Reading this article almost made me cry

2dangerous

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Michael is simply one of the most generous individuals on the face of this earth. I will post the entire article which does seem to start off talking about financial troubles. But the bulk of the article really highlights the generosity of Mr. Jackson and how highly his neighbors thought of him. Here it goes:


Jackson lawyer: Neverland auction off

03/14/2008 7:09 AM, AP
Eric Talmadge

Michael Jackson still has Neverland, having cut an 11th-hour deal Thursday to keep it off the auction block.
But the magic that once made the financially troubled entertainer's 2,500-acre paradise in the rolling hills of central California's wine country one of the most talked-about places on Earth seems to have vanished along with its reclusive owner.
Jackson hasn't been seen in this bucolic area of oak-studded hills since he was acquitted in June 2005 of molesting a 13-year-old visitor to his estate, and his absence leaves the future of Neverland, a sort of Hearst Castle for 12-year-olds, in doubt.
"We're all, of course, wondering what's going to happen. We've heard rumors but we don't know anything," said Kim Morrison, one of the administrators of a private school located just across the road from Neverland.
One of those rumors has soccer star David Beckham interested in the property.
"I wouldn't mind having a new neighbor. It would be nice to have Beckham there," laughed Morrison, although she quickly added that Jackson "was always a good neighbor."
The pop star's attorney, L. Londell McMillan, told The Associated Press his client has worked out a confidential agreement with Fortress Investment Group LLC allowing him to retain ownership of the estate.
Whether he'll keep it for long, however, remains to be seen. Jackson is said to be living in various places, including overseas, and his family has said that when dozens of sheriff's deputies raided the place in 2003 they destroyed the fond feelings he once had for Neverland.
Before Thursday's deal was announced, the property was scheduled to be auctioned March 19 because Jackson had gone into default. Financial Title Co. of San Francisco said he owed $24.5 million on the former cattle ranch he bought from real estate baron William Bone in 1988.
Jackson, then just 29, was at the height of his career when he purchased Neverland, naming it after the mythical land of Peter Pan — where boys never grow up. He had become a pop superstar before his 12th birthday, and he has said he created Neverland in an effort to obtain the childhood he never had.
Soon he had installed a merry-go-round, bumper cars, a Ferris wheel, roller coaster, a game arcade and a private train to rival that of Disneyland's. He brought in a zoo that included flamingos, giraffes, elephants, orangutans and reptiles and brought in a veterinarian and snake handler to care for them.
"It's like stepping into Oz," he once said. "Once you come in the gates, the outside world does not exist."
These days all is quiet at Neverland except for the squawking of a few of exotic birds that continue to roost in the trees. The other animals are gone and the only outward thing to distinguish Jackson's home from any other is the guard shack with its satellite dish just inside the locked front gate.
"Nobody is living here," says a friendly but otherwise reticent guard who has been ordered not to talk to anyone.
The shuttered amusement park sits out of sight, but recent aerial photos show it beginning to fall into disrepair.
It's a far cry from Jackson's heyday in the 1980s and '90s, when hundreds of children might be playing there.
"People would line up for a quarter mile or more just to get in the gate," recalled longtime resident Carol McCarley, out for a morning walk past the ranch.
Although he was rarely seen around town, many say Jackson always gave off the impression of a friendly neighbor.
When a rattlesnake would get into a classroom at The Family School, Morrison said, a call to Neverland would bring the snake handler over to dispose of it. If a child got hurt on the playground, the ranch doctor and Neverland's own fire department would arrive sooner than the local paramedics.
Jackson, meanwhile, would invite children by the thousands to enjoy the ranch.
Many were disadvantaged or seriously ill. Some were simply local school kids lucky enough to be granted a field trip to Neverland.
"My son knew Michael's nephews and would hang out at the ranch a lot. It was a wonderland for kids," said Skip Biolley, taking a break from putting a fresh coat of paint on J. Woeste's knickknack shop in the heart of downtown Los Olivos, an area that stretches all of two blocks in one direction and two in another.
"He had nothing but good experiences there," Biolley said of his son, adding the family remains friendly with one of the nephews.
Jackson's presence in Neverland and his financial empire began to unravel when one of his visitors accused the pop star of molesting him.
His trial, coupled with his often bizarre public behavior, turned him into a pariah in the eyes of many.
But not in this town of 1,000 residents 150 miles north of Los Angeles. Here, it is hard to find anyone who will say a bad word about Jackson. Some, like Fred Chamberlin, whose ranch abuts Jackson's, believe he was the victim of an overzealous prosecutor and are quick to note he was never convicted.
Now that he's gone, people are torn in trying to decide who their new neighbor should be.
Although Jackson's presence sometimes brought in gawkers who were a nuisance, Biolley noted that having a pop superstar does add a certain cachet. "Maybe Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt will buy it for their kids," he speculates.
 
