn’t listen to the song because I was so scared of it. Talk about ironic!
Image Source: Courtesy of Grayson Kirch
What was it like scouting spots for your ‘Thriller’ remake—especially filming in the Oriental Theatre? That’s iconic. Finding shooting locations was one of my favorite parts of making this video. It was so much fun to find places in my local area that have the same vibe as the original video. It was also quite a challenge, though, as the original ‘Thriller’ was filmed in LA, finding similar areas near me. My friends and I had a lot of fun calling different theaters and explaining to them what we were doing. We probably called 10 other theaters before the Oriental, and they all said no, but I am so glad we ended up shooting there – it was perfect.
Is there one moment from shooting ‘Thriller’ that you look at and go, “Yeah… that was sick?” I mean, I think I definitely have to go with the zombie dancing scene. Obviously, the original dancing scene is one of the most iconic in history, and being able to recreate that was so much fun, and I am so happy with how it turned out. We worked so hard on every detail of that scene, making sure that it was as close to the original as possible, while still adding our own little twist to it.
Next up, you’re doing Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want for Christmas Is You,’ and you’ve got FrankenFuel as a sponsor—what is it about holiday videos that brings out the most creativity in you? Christmas is something that I love just as much as creating. Since I was little, it has always been my favorite time of year. I just enjoy it so much more than anything else. It brings me so much joy, and I hope this video will do the same for a lot of people. I can’t wait to share this next video with everyone; we have some awesome things in store, including a cameo appearance that I can’t wait for you guys to see!
Going from “these videos are fun” to “oh wait, sponsors are watching” is a jump. How do you keep the stress out and stay in your creative zone? I think that something that most people don’t realize is the whole business side that is behind this. I am even more passionate about business and building my brand than I am about creating videos, but most people don’t see that side of me. There is so much strategy that goes into it. You have to be really close to me to see how hard I work behind the scenes on the business/marketing side of things. You could ask any of my close friends how much work I put into it that nobody else sees. I think you have to have a really good business and marketing sense to do something like this – you’re marketing yourself. It does get stressful at times, but I always try to remind myself that this should be fun and not to get too stressed about it.
You’re working with your friends as your cast and your crew. What do you wish people knew about how creative teens actually are, even if Hollywood hasn’t caught up yet? I don’t think people realize how our generation connects with the internet. We are able to create anything from anywhere. These days, you don’t have to be in Hollywood to be able to be “in Hollywood”.
Last one—where do you see yourself in ten years? Dream big, we won’t judge. I definitely want to be doing something that has to do with what I am doing now. I always say that my biggest fear is ending up spending my life doing something that I don’t enjoy. If I could find a way to make this career, that would be the dream; so I hope that I’ve done that in 10 years.
Which holiday should Grayson reimagine next? Drop your chaotic, festive, or downright unhinged suggestions on our socials—Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook. Go on, enable his cinematic era.
Lionsgate released the first official teaser trailer for the forthcoming Michael Jackson biopic, Michael, on Thursday. And after its initial 24 hours, the views racked up to 116.2 million globally, according to WaveMetrix, making it the most-viewed trailer for any music biopic in history and now holding the title for Lionsgate as the studio’s largest trailer debut.
Jaafar Jackson, nephew of the late Michael Jackson, stars as the King of Pop. In the first footage, Jaafar is seen recreating the musician’s iconic dance moves, such as the moonwalk, and it also teases a clip of the “Thriller” music video. The trailer will play in theaters starting next week.
Additional castmembers include Miles Teller as attorney John Branca, Colman Domingo as Joe Jackson, Kat Graham as Diana Ross, Nia Long as Katherine Jackson, Laura Harrier as Suzanne de Passe, Kendrick Sampson as Quincy Jones and Juliano Krue Valdi as a young Michael.
Here is the official synopsis: “The film tells the story of Michael Jackson’s life beyond the music, tracing his journey from the discovery of his extraordinary talent as the lead of the Jackson Five, to the visionary artist whose creative ambition fueled a relentless pursuit to become the biggest entertainer in the world. Highlighting both his life off-stage and some of the most iconic performances from his early solo career, the film gives audiences a front-row seat to Michael Jackson as never before. This is where his story begins.”
Antoine Fuqua directs the feature with a script by John Logan. Meanwhile, Graham King, John Branca and John McClain serve as producers. Michael hits theaters April 24, 2026.
Social media is ABLAZE over the long-awaited Michael teaser trailer that dazzled its way to 30 million views in only 6 hours as the definitive first look at the highly anticipated biopic.
Source: Lionsgate Pictures
Directed by Antoine Fuqua–the second highest grossing Black director of all-time, Michael stars MJ’s nephew Jaafar Jackson (Jermaine’s son) as the King of Pop in the glossy film that seemingly captures the spirit of music’s most golden era.
Check out the teaser trailer below:
Naturally, fans dissected every moment of the teaser including the now-viral reveal of Jaafar Jackson’s large prosthetic nose that sparked endless debate over accuracy vs. mockery across the internet.
Whether you appreciate the accuracy or think they did too much, it’s clear the film isn’t scared to address every part of MJ’s iconic career.
At one point, the film was rumored to be 4 HOURS before later being teased as a potential 2-part event.
When asked by an analyst about Part 2 of the film, Lionsgate Motion Picture Chair Adam Fogelson teased that “more Michael” could be announced right after the first film is released, per World of Reel.
“…we’ve had the great pleasure of seeing the director’s cut of the first film, and it is exceptional,” he said on a recent earnings call.
“While we’re not yet ready to confirm plans for a second film, I can tell you that the creative team is hard at work making sure that we’re in a position to deliver more Michael soon after we release the first film.”
Based on the rousing reception, Michael is primed to be one of 2026’s biggest hits when it moonwalks into theaters April 24, 2026 and is already stirring up hysteria that you can see on the flip.
Cyndi Lauper leading the crowd at the first MTV New Year’s Eve party at Times Square. Photo: Allan Tannenbaum/Getty Images
The news that MTV is shutting down its music channels does not come as a surprise to me. Starting in 1986, I ran MTV, VH1, Nickelodeon, Comedy Central, and other cable TV networks for 17 years as the CEO of MTV Networks, the sun in Viacom’s solar system. It hasn’t been that for a while. MTV has been losing credibility for years, and it’s devolved into a dumping ground for B-grade reality shows. No new music energy has been pumped into it for ages.
Only the U.K. music channels are affected for now, but the United States can’t be far behind. The business case for running music videos on a linear TV cable network in this increasingly digital, on-demand world is terrible and only getting worse. Why sit around and wait for Beyoncé when you can summon her video with a simple click?
David Ellison, who recently acquired Paramount Global from Viacom, has an opportunity to step back and try to reimagine MTV as a new destination outside the confines of a linear TV network. The music space is now dominated with increasingly predictive and boring algorithms. Maybe there is a way to shake up at least a corner of the huge music market like we did back in 1981, when I was just the marketing guy arriving at the start-up that would become MTV.
