John Branca interview at L'Uomo Vogue

ivy

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Another great find by marc_vivien

John Branca is interviewed by Italian Vogue (L'Uomo Vogue) for their February 2013 issue. The article is in Italian and is not completely posted online. I'm sure he's talking about Michael and Michael's Estate in the interview. Can one of members from Italy get the magazine and do a full translation for us?


John Branca The DEALMAKER

http://www.vogue.it/uomo-vogue/people/2013/02/john-branca

vu01302d0150-015101branca-539242_0x440.jpg


vu01302d0152-015302branca-2205343_0x440.jpg


vu01302d0154-015503branca-4396413_0x440.jpg


----------------------------
I was given this link, it's the English version of the article. I'm not sure if it's the whole thing

http://www.vogue.it/en/uomo-vogue/people/2013/02/john-branca

He is probably the most famous lawyer in the United States. Some might say the most infamous, but most of them are subscribers to improbable conspiracy theories who can’t get over the death of Michael Jackson. Bearing his sixty-two years like a rich Angeleno, John Branca is actually the curator of the estate of the King of Pop, the man who is bringing it back to solvency: rumors are that 310 million dollars have come back in over the past 15 months, much from Bad 25—the reissue (sponsored by Pepsi) celebrating the 25th anniversary of Jackson’s famous 1987 album complemented by a documentary directed by Spike Lee.


Branca says that he worked with Michael Jackson in 1984, laying the groundwork for his relationship with Pepsi, and then again in 1988 for the Bad Tour. He was very happy to bring them back together for the Bad 25 project; the souvenir Pepsi cans are much coveted by fans and collectors. Branca has a particular sensitivity for the commemorative: his collection of baseball cards is one of the world’s largest. He started collecting them as a boy. His family shared his passion for baseball (Uncle Ralph played for the Dodgers in the ‘50s) and he was able to collect a number of rare cards. After the devastating blow of their theft from his mother’s house, Branca stopped collecting. But one day he went to a Sotheby’s auction to buy his uncle’s pitcher uniform and ended up coming home with a large private card collection that got him “back in the game”. He says that a love for baseball is something that is deeply and inescapably American: Babe Ruth is on a par with Abraham Lincoln or Elvis Presley. He has always had the soul of a collector. The things that are dearest to him, apart from his baseball cards, are his collection of rock memorabilia, leather jackets, and Venetian antiques.

Branca lives in Beverly Hills in an Italian-style villa furnished with Fortuny fabrics and a slew of 18th-century furniture bought all over the world but especially in Venice itself. He has another house near Los Angeles which looks out over—need I say—the canals of Venice. His mania for these things has made him one of the most sought-after professionals in the entertainment business. His client portfolio in music ranges from the Doors to Justin Timberlake, with Carlos Santana, Fleetwood Mac, the Beach Boys, the Bee Gees, Shakira and Alanis Morissette somewhere in the middle. He has made headlines for his work to reclaim and manage the legacy and royalties of Kurt Cobain and Elvis Presley, and for helping Michael Jackson acquire the Beatles’ catalogue. He is a firm believer in the value of copyrights and the protection of artists (even from themselves: he is one of the founders of MusiCares, a charity that helps musicians who find themselves in difficulty of one sort or another), and this is where he has channeled his professional energy.


He has played the guitar since he was a kid and his band got its first contract when he was 16. He started college studying music but luckily realized right away that he was made for something else. One day he was reading an article in Time about Elton John and his lawyer when a light came on in his head, he suddenly knew what he wanted to be when he grew up. They say that if someone manages to unite his passions with his profession, what he does will never be work. And Branca has had the fortune of representing all his idols. But he’s not a lawyer of technicalities and fine print: he always works creatively with his clients, some of whom have become close friends, like Michael Jackson (who, along with his chimpanzee Bubbles, both dressed impeccably in tuxedos, was Best Man at Branca’s wedding). He came up with the idea of financing the Thriller video by selling the Making of Thriller video to a cable television channel for 1.2 million dollars, knowing that producing the video would cost 1 million (at the time, the average price of a music video was 50,000 dollars).


Branca says that you have to be creative even when establishing a partnership between a celebrity and a brand. He should know. He joined Michael Jackson and Pepsi, Aerosmith and General Motors, and lined up the sponsors for the Rolling Stones’ Steel Wheels tour. And he points out that in addition to the financial aspects, a good lawyer has to keep in mind the impact that a given alliance will have on the artist as a brand: the two parties have to have a natural compatibility, and the artist has to have control over the creative process to make sure he or she is presented the right way.


