thread oben

Einklappen

Ankündigung

Einklappen
Keine Ankündigung bisher.

Fall Murray/MJ - Anklage Fahrlässig od. Tötung?

Einklappen
Dieses Thema ist geschlossen.
X
X
 
  • Filter
  • Zeit
  • Anzeigen
Alles löschen
neue Beiträge

  • diese nebenwirkungen alleine sind ja schon gruselig.
    selbst mit stink normalem johanniskraut darfste nicht mehr
    in die sonne.

    Kommentar


    • womc.com
      The Insider)
      "The Insider" has obtained a letter from Dr. Conrad Murray, Michael Jackson's former personal physician who is now being investigated for manslaughter, written to his patients in June explaining that he was leaving his medical practice indefinitely for a "once in a lifetime opportunity."

      In his June 15 letter to "patients and friends," Murray said he was seeking a "suitable replacement [doctor]" for himself, but intended to "manage the practice, and be involved as much as possible [from afar]," stating also, "please know my absence is not permanent."

      Authorities raided Murray's offices on Wednesday, searching for manslaughter evidence in their investigation into the death of the King of Pop, who passed away on June 25.

      Keep checking back here for the latest.


      konnt er das da schon wissen, dass er nicht lange abwesend sein wird?

      Kommentar


      • Wenn man jetzt mit Beipackzetteln hier anfangen, dann wird das uferlos und die Spekulationen unerträglich!

        Zahlreiche Medikamente die jeder von uns mal eingenommen hat (Antibiotika, Schmerzmittel, Corticoide, ......) haben ebenso eine ähnliche Palette all dieser Nebenwirkungen....und wirken sich sehr häufig und besonders auf der Haut.... aus.

        Das stiftet nur Verwirrung und Mutmaßungen!

        Ich betone nochmals, Medikamete einnehmen und Medikamentenmißbrauch, Medikamentensucht, Abhängigkeit und tödliche Überdosierung sind verschiedene Paar Stiefel und extrem wichtig in der Differzenzierung!
        Zuletzt geändert von nenasnezana; 12.11.2009, 16:36.

        Kommentar


        • Zitat von nenasnezana Beitrag anzeigen
          Wenn man jetzt mit Beipackzetteln hier anfangen, dann wird das uferlos und die Spekulationen unerträglich!

          Zahlreiche Medikamente die jeder von uns mal eingenommen hat (Antibiotika, Schmerzmittel, Corticoide, ......) haben ebenso eine ähnliche Palette all dieser Nebenwirkungen....und wirken sich sehr häufig und besonders auf der Haut.... aus.

          Das stiftet nur Verwirrung und Mutmaßungen!

          Ich betone nochmals, Medikamete einnehmen und Medikamentenmißbrauch, Medikamentensucht, Abhängigkeit und tödliche Überdosierung sind verschiedene Paar Stiefel und extrem wichtig in der Differzenzierung!
          Ich unterstelle mal, dass Du mein Post meinst und glaube, dass Du es komplett missverstanden hast - ich wollte nicht auf Medikamentenmissbrauch (z.B. von Psychopharmaka) hinaus, sondern auf das Gegenteil. Auch nicht auf eine tödliche Überdosierung von diesem Mittel. Ich finde es eher fraglich, wieso diese sehr selten vorkommenden Wechselwirkungen nicht beachtet wurden (z.B. von Doc Murray), falls diese überhaupt relevant sind (deshalb habe ich bereits geschrieben, dass ich es nicht beurteilen bzw. dazu nichts sagen kann) - ich habe hier nur der Vollständigkeit wegen alles gepostet und nicht nur Teile (das würde eventuell ein verfälschendes Bild abgeben). Außerdem waren ein Grund für das Post u.a. Diskussionen über die Fingernagelverfärbungen - und diese werden eben nicht duch alle möglichen anderen Mittel hervorgerufen, genauso wenig wie die Augenschäden - diese sind ganz typisch für das genannte Medikament.

          Lies bitte nochmal genau, was ich im vorigen Beitrag tatsächlich geschrieben habe. Danke.
          Zuletzt geändert von November; 12.11.2009, 17:31.