Paragraphs are our friends :lol:
wow i cant read that like that can you seperate the paragraphs
with double spacing or at least a space - Thanks (hugs)
 
Thank you for posting that article! it ws REALLY sweet. Michael is a genuinely kind and caring person. I love how his neighbors are supporting him, though i don't know if you can call it 'support', cause they are just telling the truth! If his own neighbors dont have anything bad to say about him (granted i know that they dont know him personally), then why do ignorant ppl always have to put in their 2 cents when all they have to go by is the National Enquirer?
anyway,I LOVE what his neighbors had to say, though the rest of the article is too much into his finances and past happenings.
thanks again!
 
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Nice artical nice to see the people didn't judge him during trial based on the amount of media reporting it :smile: MJ really should go back to Neverland and put the past behind him and focous on the future
 
Thanks for posting this article. :) It's really sad to hear Michael's neighbors talk about him, hopefully someday he'll consider moving back to Neverland.
 
I didn't like the word "pariah" being used. If he was a pariah no one would be buying his album and putting it in the top 10 every week for 5 weeks and his neighbors sure as hell wouldn't be talking "nice" about him
 
I didn't like the word "pariah" being used. If he was a pariah no one would be buying his album and putting it in the top 10 every week for 5 weeks and his neighbors sure as hell wouldn't be talking "nice" about him

I agree, I don't like that word being attributed to him, either. Nobody sensible thinks of Michael as a 'pariah.' :no:
 
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I think He should keep it. Use it for a celebrity retreat and charge huge sums of money. Then every so often have continue to invite the underprivilaged kids.
 
Thanks for posting the article, but, yeah, paragraphs are the way to go. :)

Paragraphs are our friends :lol:
wow i cant read that like that can you seperate the paragraphs
with double spacing or at least a space - Thanks (hugs)
 
Paragraphs are our friends :lol:
wow i cant read that like that can you seperate the paragraphs
with double spacing or at least a space - Thanks (hugs)

Here ya go sweets--just for you: :D

Jackson lawyer: Neverland auction off

03/14/2008 7:09 AM, AP
Eric Talmadge

Michael Jackson still has Neverland, having cut an 11th-hour deal Thursday to keep it off the auction block.

But the magic that once made the financially troubled entertainer's 2,500-acre paradise in the rolling hills of central California's wine country one of the most talked-about places on Earth seems to have vanished along with its reclusive owner.

Jackson hasn't been seen in this bucolic area of oak-studded hills since he was acquitted in June 2005 of molesting a 13-year-old visitor to his estate, and his absence leaves the future of Neverland, a sort of Hearst Castle for 12-year-olds, in doubt.
"We're all, of course, wondering what's going to happen. We've heard rumors but we don't know anything," said Kim Morrison, one of the administrators of a private school located just across the road from Neverland.

One of those rumors has soccer star David Beckham interested in the property.
"I wouldn't mind having a new neighbor. It would be nice to have Beckham there," laughed Morrison, although she quickly added that Jackson "was always a good neighbor."
The pop star's attorney, L. Londell McMillan, told The Associated Press his client has worked out a confidential agreement with Fortress Investment Group LLC allowing him to retain ownership of the estate.