I ask him what he thinks of the famous episode with George Clooney and Nespresso: a few years ago a journalist at a press conference in Venice asked George how a political, humanitarian and environmental activist like himself could hire himself out to a controversial multinational like Nestlé. Clooney surprised everyone by flying off the handle and saying that he didn’t have to justify himself to anyone. Branca replied like a true lawyer, saying he was not familiar with the incident and could not comment on it.


L'Uomo Vogue, February 2013 (n. 438)


Photo by Gavin Bond
Fashion editor Rushka Bergman
Fashion assistant Ashley Sean Thomas
 
I ask him what he thinks of the famous episode with George Clooney and Nespresso: a few years ago a journalist at a press conference in Venice asked George how a political, humanitarian and environmental activist like himself could hire himself out to a controversial multinational like Nestlé. Clooney surprised everyone by flying off the handle and saying that he didn’t have to justify himself to anyone. Branca replied like a true lawyer, saying he was not familiar with the incident and could not comment on it.
A man of few words is that John Branca.
I pray Michael Jackson's children (Prince, Paris, and Blanket)
each grows up intelligent and intuitive; so they can effectively
interact with the executors of the trust fund their father left them. :innocent:
 
Thanks.

So much for the argument that speaking to the tabloids is the way to go.

Interviews like this just shows what a heavyweight Branca is.
 
Great!! Rushka Bergman styled him as well.

I hope he will be on board for the exposition she's working on.
 
I asked our friends at MJFanSquare (Italian MJ fan forum) for help and Cristiana has agreed to get the magazine tomorrow and do a translation for us. So we should have that in a few days. :)
 
He looks very good. Ms. Bergman definitely knows her stuff.

Aside from working with Michael, I really didn't know about all the other artist that have crossed Mr. Branca's path over the years. His list of clients is very impressive.

I said it before and I'll say it again: "I like the way Branca handles himself, always very professional."

It's very easy for me to see why Michael wanted Branca back on his team.
 
I was given this link, it's the English version of the article. I'm not sure if it's the whole thing

http://www.vogue.it/en/uomo-vogue/people/2013/02/john-branca

He is probably the most famous lawyer in the United States. Some might say the most infamous, but most of them are subscribers to improbable conspiracy theories who can’t get over the death of Michael Jackson. Bearing his sixty-two years like a rich Angeleno, John Branca is actually the curator of the estate of the King of Pop, the man who is bringing it back to solvency: rumors are that 310 million dollars have come back in over the past 15 months, much from Bad 25—the reissue (sponsored by Pepsi) celebrating the 25th anniversary of Jackson’s famous 1987 album complemented by a documentary directed by Spike Lee.


Branca says that he worked with Michael Jackson in 1984, laying the groundwork for his relationship with Pepsi, and then again in 1988 for the Bad Tour. He was very happy to bring them back together for the Bad 25 project; the souvenir Pepsi cans are much coveted by fans and collectors. Branca has a particular sensitivity for the commemorative: his collection of baseball cards is one of the world’s largest. He started collecting them as a boy. His family shared his passion for baseball (Uncle Ralph played for the Dodgers in the ‘50s) and he was able to collect a number of rare cards. After the devastating blow of their theft from his mother’s house, Branca stopped collecting. But one day he went to a Sotheby’s auction to buy his uncle’s pitcher uniform and ended up coming home with a large private card collection that got him “back in the game”. He says that a love for baseball is something that is deeply and inescapably American: Babe Ruth is on a par with Abraham Lincoln or Elvis Presley. He has always had the soul of a collector. The things that are dearest to him, apart from his baseball cards, are his collection of rock memorabilia, leather jackets, and Venetian antiques.

Branca lives in Beverly Hills in an Italian-style villa furnished with Fortuny fabrics and a slew of 18th-century furniture bought all over the world but especially in Venice itself. He has another house near Los Angeles which looks out over—need I say—the canals of Venice. His mania for these things has made him one of the most sought-after professionals in the entertainment business. His client portfolio in music ranges from the Doors to Justin Timberlake, with Carlos Santana, Fleetwood Mac, the Beach Boys, the Bee Gees, Shakira and Alanis Morissette somewhere in the middle. He has made headlines for his work to reclaim and manage the legacy and royalties of Kurt Cobain and Elvis Presley, and for helping Michael Jackson acquire the Beatles’ catalogue. He is a firm believer in the value of copyrights and the protection of artists (even from themselves: he is one of the founders of MusiCares, a charity that helps musicians who find themselves in difficulty of one sort or another), and this is where he has channeled his professional energy.