          Kommentar


          • @November

            Sorry, das habe ich im Eifer des Gefechts übersehen, dass Du hier den Beipackzettel von dem Mittel welches Michael wegen Lupus eingenommen haben könnte gepostet. Unter diesen Umständen wäre es dan nachvollziehbar mit den Nebenwirkungen (Augen, Haare, Nägel). Da muss ich schon DANKE dafür sagen! DANKE und SORRY nochmal.

            Kommentar


            • Aktuelle Nachrichten und Hintergründe aus Politik, Wirtschaft und Sport aus Berlin, Deutschland und der Welt.

              Film
              Michael Jacksons letzter Auftritt
              Dienstag, 27. Oktober 2009 07:04 - Von Hanns-Georg Rodek

              Für den Pizzaboten schien es anfangs eine Lieferung wie jede andere. Der Wächter am Sony-Eingang in Los Angeles wies ihm den Weg zu einem Gebäude auf dem Studiogelände. Nicht weniger als acht Bewaffnete umringten den Ziegelbau.

              Die Tür öffnete sich und ein Mann fuchtelte mit Hand-Scanner herum, bevor er ihn durch eine weitere Tür schob. Dort erwartete ihn die komplette Flughafenprozedur - Geldbörse, Handy, Schlüssel; auch die Pizza verschwand in der Durchleuchtungskammer. Als klar war, dass sie keine unerlaubten Zusatzstoffe enthielt, wurde der Bote zum Fahrstuhl eskortiert. Per Code-Karte aktiviert, fuhr der ihn in den zweiten Stock, wo ein weiterer Wächter seinen Ausweis kontrollierte, bevor die längst kalte Pizza abgegeben werden durfte. Das Gleiche wiederholte sich auf dem Rückweg - später auch für die leere Pizza-Schachtel; es konnte ja ein USB-Stäbchen im Müll versteckt sein.
              Anzeige
              Die Studios rissen sich um den Film

              In gewisser Weise war die Sicherheitsparanoia bei "Project Love" - so der Deckname für Michael Jacksons Schwanengesang "This is it" - sogar verständlich, steht doch eine Milliarde Dollar auf dem Spiel. Fünf Tage nach Jacksons Tod hatten sich vier Personen in die Schnitträume von AEG auf dem Unterhaltungs-Campus LA Live in Los Angeles eingeschlossen; AEG steht hier nicht für die gute alte deutsche Hausgerätefirma, sondern für Anschutz Entertainment Group, einen Multi, der weltweit Tourneen veranstaltet und Arenen wie die O2 World in Berlin betreibt.

              AEG-Chef Randy Phillips, der Michael Jackson zweimal eine Welttournee vorgeschlagen hatte und zweimal abgeblitzt war, sah sich mit drei Technikern die Früchte seines dritten Anlaufs an: 130 Stunden Videoaufnahmen von den Proben zu Jacksons Londoner Bühnenshow, die der Sänger nicht mehr ablehnen konnte, weil ihn die Schulden niederdrückten. Ein paar Tage später erschienen bei Philipps die Lenker der größten Filmstudios - Fox, Universal, Sony, Paramount. Als die 15 Minuten Ausschnitte vorbei waren, so Phillips, "bekämpften sich die vier gegenseitig, um den Film zu bekommen. Sie sind total ausgerastet."

              Den Zuschlag erhielt Sony für 60 Millionen Dollar. Sony stehen alle Einnahmen zu, bis der Film die 200-Millionen-Marke erreicht hat, danach fallen 90 Prozent der Kartenverkäufe den Jackson-Erben zu, zehn Prozent AEG. Allein am ersten Wochenende, erwarten Industriekenner, werden 300 Millionen in die Kinokassen fließen. Die Dollars aus den "This is it"-DVDs, die erst nächstes Jahr in den Handel kommen sollen, werden zwischen AEG, Sony und den Erben gedrittelt. Die Milliarde scheint ein realistisches Ziel, und alle Beteiligten tun ihr Möglichstes, damit Michael Jackson tot mehr wert ist als lebendig. Bei den Londoner Konzerten hatte Phillips die möglichen Einnahmen für Jackson noch auf maximal 100 Millionen geschätzt.