After we busted through the cable-operator gates with “I Want My MTV,”we became the new gatekeepers. Everyone wanted to be on MTV. Labels and artists lobbied to get their videos in heavy rotation. Wecould catapult nobodies to stardom in weeks. There was a lot of power to wield, and power doesn’t always bring out the best in people.
We were in the Zeitgeist business, so we took a lot of chances with new things, not always successfully. If something didn’t work, it died a quick death, and we moved on. We decided we weren’t going to grow old with our audience the way Rolling Stone magazine had — they were still writing about Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton. We would refresh and reinvent MTV every four to five years as one group aged out and a new one replaced it.
Advertisers pay a higher premium to reach young people. The thinking is: Hook them on Crest or Pepsi or Ford early on and you’ve got a customer for life. When MTV said, “We have a direct line to them,” Madison Avenue lined up at our door.
One by one, record labels agreed to give us clips for free, and they set up whole departments dedicated to servicing MTV. But they never stopped grumbling. They complained about the money they had to spend to increase the quantity and quality of their music videos. So we agreed to pay them millions of dollars through new, multiyear “output deals.” Buried in those deals was a clause granting us exclusivity for six months over any other 24-hour channel on 20 percent of their music videos. The 20 percent of the videos we picked were all the big hits. No potential competitor could take a run at us without access to the hits.
I was against using hard-nosed tactics with the record companies and artists. Gatekeepers with a heart seemed the best way to prolong our prominence. As “the biggest radio station in the nation,” I argued, we should be fair, humble, and walk softly; the labels were predisposed to resent us. My opinion didn’t always carry the day. I watched some of our talent-relations people blossom into megalomaniacs. I guess it’s human nature that if you are hanging out on boats with Billy Idol and partying with Van Halen and strolling into every dressing room while giving thumbs-up or down to anxious managers, it will eventually turn you into an asshole. I saw it happen again and again.
A recruit to the Music & Talent department with good ears and a deep knowledge of pop and rock might last three years. To fire them, we might have to find a concierge to kick down a door in an L.A. hotel and revive them after a three-day cocaine binge. We needed a strong human-resources department.
Tom Freston at a promotional event in 1987. Photo: Alan Gilbert/Fairfax Media via Getty Images
We were witnesses and eager participants in the last display of the legendary excesses of the music business. The party really kicked into gear when Bob Pittman made former radio DJ and label executive Les Garland the head of programming. Les was the one who had gotten Mick Jagger to scream, “I want my MTV.” He referred to himself in the third person as “the Gar Man,” which tells you a lot. Les Garland wasn’t his real name. Like many former radio people on our staff, he created a radio name. “Les Garland” was really Lester Schweikert.
He looked about my age, but to this day I don’t think his date of birth has ever been revealed. He was an effervescent, good-looking guy with stylish curly brown hair, confident that he was the king of cool. In many ways he was. MTV’s fingers were in every pie of the music-industry machinery and for a while, most things came through or went out from Les. He arrived with deep music-business relationships, full of war stories from the rock-and-roll trenches of the ’70s, which he recounted to entertain his younger minions. It was like David Lee Roth had arrived in an Armani suit and taken over the floor.
Amid towering speakers, gold records, stacks of videotapes, Sony Trinitrons, overflowing ashtrays, and a bar stocked with tequila and a lineup of squat green Dom Pérignon bottles sent over by the labels, the Les Garland Show streamed. Every time a big ad sale landed, he rang a huge bell. Grizzled label-promotion men in satin jackets and facial hair would slink in and out, usually laughing. Rod Stewart would drop by to play his newest tracks. When female artists came calling, his staff would vacate, and according to office lore, the Gar Man would fornicate with a lucky few. At least, that’s the legend. With Les, it was hard to tell what was true, what was myth, and what was scandal.
When he wasn’t there, others would sneak in to have sex in his office. At one Christmas party, a staffer full of holiday bravado cozied up to Garland and said, “Les, I just want you to know that I fucked one of your assistants last night on your desk.” Les clinked his glass, said, “Congratulations, Bud,” and walked away.
Big blowout parties became part of company mythology. “Tequila girls” in short shorts and cowboy hats, decked out in bandolier sashes packed with shot glasses, always circulated. Tequila bottles were nestled in holsters strapped across their hips. Bands like the Fabulous Thunderbirds would play. These parties could go on to three or four in the morning, sometimes devolving into after-parties. You could never get away with this kind of office party nowadays. Nonetheless, the next day, a line would form outside the human-resources offices.
The Gar Man undeniably upped our game, our profile, our whole tempo. I had spent nearly a decade in the 1970s running a clothing export company out of India and Afghanistan and to me, MTV was a lot like Kabul. An exotic new place with a crazy cast of wild characters and few rules.
A superfan myself, I had the privilege of attending any concert I wanted. Every day we dealt with the biggest stars in the world, along with all the black sheep and characters who handled them. Even though music drove the culture, the business of music was still considered the lowest rung of the entertainment ladder. To people in film and television, it was a lowbrow world of payola, shysters, and semi-gangsters in sharkskin suits. But these were the folks I liked the most. They had hustle, were clever, and loved music. They were also the most fun. Some label heads, like Gil Friesen, who ran A&M, Jeff Ayeroff, who ran Virgin, and Jimmy Iovine, who ran Interscope, became good friends. Many in the MTV crowd had not been to or finished college. I went undercover with my academic credentials. It sounded a lot better to be “the man from Afghanistan” than the M.B.A. from NYU.
People worked in flip-flops and bathing suits; some slept in their offices. In 1988, at 2 a.m., an overnighter flipped a lit cigarette into his garbage can and burned down a whole floor at 1775 Broadway. Nineteen firefighters were hospitalized. The local radio stations would play Springsteen’s “I’m on Fire” and dedicate it to us.
“Exotic dancers” would be sent over by the music labels. Bands passed through all the time. Lemmy from Motörhead might wander by with a bottle of tequila. We had one receptionist who sold cocaine. Many of the staff found that convenient. Cocaine was rampant in the ’80s, especially in the music industry. Even your dry cleaner was doing it then. People thought coke was the new No-Doz, a harmless pick-me-up powder.
One of the programming guys, a jovial, former radio hotshot whom Howard Stern had crowned “Pig Virus,” kept his stash in a little plastic receptacle in his desk drawer, the place where you’d put paper clips. In a meeting, he’d nonchalantly open the drawer and take a hit off a collar stay, then politely look around. “Anyone need their beak packed?”
MTV wasn’t a job; MTV was a life. We were a second family. People would duck out all the time to the bar around the corner. At night, there was always a smorgasbord of things to choose from … concerts, dinners, listening parties, movie screenings. We were in the middle of everything, so we were invited to everything. Not everybody made it out the other side; there were casualties with all the late nights, alcohol, and drugs. No one except me had a family. Margaret and I had a young son, Andrew, at home, which kept me pretty much on the straight and narrow. Once he went to sleep, I could head back out on the town.