Whether he'll keep it for long, however, remains to be seen. Jackson is said to be living in various places, including overseas, and his family has said that when dozens of sheriff's deputies raided the place in 2003 they destroyed the fond feelings he once had for Neverland.

Before Thursday's deal was announced, the property was scheduled to be auctioned March 19 because Jackson had gone into default. Financial Title Co. of San Francisco said he owed $24.5 million on the former cattle ranch he bought from real estate baron William Bone in 1988.

Jackson, then just 29, was at the height of his career when he purchased Neverland, naming it after the mythical land of Peter Pan — where boys never grow up. He had become a pop superstar before his 12th birthday, and he has said he created Neverland in an effort to obtain the childhood he never had.

Soon he had installed a merry-go-round, bumper cars, a Ferris wheel, roller coaster, a game arcade and a private train to rival that of Disneyland's. He brought in a zoo that included flamingos, giraffes, elephants, orangutans and reptiles and brought in a veterinarian and snake handler to care for them.

"It's like stepping into Oz," he once said. "Once you come in the gates, the outside world does not exist."

These days all is quiet at Neverland except for the squawking of a few of exotic birds that continue to roost in the trees. The other animals are gone and the only outward thing to distinguish Jackson's home from any other is the guard shack with its satellite dish just inside the locked front gate.

"Nobody is living here," says a friendly but otherwise reticent guard who has been ordered not to talk to anyone.
The shuttered amusement park sits out of sight, but recent aerial photos show it beginning to fall into disrepair.
It's a far cry from Jackson's heyday in the 1980s and '90s, when hundreds of children might be playing there.

"People would line up for a quarter mile or more just to get in the gate," recalled longtime resident Carol McCarley, out for a morning walk past the ranch.
Although he was rarely seen around town, many say Jackson always gave off the impression of a friendly neighbor.

When a rattlesnake would get into a classroom at The Family School, Morrison said, a call to Neverland would bring the snake handler over to dispose of it. If a child got hurt on the playground, the ranch doctor and Neverland's own fire department would arrive sooner than the local paramedics.

Jackson, meanwhile, would invite children by the thousands to enjoy the ranch.
Many were disadvantaged or seriously ill. Some were simply local school kids lucky enough to be granted a field trip to Neverland.

"My son knew Michael's nephews and would hang out at the ranch a lot. It was a wonderland for kids," said Skip Biolley, taking a break from putting a fresh coat of paint on J. Woeste's knickknack shop in the heart of downtown Los Olivos, an area that stretches all of two blocks in one direction and two in another.
"He had nothing but good experiences there," Biolley said of his son, adding the family remains friendly with one of the nephews.

Jackson's presence in Neverland and his financial empire began to unravel when one of his visitors accused the pop star of molesting him.
His trial, coupled with his often bizarre public behavior, turned him into a pariah in the eyes of many.

But not in this town of 1,000 residents 150 miles north of Los Angeles. Here, it is hard to find anyone who will say a bad word about Jackson. Some, like Fred Chamberlin, whose ranch abuts Jackson's, believe he was the victim of an overzealous prosecutor and are quick to note he was never convicted.

Now that he's gone, people are torn in trying to decide who their new neighbor should be.
Although Jackson's presence sometimes brought in gawkers who were a nuisance, Biolley noted that having a pop superstar does add a certain cachet. "Maybe Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt will buy it for their kids," he speculates.
 
Hey that was sweet of you to fix the paragrahs so she can read it. It was a very touching story and i always new Michael was loved but its nice to know he still is. This story goes to show what a kind gentle man he really always has been. It was a heart warming story thanks.
 
It's a really sweet article, it feels really nice to read a press article that doesn't bash him and at least tries to be objective.
Thanks.
 
This thread isn't about the goings on of Neverlands current auction but rather MJ being a good neighbor so as long as it doesn't fall into the same category as the other Neverland thread I'll leave it open.
 
i don't think naysayers have enough clout when they have to add the phrase 'bizarre public behaviour' to the idea of a trial, in order to 'justify' that he is in financial trouble of any kind...