              Heute Abend soll nun der Riesen-Transfer beginnen. Ab 18 Uhr Ortszeit (Mittwoch früh 2 Uhr in Deutschland) findet in Los Angeles die "This is it"-Premiere statt, die in Kinos in 15 weitere Städte live übertragen wird, u.a. nach Rio, London, Johannesburg, Seoul und Berlin. Dabei wird es neben dem Roten-Teppich-Pomp auch eine kleine Störung geben: demonstrierende Fans, die sich unter der Parole "This is not it" vereinigt haben, um ihrem Idol einen letzten Dienst zu erweisen: "Wir geben nicht vor, genau zu wissen, was in dieser verhängnisvollen Nacht im Juni geschah", heißt es auf ihrer Website www.this-is-not-it.com , "aber wir wissen, dass Michael Jackson in den Wochen vor dem 25. Juni langsam aus Profitgier getötet wurde. Das steht fest, und es ist unser Anliegen, es Euch zu beweisen."

              Die Website enthält Augenzeugenberichte einer Reihe von Fans. "Ich war durchweg in Michaels Nähe während seines Aufenthalts hier in den letzten acht Monaten seines Lebens", schreibt eine Talin. "Wenn ich nicht anwesend war, waren andere Fans vor Ort. Nehmt deshalb unsere Aussagen ernst, denn als Gruppe sahen wir Michael täglich." Eine Sandy postet eine Mail, die sie vier Tage vor Jacksons Tod an dessen Maskenbildnerin Karen Faye gesandt hatte: "Ich habe ihn im Tanzprobenstudio getroffen und war echt schockiert. Ich bemerkte, wie seine Schulterknochen buchstäblich aus seinem Hemd herausragten. Er war beängstigend mager. Als ich ihn umarmte, glaubte ich, ein Skelett zu umarmen."
              Fans sprechen von Versklavung

              Eine Samantha berichtet über ein Treffen vom 29. Mai. Jackson "erzählte uns, dass er schlafen gegangen war mit dem Gedanken, es würden zehn Konzerte sein, um am nächsten Morgen festzustellen, es sind 50! Er sagte: ,Sie haben das ohne meine Zustimmung getan'."

              "This is it", singt Michael Jackson in dem ersten postum veröffentlichten Lied, einem Demo-Band von 1983, das schnell mit Streichern und Hintergrundgesang seiner Brüder unterlegt wurde. "Here I stand. I'm the light of the world. I feel grand." Die "This-is-not-it"-Fans fordern nicht zu einem Boykott des Films auf, aber gegen dieses "Ich fühle mich großartig" wenden sie sich. "AEG stellt es so dar, als sei er in guter Verfassung gewesen, aber wir haben etwas Anderes gesehen", schreibt Talin. Sandy ergänzt: "Ich kann versichern, dass Michael AEG und Randy Phillips weder gemocht noch getraut hat. Vielmehr fühlte er sich finanziell von ihnen versklavt." Wie scherzte Phillips doch im März: "Wenn Michael zu nervös wird, um weiterzumachen, werfe ich ihn mir über die Schulter und trage ihn auf die Bühne. Leicht genug ist er ja."



              für eine milliarde dollar? konnten die hellsehen, oder hatten
              sie etwas anderes im auge?
              hey, die diskussion hätte ich gerne miterlebt.

              Kommentar



              • ist der geleiche bericht, aber sehr genauer.



                Michael Jackson was secretly working on a project which would have included a duet with "songbird" Yolanda Soares

                Print article Print article
                Refer this article Refer to a friend

                Yolanda Soares
                Yolanda Soares
                2009-10-19 11:47:22 - It is rumoured that Michael was also secretly working on a project which would have included a duet with Yolanda Soares, written exclusively for both of them by Swiss based Lyric writer Alexandre De Lusignan Fan-Moniz.

                Even by Hollywood standards, the secrecy surrounding the release of "This Is It" is extraordinary.

                Rings of armed guards, body scanners and a nerve-racking multimillion-dollar auction for the rights to show Michael Jackson's intense preparation for his doomed O2 concerts which has now left a gap in the schedule of many other dancers and performers lives, including that of Portuguese



                music sensation Musician Yolanda Soares, of "MUSIC BOX" fame.