To try to prop up the business side and bring order to the chaos, Pittman installed a series of general managers. They didn’t take. One, David Hilton, undermined his predecessor and then went down in flames. Hilton had zero music chops, which earned him zero respect. I’ve never seen anyone do a worse job at anything. He sent around a note to announce that if anyone was even one minute late to a meeting, they’d be locked out. He locked his door and put a chair under the doorknob. Sometimes we’d all be purposely late so he’d have to have his meeting by himself.
Robert Downey Jr. and Slash at the 1988 MTV Video Music Awards. Photo: Barry King/WireImage
In 1984, MTV held the first Video Music Awards at Radio City Music Hall. We were positioning ourselves as the irreverent alternative to the self-serious Grammy Awards. Bette Midler and Dan Aykroyd hosted. The Cars’ “You Might Think” won Best Video, and Herbie Hancock’s “Rockit” won pretty much everything else. Madonna rolled around on the stage in a wedding dress while singing “Like a Virgin,” and a star was born.
When MTV began, we played almost any video we could get our hands on. As we proved our ability to sell records, the bigger stars with bigger budgets pushed aside the punkier stuff. The record companies began to crank up music-video production. Instead of four or five new clips a week, we began to get 50 or 60. Big star holdouts like Bruce Springsteen joined in. Older acts like ZZ Top reengineered their image. Lionel Richie spent $1 million on his “Dancing on the Ceiling” video.
As MTV became more influential, we also got more scrutiny, and not just from the Christian right. The criticism that stung was that we were not playing Black artists. In a very awkward interview with VJ Mark Goodman, David Bowie challenged him about the channel’s color line. Rick James went on a public crusade about us rejecting his “Super Freak.” He was right.
Rock radio went backward after the 1960s, when the Beatles and Stones shared airtime and formats with the Supremes and Aretha. The early MTV music programmers came from the world of ’70s FM rock radio, which relied on a format called “album-oriented rock,” or AOR. It was a very researched system but predicated on an underlying racism. “Our audience wants to hear a guitar,” was the refrain from the programming guys. AOR resegregated rock and roll.
In the 1980s, the record companies all had “Black Music” departments. The trade magazines, Billboard, Cash Box, and Radio & Records, all had separate Black Music charts. It wasn’t just MTV. But we were the only music channel on television. Early MTV did play some Black artists who fit the AOR format — Joan Armatrading, Grace Jones, Eddy Grant’s “Electric Avenue.” We gave heavy play to Prince’s “Little Red Corvette” and “1999.” But that doesn’t excuse the sad fact that the music department would put Hall & Oates doing R&B in heavy rotation, while ignoring Luther Vandross and the Brothers Johnson.
The wall was finally knocked down by Michael Jackson’s Thriller. CBS Records chief Walter Yetnikoff always claimed that he forced MTV to play Michael Jackson by saying that if we did not, he would pull all Columbia and Epic videos from the channel. It’s a good story, but I have never found anyone who worked at MTV who had any idea what Walter was talking about. “Billie Jean” was a smash from day one. We wanted that video on our channel. “Beat It” was even better. By the time MJ released the video for “Thriller” toward the end of 1983, he and MTV were in a mutually beneficial relationship. We played his 13-minute mini-movie on the hour, every hour. I ran ads in People magazine with start times. Our ratings went through the roof, and so did Jackson’s album sales.
In the late ’80s, we opened the aperture further. We were the biggest music outlet in the world; there was no need to follow anyone. MTV would be the first to mainline hip-hop into Middle America’s living rooms with Yo! MTV Raps, hosted by downtown Renaissance man Fab 5 Freddy. Aerosmith and Run-DMC sanctified the rock-rap connection with the clever video “Walk This Way,” and we were off into a whole new world.
But before that came our next powerhouse: the July 1985 16-hour Live Aid extravaganza held simultaneously in London and Philadelphia. At the time, it was the biggest satellite linkup and television broadcast ever. It raised almost $200 million for African famine relief and would set a template for the many all-star fundraising concerts to follow.
Paul McCartney, Elton John, and David Bowie were on the bill in London. Fans saw a career-making performance by U2 and a showstopper by Queen. Phil Collins performed at Wembley, then jumped on the Concorde to play another set at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, where Mick Jagger tore off Tina Turner’s skirt.
I rented a car and drove from New York with Bob Friedman, my eager marketing foot soldier, known internally as “the V” for reasons no one remembers. When we got there, we realized our credentials were in the hands of a producer who had disappeared. This was the pre-cell-phone era. There was no one to call. We finally found our way to the artists’ enclosure and jumped the fence. I landed in the dirt right in front of Bob Dylan’s trailer, dusted myself off, and then calmly strolled down lanes of trailers, striking the pose of someone who belonged.
It was like wandering through the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame trailer park. Signs read: Tom Petty, Santana, Madonna, the Beach Boys, the Four Tops, Neil Young. We finally made it to the stage, and I spent the entire show at our news desk, 20 feet from the action. Live Aid was the final step in the legitimization of MTV. We were now like “Kleenex” and “Coke.” That year, we made the covers of Time and Newsweek. As for David Hilton, Pittman finally showed him the door and crowned me general manager. It was my 40th birthday. I had finished my apprenticeship and was ready to run the beast. I got a very warm welcome. Always follow an unpopular person into a job if you can.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Kevin Federline says concern for his two sons with Britney Spears long kept him from telling his story, and those same concerns are the reason he’s telling it now that they’re men.
In a memoir to be released Tuesday, “You Thought You Knew,” Federline documents his difficult years as husband, ex-husband, and co-parent with Spears, who wrote her own memoir in 2023.
Federline’s includes some salacious stories and some potentially disturbing details about her behavior that have already made headlines.
“I want my children to be able to move forward in their lives and know that the actual truth of everything is out there,” Federline, 47, told The Associated Press in a Zoom interview, backed by palm trees in Hawaii, where he now lives with wife Victoria Prince and their two daughters. “That’s a very, very big part of this for me. And it’s really important that I share my story, so they don’t have to.”
He and Spears’ son Preston is now 20 and his brother Jayden is 19. They have little relationship with their mother.
Federline was a 26-year-old backup dancer for other major pop acts when he coupled with Spears in 2004. Their courtship, two-year marriage and divorce took them through one of the most intense celebrity media frenzies in modern history. Federline was ruthlessly roasted as a loser hanger-on, especially after he released his own deeply mocked hip-hop album.
Britney Spears, center right, and her husband Kevin Federline are interviewed by Rachel from the Tyra Banks show as Tyra Banks, right, looks on while they arrive for the LG Mariah Carey and Jermaine Dupri Post Grammy Party at a private residence, Feb. 8, 2006, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/Danny Moloshok)
Britney Spears, center right, and her husband Kevin Federline are interviewed by Rachel from the Tyra Banks show as Tyra Banks, right, looks on while they arrive for the LG Mariah Carey and Jermaine Dupri Post Grammy Party at a private residence, Feb. 8, 2006, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/Danny Moloshok)
“I wasn’t just famous — I was infamous,” he writes in the book, which will be released on the new audiobook first platform Listenin.