He has played the guitar since he was a kid and his band got its first contract when he was 16. He started college studying music but luckily realized right away that he was made for something else. One day he was reading an article in Time about Elton John and his lawyer when a light came on in his head, he suddenly knew what he wanted to be when he grew up. They say that if someone manages to unite his passions with his profession, what he does will never be work. And Branca has had the fortune of representing all his idols. But he’s not a lawyer of technicalities and fine print: he always works creatively with his clients, some of whom have become close friends, like Michael Jackson (who, along with his chimpanzee Bubbles, both dressed impeccably in tuxedos, was Best Man at Branca’s wedding). He came up with the idea of financing the Thriller video by selling the Making of Thriller video to a cable television channel for 1.2 million dollars, knowing that producing the video would cost 1 million (at the time, the average price of a music video was 50,000 dollars).


Branca says that you have to be creative even when establishing a partnership between a celebrity and a brand. He should know. He joined Michael Jackson and Pepsi, Aerosmith and General Motors, and lined up the sponsors for the Rolling Stones’ Steel Wheels tour. And he points out that in addition to the financial aspects, a good lawyer has to keep in mind the impact that a given alliance will have on the artist as a brand: the two parties have to have a natural compatibility, and the artist has to have control over the creative process to make sure he or she is presented the right way.


I ask him what he thinks of the famous episode with George Clooney and Nespresso: a few years ago a journalist at a press conference in Venice asked George how a political, humanitarian and environmental activist like himself could hire himself out to a controversial multinational like Nestlé. Clooney surprised everyone by flying off the handle and saying that he didn’t have to justify himself to anyone. Branca replied like a true lawyer, saying he was not familiar with the incident and could not comment on it.


L'Uomo Vogue, February 2013 (n. 438)


Photo by Gavin Bond
Fashion editor Rushka Bergman
Fashion assistant Ashley Sean Thomas
 
Memefan;3776603 said:
Great!! Rushka Bergman styled him as well.

I hope he will be on board for the exposition she's working on.

She´s cool. They were an item,dating too, her and Michael?
 
Cristiana from MJFanSquare has checked. The above posted English translation is the full article / interview with Branca.
 
Good article. Is Branca wearing high water pants in the first photo--makes me think of Michael. Love the way he handled the question about Nestle. I detest professionals like lawyers/doctors who like to give public analyses of others & their actions, something that quasi-professionals were always doing to Michael on TV.

It seems then that BAD 25 really made good money after all. ^^It states that 310m came in much of it from BAD. I thought they said BAD 25 did not do as well as expected? One thing they have right is that we were looking for those Pepsi cans. I won't be surprised if some fans are still checking stores to see if some were misplaced in the back of shelves.
 
'save the artists from themselves'. The article feels slanted to me...quite opinionated. I don't like articles that give the impression that MJ wasn't the lead in being a good businessman..and that, somehow, he needed to be portrayed as being 'in his place'. To me, Michael had the ideas about publishing the Beatles catalogue, not Branca. And, ironically, Paul McCartney spoke of publishing being a good idea, to Michael, though Paul didn't see the value of his own catalogue, but the idea inadvetently came out of an artist's mouth, not Branca's. Michael turned out to be the sterling lead businessman in this whole thing. Bottom line, artists can think. It's like MJ in the trial. MJ knew when a lawyer wasn't towing the load. He made one lawyer look good and the other look bad. Now he helped forge a great rep for Branca.
 
144,000 I see what you are saying. I find it a repeating thread in articles/magazine write ups about Branca. I do not think Branca is giving that impression, but that the reporters/writers are taking Branca's accomplishments and presenting them as though the artists gave no input/decisions/ideas/guidelines. They are written as though whatever the final product, Branca did it 100% by himself. They could be doing this because Branca is still alive; or they adhere to the idea that live Michael had no money & now dead Michael has money, so Branca is the one who is doing this 100%; or they feel Michael lacks the ability. So, I disregard the slants of these articles & focus on what Branca is doing & how positively it impacts on Michael.

Let's face it we all know that, if there was not a global Michael with talent, with iconic songs/dance/clothes/videos, i.e., with a legacy there would be no billions being made by Branca, that is not to say that Branca should not be given credit for the great work he did & continues to do. We would have had a different situation, if the head was Randy Jackson, for example.

This catalog is amusing to me because I have heard 3 different people state they were the ones who told Michael to invest in such media. I heard someone from Johnsons, then I heard Paul say it was him, then I heard someone from Motown say it.
 
Fortunately i think the chances of randy jackson having a monthly sub to l'uomo vogue are pretty slim, so there should be no danger of him choking over his morning coffee as he flicks through the pages of the new issue only to find his nemesis in a james bond style photo spread.

Thanks for posting, nice pix.
 
I like John.... I really enjoyed what he had to say during the bad 25 documentary
 
Looking on another positive thing, the more they interview Branca in quality magazines or on tv, is the more exposure the legacy of Michael receives. We will get more & more new fans, & the older fans will check out what is going on in the Michael environment.
 
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