'bizarre public behaviour' is the most vague phrase in history, and means nothing. he is as normal as anyone, save the fact that he's an entertainer.

so...the fact that his neighbors have nothing but glowing things to say about him will apparently never be enough for the naysayers. he could have never gone to trial, or anything...but as long as some naysayers view him as having 'bizarre public behaviour'..they will always want that to be linked with financial trobles..as if to say that being MJ means being stupid and in trouble of some kind all the time, just because of his personality.

i appreciate the accounts being written from the mouths of neighbors...but i'm afraid that as long as MJ is MJ...it won't stop the media based harassing. it only makes me angrier that they have to continue to add their favorite buzzwords to their articles..and then wonder why i may be mad, if they write what they would want to call..'a positive article.'

i don't want to hear the account of 'being accused of molesting..' that's their buzzword....and it infiltrates...even if they say he was acquitted.

i'm tired of them equating MJ being MJ with the idea that automatically, that kind of behaviour ruins a career. this crap is mostly coming from people who wish they had his success..and are envious of him.

but..thanks for the artilce anyway...it's always nice to hear about the firsthand accounts of neighbors. that plus sales of t25 will keep aware people abreast of what the truth is.
 
awwww thanks for posting this...it was such a sweet story. You know the bits about how the school would ring neverland for help with snakes and doctors etc so cute...Michael really was a lovely neighbour...I wouldn't believe anything else.
 
Thanks for posting this. It about made me cry too, reading about how it used to be. It's so sad because of a few greedy, lying people... Anyway, it is very nice to read what his neighbors said, and I don't find it surprising either. I wish that was the kind of thing that people were always reporting about.
 
Everyone who meets Michael, has contact with him, knows him, they all use the same word to describe him, and that word is "nice". He is probably the most genuinely nice person I've ever seen, just a beautiful person, and that's exemplified by how he treats people and how they respond to him and give their impressions afterwards.
 
My official first post here at MJJCommunity:) Hi! New here and glad to see such a great fan place. I've been a fan for over a quarter of a century. I like having safe and dependable place to get Mike News. Thanks for having me.

Not going off topic, Im glad Michael kept Neverland. If I were in his shoes I would feel the same way he did but on the OTHER hand I'd be XXXXXX if I'll let all the losers that so badly wanna see him lose it WIN. I dont think Michael was ever in financial danger of losing it. I just think it possibly depressed him so much(and I'm thinking as if I were in his shoes now) maybe it just bothers him to deal with it now. He saved it. That says something about him starting to heal through the horrid ordeals he's been through.

Nice place ya got here;)
 
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Here ya go sweets--just for you: :D

Jackson lawyer: Neverland auction off

03/14/2008 7:09 AM, AP
Eric Talmadge

Michael Jackson still has Neverland, having cut an 11th-hour deal Thursday to keep it off the auction block.

But the magic that once made the financially troubled entertainer's 2,500-acre paradise in the rolling hills of central California's wine country one of the most talked-about places on Earth seems to have vanished along with its reclusive owner.

Jackson hasn't been seen in this bucolic area of oak-studded hills since he was acquitted in June 2005 of molesting a 13-year-old visitor to his estate, and his absence leaves the future of Neverland, a sort of Hearst Castle for 12-year-olds, in doubt.
"We're all, of course, wondering what's going to happen. We've heard rumors but we don't know anything," said Kim Morrison, one of the administrators of a private school located just across the road from Neverland.

One of those rumors has soccer star David Beckham interested in the property.
"I wouldn't mind having a new neighbor. It would be nice to have Beckham there," laughed Morrison, although she quickly added that Jackson "was always a good neighbor."
The pop star's attorney, L. Londell McMillan, told The Associated Press his client has worked out a confidential agreement with Fortress Investment Group LLC allowing him to retain ownership of the estate.

Whether he'll keep it for long, however, remains to be seen. Jackson is said to be living in various places, including overseas, and his family has said that when dozens of sheriff's deputies raided the place in 2003 they destroyed the fond feelings he once had for Neverland.