He told the AP he long considered writing the book, but recently got serious about it.
“I picked it up and put it down quite a lot over probably a five-year period,” he said. “I think that it’s a very good description of me, who I am, the father I’ve become, the husband I am, the ex-husband I am.”
Key revelations from Kevin Federline about Britney Spears
— Federline describes the night he and Spears first connected at a Hollywood nightclub, and how they hooked up hours later in a hotel bungalow: “Britney turned around, slipped off her underwear and started kissing me, tearing at my clothes with both hands. We stumbled toward the bed while I struggled to kick my pants off my ankles. This. Is. Happening. OK, sorry. Calm down, that’s as detailed as I’m going to get.”
— He writes that a “San Andreas-level seismic shift in my reality” followed a few hours later when he left the hotel with Spears and dozens of paparazzi cars followed them.
— He describes the night before their wedding, when Spears called her ex Justin Timberlake, seeking closure: “She never really got over him. She might’ve loved me, but there was something there with Justin that she couldn’t let go of.”
Justin Timberlake, right, greets Kevin Federline as they arrive at the JT-TV launch party in Los Angeles, Feb. 9, 2007. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)
Justin Timberlake, right, greets Kevin Federline as they arrive at the JT-TV launch party in Los Angeles, Feb. 9, 2007. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)
— Federline said seeing Spears drinking while pregnant “tripped the silent alarms in my head.” He later was outraged when he saw her doing cocaine when the boys were still breastfeeding, saying “are you seriously going to go home after this and feed them like you don’t have a body full of drugs?”
— He writes that Preston told him Spears mercilessly mocked him and once punched him in the face.
— He says the boys began refusing to visit her when they were 13 and 14, and later told him stories that “shook me to the core.” “They would awaken sometimes at night to find her standing silently in the doorway, watching them sleep — ‘Oh, you’re awake?’ — with a knife in her hand.”
Spears’ response to Federline’s book
Spears responded with a statement on her social media accounts. She said Federline has engaged in “constant gaslighting.”
“Trust me, those white lies in that book, they are going straight to the bank and I’m the only one who genuinely gets hurt here.” She said, adding that “if you really know me, you won’t pay attention to the tabloids of my mental health and drinking.”
She also addressed her relationship with her sons:
“I have always pleaded and screamed to have a life with my boys. Relationships with teenage boys is complex. I have felt demoralized by this situation and have always asked and almost begged for them to be a part of my life. Sadly, they have always witnessed the lack of respect shown by (their) own father for me.”
An attorney for Spears did not respond to a request for comment.
Federline’s life, and thoughts about Spears’ life
Federline writes about growing up in Fresno, California, and finding “my therapy and my purpose” through dance.
Kevin Federline performs during a concert at the House of Blues Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2006, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Danny Moloshok)
Kevin Federline performs during a concert at the House of Blues Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2006, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Danny Moloshok)
He reminisces about his first big tour, with Pink, and working with Aaliyah, Destiny’s Child and Michael Jackson. He details wrestling with John Cena in the WWE and appearing in a self-mocking Super Bowl commercial.
Federline says Preston and Jayden are living on their own as young adults, and have both been working on making music that makes him proud.
He weighs in on Spears’ dissolved court conservatorship, saying it was necessary but hurt most of the people involved. He said the fans who fought to free her left an unfortunate legacy.
“The Free Britney movement may have started from a good place, but it vilified everyone around her so intensely that now it’s nearly impossible for anyone to step in,” he writes.
He says in the book that he wrote it in part as a public plea for her to get more help.
“I’ve lost hope that things will ever fully turn around,” he writes, “but I still hope that Britney can find peace.”
The Michael Jackson Bad World Tour Keepsake Premiere Collection will debut on December 15, 2025, celebrating the King of Pop’s first solo tour, which kicked off on September 12, 1987, with a range of card designs.
LOS ANGELES, October 8, 2025 (Newswire.com)
– Keepsake Trading Cards is proud to announce the release of the first premium Michael Jackson collectible trading card collection in recent years.
The Michael Jackson Bad World Tour Keepsake Premiere Collection will debut on December 15, 2025, celebrating the King of Pop’s first solo tour, which kicked off on September 12, 1987, with a range of card designs.
This one-of-a-kind collection will feature Private Collection relic cards containing actual pieces from a pair of Michael Jackson’s Bad World Tour-worn gloves purchased by Keepsake at auction.
In addition, a randomly inserted 1 of 1 masterpiece card will feature an original cut Michael Jackson signature autograph purchased by Keepsake at auction, making it among the most rare and coveted collectible in music trading card history.
The product line will be available in multiple formats, offering collectors and fans at every level the opportunity to purchase a box:
Hobby Box – 16 packs | SRP $59.95
Breakers Box – 2 packs | SRP $59.95 with a guaranteed hit numbered to 16 or less per box and exclusive Breakers Box limited parallels
Blaster Box – 8 packs | SRP $29.95
Hanger Box – 4 packs | SRP $14.95
Hanger Pack – 4 cards | SRP $5.95
The Hobby Box & Breakers Box will officially release on December 15, 2025 while the Retail offerings will hit stores and retailers on January 23, 2026.
To further honor the history of the Bad World Tour, the collection will feature unique, symbolic numbering and parallels that connect directly to certain facts relating to the tour:
Red Parallel (/87) – A tribute to 1987, the year the tour began.
Gold Parallel (/17) – Representing the 17 months from Sept 87 through Jan 89 that the Bad Tour spanned.
Platinum Parallel (/15) – Marking the 15 countries where Michael performed on this tour.
Base Set (123 cards) – Reflecting the 123 total concerts performed worldwide as part of this tour.
In total, the collection’s checklist will include over 300 unique cards-from base and parallel variations to inserts, relics, and the one-of-a-kind cut signature card-ensuring depth and excitement for collectors at every level.
Keepsake Trading Cards is renowned for their exceptional quality and innovative designs. Specializing in creating unique and memorable trading cards, Keepsake takes pride in celebrating icons and exceptional moments in history for music, pop culture, and entertainment.
For more information, visit keepsaketradingcards.com and on all social platforms @keepsaketradingcards
Marc Schindler, former assistant secretary and chief of staff with Maryland Department of Juvenile Services, summarizes to members of the Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland the marked gravestones at burial site of Black boys next to Cheltenham Veterans Cemetery in Prince George’s County on Sept. 23. (Photo by William J. Ford/Maryland Matters)(Maryland Matters/William J. Ford)
Marc Schindler, former assistant secretary and chief of staff with Maryland Department of Juvenile Services, summarizes to members of the Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland the marked gravestones at burial site of Black boys next to Cheltenham Veterans Cemetery in Prince George’s County on Sept. 23. (Photo by William J. Ford/Maryland Matters)(Maryland Matters/William J. Ford)
Some gravestones lie flat on the ground, leaves and twigs partially covering their weathered epitaphs, like the one for “Mark Davis of Baltimore, Died Feb. 3, 1885, Aged 13.”