                We recently had the privilege to speak to the men, and women turning the King of Pop's last days into the biggest money-spinner of all time

                For the pizza boy carrying his Domino's white cardboard box with its trademark red logo, it felt like any typical working day in Hollywood. He arrived at the entrance to Sony studios and passed the security guard at the gate. He was pointed in the direction of a nondescript building, towards the back of the Culver City lot; he parked his scooter, walked across the car park and headed towards a steel door.

                Which was when he realised that this was no ordinary delivery?

                For one thing, eight armed guards ringed the brick building.

                He wondered whether he had come to the right place. But then one waved at him and passed a hand-held electronic scanner over him before ushering him through a door. Once inside, his pizza rapidly cooling, the delivery boy underwent a full airport-style security check. He turned out his pockets and put the contents, including his mobile phone, into a plastic container that was run through a scanning machine. The pizza was placed in a plastic basket and scanned, too.

                Now he was accompanied by another guard, who escorted him into a lift. The guard used his pre-programmed card to take them up to the second level of the building. Out of the lift he walked across a small walkway to another door, where another guard checked his credentials again, until finally, at a reception desk, he was allowed to hand over the pizza.

                After leaving his pizza the delivery boy was then accompanied back down the lift, and scanned once more before being allowed out of the building.

                This was not the end of the journey for the pizza, however. After the contents were consumed the box was placed with all the other rubbish collected from this building and the whole lot scanned to make sure that no USB memory chips had been smuggled out.

                This is how security works at 'Project Love', the codename given to Hollywood's most closely guarded project of the year - Michael Jackson's This Is It film.

                With $1 billion at stake, the paranoia may be understandable, however, who are going to be the financial winners at the end?

                Nothing is allowed in or out of this building without all these checks.

                So tight is security that the 35 people who work here are not allowed out until the end of their shift. Food is brought in from the Sony campus and supplemented with regular pizza deliveries.

                On the second floor are six editing bays, where some of Sony's top technicians and editors are busily finessing the 108-minute documentary?

                Jackson had always filmed his rehearsals so that he could pore over the footage, often through the night, deciding what was working and what needed correcting or modifying. More than 130 hours of high-definition film had been recorded and upon Jackson's death these hours of footage suddenly took on a profound new significance.

                As Randy Phillips, the CEO of the star's concert promoter AEG Live puts it bluntly in an exclusive interview with Live, 'It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that we were sitting on a goldmine. Not only in financial terms but also in terms of what this footage shows.

                'Here, on film for all posterity, we have the greatest pop artist of all time showing his every move and thought process as he goes from describing his vision of the show to rehearsing the band and the dancers, to running through on stage what he told me was going to be his finest performance ever.'

                There has never been a film launch like the one we are to see in ten days' time. This Is It will debut at 30,000 screens around the world.

                Simultaneous premieres will be held in 15 cities, including London, Los Angeles, New York, Berlin, Seoul and Rio de Janeiro.

                Two-disc CD featuring original album masters of the late singer's biggest hits and the new single This Is It will be released before the film goes out. It is all being as carefully choreographed as any of Jackson's dance routines.

                Moreover, the DVD of the movie will be released just weeks after the cinema release - the shortest-ever movie-to-DVD window for any film of any commercial significance. This means it will be out in time for Christmas. But the unique aspect of the venture's projected $1 billion revenue is how much will be profit.

                The studio heads were fighting over it.

                Compared to the $200 million or so it cost to film box-office runaways like Titanic and The Lord of the Rings,

                "This Is It” actually cost very little to make.

                In death, Jackson is going to earn hundreds of millions of dollars - more than he ever would have dreamed of making from the O2 concerts, which fans and fellow artists devastated.

                On Tuesday June 30, just five days after Jackson died; Randy Phillips locked himself into an editing suite in AEG's headquarters on the third floor of the massive entertainment campus LA Live.

                This complex is just opposite the Staples Centre in LA where Jackson was rehearsing in the final days of his life.

                Together with three editors from AEG, he scanned through the hours and hours of footage.

                'I didn't really know what we'd captured, but when I saw a rough cut of some of the footage I had the editors put together 15 really compelling scenes from a bunch of different songs,' says Phillips.

                The material was dynamite.

                'I knew that some people would beg, borrow or steal to get their hands on this footage and put it on the internet. It has been under Fort Knox-style security ever since he died.'