Before Thursday's deal was announced, the property was scheduled to be auctioned March 19 because Jackson had gone into default. Financial Title Co. of San Francisco said he owed $24.5 million on the former cattle ranch he bought from real estate baron William Bone in 1988.

Jackson, then just 29, was at the height of his career when he purchased Neverland, naming it after the mythical land of Peter Pan — where boys never grow up. He had become a pop superstar before his 12th birthday, and he has said he created Neverland in an effort to obtain the childhood he never had.

Soon he had installed a merry-go-round, bumper cars, a Ferris wheel, roller coaster, a game arcade and a private train to rival that of Disneyland's. He brought in a zoo that included flamingos, giraffes, elephants, orangutans and reptiles and brought in a veterinarian and snake handler to care for them.

"It's like stepping into Oz," he once said. "Once you come in the gates, the outside world does not exist."

These days all is quiet at Neverland except for the squawking of a few of exotic birds that continue to roost in the trees. The other animals are gone and the only outward thing to distinguish Jackson's home from any other is the guard shack with its satellite dish just inside the locked front gate.

"Nobody is living here," says a friendly but otherwise reticent guard who has been ordered not to talk to anyone.
The shuttered amusement park sits out of sight, but recent aerial photos show it beginning to fall into disrepair.
It's a far cry from Jackson's heyday in the 1980s and '90s, when hundreds of children might be playing there.

"People would line up for a quarter mile or more just to get in the gate," recalled longtime resident Carol McCarley, out for a morning walk past the ranch.
Although he was rarely seen around town, many say Jackson always gave off the impression of a friendly neighbor.

When a rattlesnake would get into a classroom at The Family School, Morrison said, a call to Neverland would bring the snake handler over to dispose of it. If a child got hurt on the playground, the ranch doctor and Neverland's own fire department would arrive sooner than the local paramedics.

Jackson, meanwhile, would invite children by the thousands to enjoy the ranch.
Many were disadvantaged or seriously ill. Some were simply local school kids lucky enough to be granted a field trip to Neverland.

"My son knew Michael's nephews and would hang out at the ranch a lot. It was a wonderland for kids," said Skip Biolley, taking a break from putting a fresh coat of paint on J. Woeste's knickknack shop in the heart of downtown Los Olivos, an area that stretches all of two blocks in one direction and two in another.
"He had nothing but good experiences there," Biolley said of his son, adding the family remains friendly with one of the nephews.

Jackson's presence in Neverland and his financial empire began to unravel when one of his visitors accused the pop star of molesting him.
His trial, coupled with his often bizarre public behavior, turned him into a pariah in the eyes of many.

But not in this town of 1,000 residents 150 miles north of Los Angeles. Here, it is hard to find anyone who will say a bad word about Jackson. Some, like Fred Chamberlin, whose ranch abuts Jackson's, believe he was the victim of an overzealous prosecutor and are quick to note he was never convicted.

Now that he's gone, people are torn in trying to decide who their new neighbor should be.
Although Jackson's presence sometimes brought in gawkers who were a nuisance, Biolley noted that having a pop superstar does add a certain cachet. "Maybe Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt will buy it for their kids," he speculates.

Bless you (hugs) :)

I wasnt trying to be nit picky
It is very hard for my eyes to focus and read that
when it is not seperated - That is much better
 
it is sad because he can never go back, yes it is sad they keep bringing up the trial!

but what was nice that his neighbours did not insult or really say a bad thing about Michael and even one that defended him saying that Michael was the victim and that Michael was acquitted!!

I wish more people could see the positives in Michael
 
I'm glad everyone enjoyed the article as much as I did. It is amazing to me how most people who have had any dealings with Michael--and have nothing to lose or gain based on what they say--typically have nothing but positive things to say. Then again, none of us are surprised because we know the humanitarian that Michael is.

BTW, sorry about the paragraph thing...I simply copy and pasted from the article.
 
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