In another section of woods, there aren’t even headstones: About 100 cinder blocks lined in rows mark the graves of some of the Black boys buried here from the 19th into the 20th centuries and largely forgotten, the cinder blocks sunken and visited only by bees.
That was the scene that greeted about a dozen members of the Legislative Black Caucus as they walked through heavy brush, weeds and thorny undergrowth to inspect graves of boys who died in what the old House of Reformation and Instruction for Colored Children in southern Prince George’s County.
The neglect of the boys’ graves is made more stark by the fact that it sits next to the pristine, manicured lawn of the Cheltenham Veterans Cemetery.
“I drive past this place every day, the pristine detail that’s taken in grave sites such as this,” state Sen. Michael Jackson (D-Prince George’s, Charles and Calvert) said of the veterans cemetery, before reflecting on the forgotten an overgrown graves of the boys.
“There is no reason to disrespect anyone,” said Jackson, whose district includes the graves. “We have a lot of work to do, folks.”
A gravestone for Mark Davis, a teen who died in state custody at the House of Reformation and Instruction for Colored Children in 1885. (Photo by William J. Ford/Maryland Matters)
The folks he was addressing were the caucus members, who are already working on legislation to not only clean up the burial site “to bring dignity and care” to the boys’ lives, but also create a commission to investigate their deaths.
A small pot of money may help with the restoration of the site near the Cheltenham Youth Detention Center, which is managed by the state Department of Juvenile Services. The department applied this summer for a $31,000 grant to the African American Heritage Preservation Program to work on restoring the wooded area.
If the grant is approved later this year, the state may invest more money for “restoration and repair of the cemetery” in next fiscal year’s capital budget, according to a statement Tuesday evening from the Gov. Wes Moore’s office.
“Our history is our power and everyone shares responsibility in preserving and uplifting the countless stories of our state that have often gone unrecognized and unheralded,” said David Turner, the governor’s communications director. “We look forward to working with the General Assembly, our state agencies, local leaders, and community advocates on this project.”
‘Scandalous’
Work on a restoration project began with former Department of Juvenile Services Secretary Vincent Schiraldi, who stepped down in June.
Marc Schindler, former assistant secretary and chief of staff with the department, who walked the woods with legislators on Tuesday, first visited the site last year. He later returned to look for any headstones with department staff, a volunteer genealogist and some youth from the nearby Cheltenham detention center.
Schindler said research revealed that the House of Reformation and Instruction for Colored Children was opened around 1870, about 20 years after the House of Refuge was opened for juvenile offenders. But that facility, on the site of what is the current Charles Hickey School, was reserved for white children.
Schindler said the conditions at the House of Refuge for white children focused “on education and treatment.” He called the treatment of Black children at the House of Reformation “scandalous.”
He said there could be more headstones because some records are missing and death certificates were not issued in most parts of the state until 1898.
Cinder blocks that represent gravestones in wooded area near Cheltenham Veterans Cemetery in Prince George’s County. (Photo by William J. Ford/Maryland Matters)
“It’s hard to find the words to describe how sad and outrageous it is,” said Schindler, who led caucus members through the site. “But we just don’t know how many more are here.”
Sen. William C. Smith Jr. (D-Montgomery) said the injustices of the past can still be seen today, in the treatment of youth who are automatically charged as adults for a number of crimes under Maryland law. It’s why he plans to reintroduce a bill that seeks to raise the age at which a youth would be tried as an adult, from 14 to age 16.
Smith’s bill also proposed for those 16 and younger charged with offenses such as first-degree assault, third-degree sex offense and certain offenses involving machine guns would be eligible to go to juvenile court.
“Even our predecessors in the General Assembly understood that youth should not be in adult prisons, except they just segregated them,” Smith said. “We are still going to restore and maintain this facility and this site, but what are the next steps?”
Del. Gary Simmons (D-Anne Arundel), who visited the site Tuesday, said he’s working on legislation to assess how the state can fund efforts to to identify and restore burial sites and cemeteries across the state. Part of that would be through the state’s Office of Cemetery Oversight, which is under the Department of Labor.
“We have a tremendous amount of neglected cemeteries here in the state of Maryland,” he said. “We have all kind of different methods that we generate funds for the state. This is about community pride. We’ll get it done.”
Winnie Harlow Drops Joke About Her & Chris Brown Being “Michael Jackson’s Kids”
Over the weekend, Harlow took to her Instagram feed to share a carousel with photos from her attendance at a recent Breezy Bowl tour stop in Paradise, Nevada. Furthermore, the majority of the photos showed Harlow around the venue. However, a few showed her and Chris Brown posing alongside each other. Notably, the first photo in the carousel showed her and Brown embracing as they smiled ear to ear at the camera.
“Look at Michael Jackson’s kids. I got the Skin, Maurice got the Skill 😂,” Harlow captioned the carousel in part.
Peep the photo and Winnie Harlow’s caption below.
The Joke About Being Her & Chris Brown Being “Michael Jackson’s Kids” Sparks Mixed Reactions
Social media users slid into TSR’s comment section with mixed reactions to the caption Winnie Harlow dropped for her photos with Chris Brown.
Instagram user @meikiem5145 wrote, “This was very disrespectful to the KING!”
While Instagram user @wynsongbyrd added, “Im almost positive she’s referring to vitiligo which MJ had y’all 😂”
Instagram user @lilmissdaph wrote, “Somebody said ‘Who got the HEE HEE’ and I am still screaming!!!! 😭😭😭💀”
While Instagram user @xoxorikkie added, “The caption 😂😂😂😂😂”
Instagram user @trinishyia wrote, “Saying I got the SKIN while Chris fighting colorism accusation is diabolical 😂”
While Instagram user @krystal_nigga added, “The joke was horrible”
Instagram user @staytuned_1 wrote, “Yeah I’m not understanding why everybody so offended 😂 she can’t shade Michael if they both had the same skin condition. I think it just went over a lot of y’all heads”
While Instagram user @livelove_lane added, “Now why would she say that 😂”
Instagram user @jogottii wrote, “Ain’t she engaged? That’s mad disrespectful”
While Instagram user @dhatboi_nes added, “I think she just saying Michael had vitiligo”
Instagram user @theblackmedia wrote, “Inappropriate.”
While Instagram user @80extraordinaire added, “lol Winnie funny”
Instagram user @iamperrier wrote, “Kinda dark humor but I laughed ngl😭”
While Instagram user @_nyesha__ added, “I think it’s hilarious 😂😂 tf is everybody so mad for lmao”
Instagram user @jerr__finche wrote, “she could’ve said anything else🤣”
More On Winnie Harlow & Michael Jackson’s Journey With Vitiligo
According to healthinsight.ca, Winnie Harlow was diagnosed with vitiligo at the age of four. Per the outlet, vitiligo is a skin condition that affects one in every hundred people and involves white patches appearing on different parts of their body. Medium reports that Michael Jackson began experiencing the effects of the condition in 1993. According to his son, Prince, Michael had “a lot of insecurity” around it, per PEOPLE.