                A few days later, with a slick 15-minute cut in the can, Phillips invited the chairmen from Hollywood's four key studios - Fox, Universal, Sony and Paramount - to his o office.

                'These are guys who are used to things coming to them. But that footage was not leaving my o office. They all came. By the time the screening was over, the studio heads were fighting each other to get it. They all went nuts. They all had to have it.'

                The studio heads put in their offers.

                'We went with a $60 million deal with Sony in the end, not because it was the highest offer but because it made good synergy - Michael's music catalogue is with Sony. It just made sense.'

                In its first weekend, This Is It is expected to take £188 million ($300 million).

                The film isn't going to challenge Titanic's $1.84 billion, in part because the promoters have decided to give it a two-week run followed by the release of the DVD. But this is part of the strategy. With the hype around the film fresh in shoppers' minds, Sony will be able to halve the money it would usually spend to support a big DVD release.

                This Is It is a money-making machine. Revenues are almost guaranteed to crash through the $1 billion barrier. And that leaves a lot of profits for the three organisations involved: Sony, AEG and the Jackson estate.

                Under an agreement approved by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mitchell Becklo , once the film has passed the $135 million mark, the Jackson estate gains 90 per cent of the additional box-o office earnings, while AEG takes the remaining ten.

                AEG has already covered the $50 million losses it racked up after Jackson died, out of the $60 million it has received from Sony, so any other gains will be pure profit. The income from DVD sales is being shared equally between AEG, Sony and the Jackson estate. And Sony will capitalise on a huge jump in record sales that it hopes the film will generate.

                So while This Is It is not going to be the biggest-grossing film in history, the whole project is certainly going to be one of the most profitable.

                Frank DiLeo is a character seemingly plucked from central casting as a music manager. A cigar between his teeth, he greets me on the sun-decked patio of his room at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, his shirt open to the waist, a large gold Rolex (a gift from Jackson) prominently displayed on his tanned wrist.

                It was DiLeo who masterminded Jackson's 'glory days', from the Bad, Thriller and Victory tours through to negotiating his $10 million Pepsi advertising deal. It was while filming the Pepsi commercial in 1984 that Jackson's hair caught fire, prompting his first use of the prescription painkillers and sleeping medication that would lead to his death at 50.

                It was during rehearsals for his Bad tour that the idea of videoing his preparations first came up.

                'Michael liked to go through the footage at night,' says DiLeo.

                'He'd see places he could improve his routine or notice things like how a back-up dancer blocked him from the crowd in a certain song.

                It certainly made sense for Sony. More advance tickets were sold in the first 24 hours of their release three weeks ago than have ever been sold for any previous film. In the UK, Vue Entertainment has sold more than 30,000 tickets.

                For the O2 gigs, all the sessions were filmed from the start and they were still shooting the day before Jackson died.

                'We captured Michael talking about his creative vision and then the dancers come in and the band members. The dancers had already been whittled down from hundreds to 50. Michael did what he would always do. He sat quietly at the back of the studio. He never really liked the kids knowing he was there because if they did it would throw them.'

                The footage shows Jackson's perfectionism.

                'You see him going to wardrobe to discuss every item of clothing, not just for him but for the backing dancers. I remember him looking at a costume and noticing that a button had been stitched on cross-ways and he wanted it on a diagonal. He was that precise.'

                By the time the rehearsals were in full flow there were 80 people in the venue - a band of eight, 12 dancers, the crew and backstage staff.

                'The thing that struck me was how sharp his memory was, even when listening to music on his headphones, it was a DC Titled Music Box, by Yolanda Soares, someone Michael had taken interest in a few years ago.

                It wasn't like he had to consciously remember any of the steps. It was like they were ingrained in him. As the music started, this wasn't a 50-year-old man; this was the old Michael, running through the familiar steps, totally in control.'

                It all sounds a long way from the frail, emotionally fragile, heavily doped-up Jackson that others have portrayed. Surely DiLeo must have had some inkling that his friend was heavily drugged up, as the toxicology tests have since revealed?

                'No, no,' the manager says. 'I know you won't believe me but Michael compartmentalised his life. I was his manager, his friend. The only time I ever saw him on drugs was during the second trial when he started acting weird and dancing on cars. I told him, "Michael, you need to get o ff this stuff" and he said he was hooked on prescription pills for the pain. He went to rehab to kick it.