“When people make up stories that I don’t want to be who I am, it hurts me. It’s a problem for me. I can’t control it. But what about all the millions of people who sit in the sun to become darker, to become other than what they are? Nobody says nothing about that,” Michael reportedly explained while speaking with Oprah in 1993. “It’s in my family, I can’t control it. It makes me very sad… I try to control it, and using makeup evens it out because I have blotches on my skin, and I have to even it out. But you know what’s funny? Why is that so important? That’s not important to me.”
Most recently, Harlow’s journey with vitiligo was commemorated by Madame Tussauds New York when they unveiled a wax figure of her in honor of World Vitiligo Day. The model ultimately called the honor a “stamp in time for representation.”
The highly anticipated Michael Jackson biopic Michael won’t hit theaters for awhile, but it’s already at the center of controversy. Paris Jackson, the 27-year-old daughter of the late King of Pop, took to her Instagram to slam the upcoming biopic from director Antoine Fuqua and writer John Logan, calling it “dishonest” and saying she has “0% involvement” in the film.
Jackson’s comments came two days after statements made by Oscar-nominated actor Colman Domingo, who plays Joe Jackson, the family patriarch, in the film. On Sunday, while leading the amfAR benefit gala for AIDS research during the Venice Film Festival, Domingo told People that Paris and her younger brother Prince Jackson were “very supportive of the film.” Paris Jackson, whom Domingo told People has been “lovely” to him, also performed at the amfAR event. “I’m excited to be here at amfAR tonight with Paris,” he added. “It feels like that’s a nice way for us to be together.”
The feeling was apparently not mutual. On Tuesday, Paris Jackson responded directly to Domingo’s comments on Instagram, distancing herself from the film. “[Colman], don’t be telling people I was ‘helpful’ on the set of a movie I had 0% involvement in lol. That is so weird,” she wrote.
The singer and actress explained that she had seen an early draft of the film and pointed out the parts that she felt were unconvincing: “I read one of the first drafts of the script and gave my notes about what was dishonest [and] didn’t sit right with me and when they didn’t address it I moved on with my life,” she wrote. “Not my monkeys, not my circus. God bless and godspeed.”
In follow-up videos posted to her Instagram story, Jackson expanded on her involvement with the film, saying that after she was explicitly informed her suggestions would not be considered, “I wasn’t involved at all, aside from giving feedback on the first draft and then getting the feedback that [production] was not actually going to address your notes at all. So I just butted out and left it alone because it’s not my project.”
She continued, saying that the filmmakers are “going to make whatever they’re going to make” and that the project would most likely make her father’s diehard fans happy. “A big reason why I haven’t said anything up until this point is because I know a lot of you guys are gonna be happy with it,” Jackson added. “A big section of the film panders to a very specific section of my dad’s fandom that still lives in the fantasy, and they’re gonna be happy with it.”
Michael has been in development since 2019 in collaboration with the Jackson family. It stars Domingo, Miles Teller, Nia Long, Kat Graham, and, in his big screen debut, Michael Jackson’s grandson Jafar Jackson as the pop icon. The film has already faced several controversies. According to Puck, the production has reportedly been mired in rewrites and reshoots. The entire third act of the film reportedly had to be rewritten and re-shot, allegedly because the first version had overlooked terms of a settlement between the Jackson estate and a child-abuse accuser.
A source close to the production, however, flatly denied rumors that the production was a mess. “The Michael Jackson biopic is not in total chaos,” they told People in January. “The inflammatory headlines about the moving halting are simply not true. The film is moving forward, and reshoots are happening in March.”
Michael is currently set for release on April 24, 2026 from Lionsgate.
Sports and music fans, flocking to a once-questionable corner of downtown, were the springboard for an L.A.-born multibillion-dollar empire of venues and events for screaming enthusiasts around the globe.
AEG, the company behind Crypto.com Arena and the L.A. Live district, has turned its know-how about hosting and promoting big shows into a formula it has rolled out on five continents. It is literally setting the stages for the world’s biggest pop stars, sports teams and even — most recently — sumo wrestlers.
It is one of the city’s lesser-known global success stories. With more than 20,000 employees and billions of dollars of projects running at any one time, AEG is one of the planet’s biggest venue and event companies. L.A.’s high concentration of sports teams and musical talent forced it to develop a system that uses its spaces for up to five different events in a day.
“We learned how to be nimble in moving from one to the other to really maximize,” AEG Chief Executive Dan Beckerman told The Los Angeles Times.
AEG is prospering by executing a fairly simple business plan, said Andrew Zimbalist, professor emeritus of economics at Smith College. Its industry is fairly straightforward — and more use of each seat gives the company more capital to build more venues.
“You have to pick your niche, have capital, have tenacity,” he said. “And stick with it.”
Sumo wrestlers bashed bellies this month in AEG’s newest venue on the grounds of a legendary castle. The recently opened IG Arena stands in the outer citadel of Nagoya Castle in Nagoya, Japan, which was built in the early 1600s, when samurai battles raged in the region.
While the summer sumo tournament required a traditional ring of sand, clay and rice straw bales, the arena will be soon be transformed to host such diverse events as a basketball clinic hosted by the L.A. Lakers’ Rui Hachimura, a professional boxing match and a concert by English musician Sting.
The new IG Arena in Nagoya, Japan stands in the outer citadel of Nagoya Castle.
(AEG)
In Nagoya and increasingly across East and Southeast Asia, AEG is doing what it does better than most — build arenas that can host pro sports and shows by big-name artists, with the venues often built within an ecosystem of bars, restaurants and hotels also built by the company and its partners.
The company was founded in 1995 when Denver billionaire investor Philip Anschutz bought the Los Angeles Kings and in 1999 opened the downtown arena then known as the Staples Center, which was built by Anschutz and Kings co-owner Ed Roski.
It was considered a risky project at the time, when the gritty blocks near the Los Angeles Convention Center were deemed undesirable by most real estate developers. AEG added the $3 billion L.A. Live complex in 2007, and other developers also moved into the South Park district, building hotels, restaurants and thousands of residential units.
The popular venues have now hosted 22 Grammy Awards shows, a Democratic National Convention, two Stanley Cup championships, six NBA championships and All-Star hockey and basketball weekends.
That high-profile success gave it an edge when competing to build or buy around the world. AEG has expanded to own and operate more than 100 venues serving 100 million guests annually. Among its holdings are the Los Angeles Galaxy soccer team and German pro ice hockey team Eisbären Berlin. As the second biggest event promoter in the world, it puts on large festivals including the annual Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival and American Express Presents BST Hyde Park music festival in London.
It has faced slowdowns and other tough periods as well.
Its London arena was the site of Michael Jackson’s planned comeback announced in 2009. During a period when he was rehearsing for the physically demanding shows, Jackson died.
His mother and three children sued AEG Live in 2010. The lawsuit alleged that AEG was negligent in its hiring of the physician who administered the fatal dose of propofol that led to Jackson’s death. A Los Angeles jury unanimously decided that the concert promoter wasn’t liable in the singer’s death.
“People heard of AEG because of Michael Jackson and the subsequent lawsuit from the family,” said Randy Phillips, former manager of music promotions at AEG. “They would never have even known what it is.”
The company was laid low during the pandemic, when live events were canceled starting in March 2020. Venues stayed dark until well into 2021, when AEG started putting on sports events with no audiences and later with limited seating. Times changed in 2022 when revenues reached new records as fans stormed back, Beckerman said.
“We were all very pleasantly surprised,” he said. “I think people learned during the pandemic that there really is no substitute for live events.”
AEG also lost a longtime arena tenant when the Los Angeles Clippers moved to a new arena in Inglewood after the team’s lease at Crypto.com Arena expired in 2024. Owner Steve Ballmer said he wanted the Clippers to have their own home that they didn’t share with other teams.
AEG’s touring business lifted off with a 2001 concert with Britney Spears at Staples Center.
“The Britney Spears tour is what broke the company wide open,” said Phillips, who became head of music promotions for AEG after landing Spears. “That’s when we became players.”
Big acts followed including Tom Petty, Paul McCartney, Tina Turner and Pink.
AEG expanded its U.S. concert touring empire by building large multipurpose arenas in Las Vegas and Kansas City. It also is establishing a network of smaller venues such as the El Rey Theatre in Los Angeles and the Showbox in Seattle. It recently opened the Pinnacle at Nashville Yards, a concert hall that is part of a mixed-use district including housing and offices that AEG and a local partner are developing in downtown Nashville.
Its highest-profile property outside of Los Angeles is in London, where the company resurrected a large dome-shaped building built to house an exhibition celebrating the turn of the millennium in 2000. After AEG’s redevelopment of the site, the O2 Arena became one of the world’s busiest venues for entertainment and sports with 10 million visitors a year.
In Berlin, the company built the Uber Arena, one of the highest-grossing arenas in the world and part of an entertainment district with restaurants and theaters.
The Nagoya project is part of the company’s pan-Asian strategy to grow its real estate empire and create more venues for artists like Taylor Swift and Ed Sheeran.
The United States and Europe, where AEG has long been active, are largely built-out with modern arenas for sports and entertainment, but many Asian countries are ready to upgrade their old facilities.
“Japan is at the top of the list” for AEG, said Ted Fikre, head of development at the company.
The country’s venues are typically decades old and pale in comparison to modern multi-use arenas typically found in the U.S. and Europe.
The IG Arena in Nagoya, with a capacity of 17,000, is expected to annually host 150 events for 1.4 million attendees at concerts, basketball games and other live entertainment.
AEG has an even larger development in the works in Osaka. Plans call for an 18,000-seat arena that will anchor an entertainment district with hotels, offices, shops and restaurants along with housing. Valued at more than $1 billion, Fikre compared the Osaka project to its largest mixed-use districts — L.A. Live in Los Angeles and the O2 in London. The project is set to break ground in 2027.
In partnership with the NBA, the company built Mercedes-Benz Arena in Shanghai in 2010. It is also involved in plans for South Korea, Singapore and Thailand.
“The ambition for us is to establish a strong presence throughout the Asia region, and we’ve got a good head start,” Fikre said.
A panoramic view of L.A. Live in Los Angeles, CA on Friday, July 18, 2025.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
AEG opened a 4,500-capacity venue in Bangkok last year with a concert by Ed Sheeran. The company is also working with one of Thailand’s largest mall operators to build an 18,000-seat arena in a sprawling regional mall just east of Bangkok, set to open in 2028.
AEG’s network of venues throughout Asia makes it easier to book big-name artists.
“It’s a bit tricky to tour in Asia because of the expense of traveling around the region,” Fikre said. “It’s not like you’re in the U.S., where you just take a bunch of trucks” from city to city.
Aerial view of Crypto.com Arena and the L.A. Live sports and entertainment district of Los Angeles.
(AEG)
Swift completed the international leg of her most recent tour last year that included six nights in Singapore and four nights in Tokyo to sold-out audiences booked by AEG Presents as her international promoter. Sheeran played in Bhutan, India and other Asian countries he hadn’t previously visited in venues booked by AEG.
The international trend now works in both directions for AEG, with K-pop acts such as BTS, Blackpink and other global stars packing AEG venues in the West.
Tito Jackson, one of the brothers who made up the beloved pop group the Jackson 5, has died at age 70.
Tito was the third of nine Jackson children, which include global superstars Michael and sister Janet, part of a music-making family whose songs are still beloved today.
“It’s with heavy hearts that we announce that our beloved father, Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Tito Jackson is no longer with us. We are shocked, saddened and heartbroken. Our father was an incredible man who cared about everyone and their well-being,” his sons TJ, Taj and Taryll said in a statement posted on Instagram late Sunday.
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The Jackson 5 included brothers Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, Marlon and Michael. The family group, which was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1997, produced several No. 1 hits in the 1970s including ABC, I Want You Back and I’ll Be There.
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The Jackson 5 became one of the biggest names in music under the guidance of their father, Joe Jackson, a steelworker and guitar player who supported his wife and nine children in Gary, Indiana. As the family’s music careers took off, they relocated to California.
Born on Oct. 15, 1953, Toriano Adaryll “Tito” Jackson was the least-heard member of the group as a background singer who played guitar. His brothers launched solo careers, including Michael, who became one of the world’s biggest performers known as The King of Pop.
Michael Jackson died at age 50 on June 25, 2009.
FILE – The Jackson 5, Michael Jackson, front right; Marlon Jackson, front left; Tito Jackson, back left; Jackie Jackson, back center; and Jermaine Jackson, back right; pose for this undated photo together in Los Angeles.
AP Photo, File
Speaking to The Associated Press in December 2009, Jackson said his younger brother’s death pulled the family closer together.
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“I would say definitely it brought us a step closer to each other. To recognize that the love we have for each other when one of us is not here, what a great loss,” he said, adding he would personally never “be at peace with it.”
“There’s still moments when I just can’t believe it. So I think that’s never going to go away,” he said.
In 2014, Jackson said he and his brothers still felt Michael Jackson’s absence in their shows, which continued with international tours.
“I don’t think we will ever get used to performing without him. He’s dearly missed,” he said, noting that Michael’s spirit “is with us when we are performing. It gives us a lot of positive energy and puts a lot of smiles on our faces.”
Days before his death, Jackson posted a message on his Facebook page from Germany on Sept. 11, where he visited a memorial to Michael Jackson with his brothers.