                'The Michael who turned up for rehearsals wasn't a frail addict.

                Michael was a professional. Whatever was or wasn't going on in his home, when he showed up to work, he was on.'

                Randy Phillips, who attended many of the rehearsal sessions, also denies Jackson displayed any health woes: 'He would turn up to rehearsals between 2pm and 4pm. Most days he would be there until midnight. He was thin, but not anorexic. He drank a lot of juices and ate salads that his personal chef made and he'd bring with him. There were some days he didn't show but that's because he didn't need to be there.

                'When you see Michael in the film you will see why none of us knew anything was wrong. He dances like a man 15 years younger. He didn't dance and sing at full strength during many of the rehearsals but he didn't have to. This was the process of putting a show together. It is rumoured that Michael was also secretly working on a project which would have included a duet with Yolanda Soares, written exclusively for both of them by reclusive Swiss based Lyric writer Alexandre De Lusignan Fan-Moniz.

                'When he was talking, he was present and not slurring his words. He acted fit and well. He seemed engaged in the people around him. He was happy. There were no outward signs of drug use that I could see. The Michael you will see in our footage is healthy, vibrant, and alive.'

                'The one thing that comforts me,' adds DiLeo, 'is something Michael said to me when we started working on the concert. He wanted to do it for his new generation of fans. He said: "Frank, I want my kids to see me perform, just one last time."

                Yolanda Soares is reported as saying Michael Jackson confided in her that "He was doing it for his kids.'

                At the moment there are three different openings for the movie - one which begins with footage of Jackson's funeral, one which starts with the 'tap, tap, tap' of his foot at the first rehearsal, and one which opens with a full-blown production number.

                DiLeo says: 'I am sure we'll be editing right up to the last minute. We are trying to hit a fine balance between this being a tribute to Michael and also a showcase for his genius. The hard part in the editing process is not what to put in; it's what to leave out.'

                Jackson is going to get a bigger send-off than he could possibly have imagined. DiLeo is sitting on hundreds of hours of film from previous concert preparations, as well as several dozen songs that are locked away in his vault - all songs that Jackson recorded but decided not to release.

                This Is It? Actually, this is just the start.

                This Is It' is released on October 28

                THE GREATEST SHOW THAT NEVER WAS, SADLY

                Nobody except the people in the rehearsals have any idea of the stagecraft that was being put together by Jackson. The O2 gig was going to be a total theatrical experience and this will come across in the film that is why he had asked Yolanda to partake, taking into her account her ability to merge music, fantasy and Visual expertise.

                For the first time, Live can exclusively reveal the extraordinary shows planned for Jackson's key songs.

                The set list was a compendium of full performances of 11 of his greatest hits: Thriller, Bad, Dangerous, Beat It, Billie Jean, Man In The Mirror, We Are The World, Black Or White, Heal The World, Dirty Diana, Wanna Be Startin' Somethin', along with snippets from other hits such as Smooth Criminal and a Jackson Five tribute medley.

                Thriller was to be staged with dozens of gigantic spiders and 20ft puppets. The lights were going to be dimmed and a giant screen come on. Everyone at the gig would have been given 3-D glasses, which they would have been told to put on at the start of the song.

                As the famous opening bars rang around the arena monsters would have come up out of the ground - in 3-D. Jackson's manager Frank DiLeo describes the scene: 'It's amazing. The monsters are incredible and when you have the glasses on they come straight at you. It's terrifying!'

                After the first shot of the monsters, Jackson and his dancers start to perform. The audience would have seen the monsters on the stage performing alongside the star and his crew.

                Although the film does not include any 3-D snippets, cinema-goers will get a tantalising view of the spectacle.

                The opening song in the concert was to be 1982's Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'. A glass sphere would light up on stage and then slowly drift over the heads of the crowd. As it grew brighter, it would light up in a series of primary colours before returning to the stage where a shadowy figure would emerge from a hidden platform moving up through the stage: Jackson. The globe would land in Jackson's hand and the singer would launch into the opening line of the song.

                For Dirty Diana, Jackson planned to have a flaming bed with pole-dancing aerial gymnasts playing the part of the flickering flames. In an elaborately plotted routine, Jackson would be chased around the bed by a scantily dressed 'fire goddess' (Portuguese singer Yolanda Soares) who, each time she touched the stage, would send flames shooting towards the rafters.