“Before our show in Munich, my brothers Jackie, Marlon, and I, visited the beautiful memorial dedicated to our beloved brother, Michael Jackson. We’re deeply grateful for this special place that honors not only his memory but also our shared legacy. Thank you for keeping his spirit alive,” he wrote.
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Tito Jackson was the last of the nine Jackson siblings to release a solo project with his 2016 debut, Tito Time. He released a song in 2017, One Way Street, and told the AP in 2019 that he was working on a sophomore album.
Jackson said he purposely held back from pursuing a solo career because he wanted to focus on raising his three sons, TJ, Taj and Taryll, who formed their own music group, 3T. Jackson’s website offers a link to a single featuring 3T and Stevie Wonder titled, Love One Another.
Tito Jackson also is survived by his brothers Jermaine, Randy, Marlon and Jackie, his sisters Janet, Rebbie and La Toya and their mother, Katherine. Their father died in 2018.
Jackson’s death was first reported by Entertainment Tonight.
Although some could argue that Ronald Reagan’s oppressive regime in the 1980s is part of what fueled better pop culture than the schlock of the moment, one thing that could never be improved was Donald Trump. A man who did become part of the pop cultural lexicon of that era despite being a New York-confined Patrick Bateman type. For whatever reason (apart from The Art of the Deal), he managed to infiltrate the mainstream consciousness—more than likely because, in those days, it was the height of “aspirational” to be rich. Not that it still isn’t, it’s just more “cloaked” behind “earnest,” “let’s save the planet” messaging.
Trump, obviously, never gave a fuck about that. And still doesn’t. Nor did he ever care about reading, though he did feign being very taken with the “excellent” Tom Wolfe during both men’s heyday. “Excellent” was the word he used to describe the quintessential 80s author in a 1987 interview with Pat Buchanan and Tom Braden when asked what books he was reading. But, of course, 1) he wasn’t actually reading any and 2) Trump couldn’t resist the urge to ultimately say, “I’m reading my own book because I think it’s so fantastic, Tom.” That book was the blatantly ghostwritten The Art of the Deal, released, incidentally, in the month that followed The Bonfire of the Vanities landing on bookshelves everywhere. Indeed, that was the main reason Trump was on the show.
Oddly, Trump’s book (an oxymoron, to be sure) was the thing that made him become a household name in America, as opposed to just being limited to the niche jurisdiction of New York City and certain parts of New Jersey. As for his abovementioned interview, some have speculated that Bret Easton Ellis used this bizarre moment for Bateman/American Psycho inspiration. For it does smack of Bateman saying whatever the fuck comes to his mind just to see if anyone’s actually paying attention (e.g., saying he’s into “murders and executions mostly” instead of “mergers and acquisitions”). A moment where, in one instant Trump is declaring he’s well-versed in all literature Wolfe but hasn’t yet read The Bonfire of the Vanities, and, in the next, claiming to be reading Wolfe’s “last book.” Which would have been, what else, The Bonfire of the Vanities. He certainly wasn’t talking about From Bauhaus to Our House. And yet, even when caught in a lie, Trump always counted on touting generalities with confidence as a means to deflect from his total lack of knowledgeability.
So it is that he keeps repeating such generalities as, “He’s a great author, he’s done a beautiful job” and “The man has done a very, very good job.” Finally, realizing that there might be some people out there not falling for his bullshit, he relies on the excuse, “I really can’t hear with this earphone by the way.” (Or, as Mariah would put it, “I can’t read suddenly.”) Trump, in this and so many other ways, has brought back the “art” of the flagrant lie-con that was popularized by some of the 80s’ most notorious swindlers, like David Bloom and Jim Bakker. Everyone wanting to adhere to the “fake it till you make it” philosophy so beloved by the U.S., and which it was essentially founded upon. A “philosophy” that Trump has taken “to heart” his entire life. Except for the fact that, as Tony Schwartz, the true writer of The Art of the Deal, eventually said, Trump doesn’t actually have a heart. More specifically, “Trump is not only willing to lie, but he doesn’t get bothered by it, doesn’t feel guilty about it, isn’t preoccupied by it. There’s an emptiness inside Trump. There’s an absence of a soul. There’s an absence of a heart.”
And it can be argued that this absence began to extend to the collective of America in a more noticeable way than ever during the Decade of Excess. Uncoincidentally, it was the decade when neoliberalism came back into fashion in a manner as never seen before, courtesy of the “laissez-faire” policies of Reagan and, in the UK, Margaret Thatcher. With such an emphasis on “me first” and “getting ahead at any cost,” it was no wonder that a man like Trump, emblematic of the Wall Street monstrosity that would come to be embodied by Gordon Gekko, was so “revered.” His “lifestyle” coveted. Of course, it was harder then to debunk myths, like the idea that anything about Trump was “self-made.”
In the backdrop (or foreground, depending on who you ask) of Trump and Reagan representing the worst of the 80s, there were, needless to say, so many amazing things about that decade: the birth of MTV, and with it, a new generation of visual artists (including the 1958 Trinity, Madonna Prince and Michael Jackson), Square Pegs, Golden Girls, Pee-Wee’s Playhouse, They Live, E.T., Dirty Dancing, Flashdance, Footloose (a whole rash of dancing movies, really), any John Hughes movie, the eradication of smallpox, the aerobics craze and Jane Fonda’s Workout, Pac-Man (and the rise of video games in general, culminating in the release of Game Boy in 1989), the early days of the internet and personal computers, the first female vice presidential candidate (Geraldine Ferraro), the fall of the Berlin Wall… So many great, memorable things that should outshine the ickier moments today—like the rampant homophobia in response to AIDS, the Challenger explosion, Irangate, the Chernobyl disaster, New Coke, the rise of the yuppie, the death of vinyl (though it would have the last laugh) and George H.W. Bush managing to win the 1988 election so as to take more “Reaganomics” policies into the 90s.
And now, Trump wants to bring all the worst of the decade back. The homophobia, the religious overtones (complete with satanic panic), rampant misogyny, the worship of money, the rollback of environmental regulations and, maybe most affronting of all, Hulk Hogan. The latter, like Trump, experienced his own heyday in the 80s, when interest in pro wrestling and the WWE reached an all-time crescendo. And, also like Trump, Hogan has a reputation for, let’s say, embellishing (read: fabricating) his lore. Because he found his success by being an over-the-top wrestler, Hogan never seemed inclined to shed his performative persona. As a result, many will remain forever haunted by Hogan at the RNC a.k.a. Trump rally ripping his shirt off to reveal a Trump/Vance tank top as he screamed, “Let Trumpamania [unclear why he wouldn’t just say ‘Trump Mania,’ but anyway] run wild brother! Let Trumpamania rule again!”
As many pointed out, it was like seeing the plot of Idiocracy fully realized. A trajectory that can now be rightfully pinned on the “ideals” of the 80s. For while it was the best of times, it was also the worst of times—and those are coming back with a vengeance if Trump manages to win the presidency yet again. On the plus side though, it seems that CDs are making a comeback to align with this potential return to the Decade of Greed.