                After she'd caught him mid song, she would tie him to the bedposts with gold ropes as a sheet of red descended to cover his struggling figure. At the end, the sheet would be whisked away - to reveal the goddess as the struggling figure, not Jackson.

                Kommentar


                • ..nichts wirklich neues, aber zumindest gibt es ihn noch..

                  Dr. Conrad Murray will appear in court today ... asking a judge to let him off the hook in his child support mess. His excuse -- he's broke ... so TMZ has learned.


                  Read more: http://www.tmz.com/category/michael-...#ixzz0X3HFG1LO
                  http://www.tmz.com/category/michael-jackson/

                  Kommentar


                  • Hallöchen,

                    ich war nun sehr lange nicht mehr da.... Habe einen langen Krankenhausaufenthalt hinter mir.....

                    Kann mir vielleicht jemand kurz schildern was es neues gibt? Ich denke, ich würde Wochen brauchen um 5 Wochen hier im Forum nachzuholen.

                    Bitte, bitte.....

                    Kommentar


                    • ..schön dich wieder hier zu haben - lass es mich so sagen, das ist fast unmöglich, aber schau doch in folgende Threads rein und lese die Artikel auf Seite 1 ..

                      http://forum.mjackson.net/forum/showthread.php?t=11153

                      http://forum.mjackson.net/forum/showthread.php?t=11399

                      http://forum.mjackson.net/forum/showthread.php?t=11443

                      LG

                      Kommentar


                      • @ for a better world

                        Vielen Dank für die Links.

                        Ich habe mir nun den ersten Link durchgelesen und muss es erst mal auf mich wirken lassen. Einfach nur krass.

                        Freu mich auch wieder hier zu sein....

                        Kommentar


                        • War nicht gestern die Verhandlung von diesem Murray?

                          Hat da schon jemand was rausgefunden, oder halten sie´s geheim bis auch andere weitere Verhandlungen abgeschlossen sind?

                          Die Sache zieht sich ja ohnehin schon lange hin, aber wer gut recherchiert u. ermittelt, braucht Zeit. Gut möglich, dass wir da in diesem Jahr vielleicht nichts mehr erfahren werden.

                          Kommentar


                          • Es gibt neues von Dr. Murray:

                            Dr. Murray Gunning for AEG
                            Posted Nov 17th 2009 1:05AM by TMZ Staff

                            Dr. Conrad Murray is setting the stage for a lawsuit against AEG .... for the medical services he rendered to Michael Jackson ... according to Dr. Murray's rep.

                            AEG owes Dr. Murray $300,000, according to Miranda Sevcik, publicist for Dr. Murray's lawyer, Ed Chernoff. Sevcik claims AEG has been "dragging its feet," even though the Dr. has requested payment for 2 months of services.

                            Sevcik says Dr. Murray has not been paid a penny for his services, in spite of the fact that the doctor claims to have signed a binding deal with AEG before giving up his medical practice.

                            Sevcik says Dr. Murray will not file a creditor's claim against Jackson's estate. She says, "Dr. Murray needs the money and he's entitled to the money based on the contract he signed with AEG."

                            AEG could not immediately be reached for comment.
                            Zuletzt geändert von November; 17.11.2009, 14:49.

                            Kommentar


                            • Bezugnahme:
                              @November (#3904)

                              Sehe ich das richtig, dass damit die Frage geklärt ist (jedenfalls war sie das bislang nicht für mich), dass Dr. Murray von der AEG bezahlt wurde?

                              Dass aber damit nicht gleichzeitig geklärt ist, w e r Herrn Murray mit Michael bekanntgemacht hat bzw. dafür gesorgt hat, dass er Michaels Hausarzt wurde?

                              Kommentar


                              • AEG could not immediately be reached for comment.
                                ..das wundert mich nicht...(grins)

                                Mal schauen ob das mit dem Vertrag stimmt - bislang wurde diesbezüglich vom Konzertveranstalter ja immer dementiert.
                                Zuletzt geändert von for a better world; 17.11.2009, 15:31.

                                Kommentar

                                thread unten

                                Einklappen
                                Lädt...
                                X