View Single Post
Old 02-06-2003, 04:59 AM   #2
Grojlach
Zartan
 

Join Date: May 2, 2001
Location: Ulpia Noviomagus Batavorum
Age: 44
Posts: 5,281
Some reactions...

Charities condemn Jackson



Charities have condemned pop star Michael Jackson for telling a TV documentary that he let children stay in his bed.
The singer revealed his close friendships with children during the ITV1 special Living with Michael which aired in the UK on Tuesday.

He told interviewer Martin Bashir that he saw nothing wrong with children sleeping over at his Neverland mansion
He also said a 12-year-old boy named Gavin regularly stayed in his bed while he slept on the floor, but admitted other children had slept in his bed with him.
Children's charity Barnado's said that if anyone in the UK had revealed similar circumstances then an investigation would be launched by the authorities.
Principal policy officer Pam Hibbert said: "At Barnardo's we feel it is totally inappropriate for an adult man to share a bed or bedroom with a child that is not his own.
"One would expect most adults to recognise and acknowledge this - and understand the reasons why.
"One has to ask whether substantial wealth protects adults but not necessarily children."

Wrong message
Jackson, who likens himself to Peter Pan, was accused of child abuse in 1994 by a 13-year-old boy.
Although Jackson strenuously denies the allegations he paid the boy's parents $18m (£11m) to drop a civil case.
During the documentary Jackson said former child star Macaulay Culkin, his brother Kieran and their sisters had stayed in his bed with him.
Jackson said there was nothing improper about the arrangement.
But children's charity the NSPCC said Jackson was sending out the wrong message.
A spokesman said: "Michael Jackson says he has innocent intentions towards children.
"But his claims that he has shared his bed with many children who are not his own and it is 'what the whole world should do' sends out totally the wrong message to those whose intentions are anything but innocent.

Masked
"This behaviour could be used as justification by people who want to harm or sexually abuse children as an excuse for their own behaviour."
There was also concern about the way Jackson is raising his own three children, Prince Michael, Paris and Prince Michael II.
None of them are allowed to leave the house without their faces being masked and do not attend a "normal" school.
Kidscape director Michele Elliott said: "Michael Jackson is a very talented musician but by his own admission, also very damaged by his childhood experiences.
"He has created a strange, unreal world and is populating it with his own children, whom he treats like toys.
"He doesn't seem to consider how his actions will impact on children."

Source: BBC

(some parts of the main article were re-used for this one, apparently)

Jackson defended over TV interview


Psychic Uri Geller has come to the defence of his friend Michael Jackson after a documentary where the pop star admitted he shared his bedroom with young children.

Jackson made the admission in a documentary made by journalist Martin Bashir on the UK's ITV1 channel on Monday.
During the programme it emerged that children still slept overnight at Jackson's house, despite the allegations of abuse - that the singer always denied - made in 1993.
Jackson said he sometimes slept on the floor while giving the children his bed, which he said was a "beautiful thing", "charming" and "sweet".
"Why can't you share your bed? That's the most loving thing to do, to share your bed with someone," he said.

Difficult questions
Geller told BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Tuesday that he thought it was a good idea for Jackson to agree to the programme.
"I thought it was about time for Michael to open his house to a presenter I trusted," he said.
"I think Michael was brutally honest, he was direct, he never flinched from the most difficult questions."
But Geller also said the tone of the show had changed halfway through and Jackson's words had been twisted.
"In the first part of the show he came over as a totally positive person, towards the end of the programme I think he was shown in a more negative light," he said.
"This is just an indication of how manipulative a documentary like this can be."
Geller added he had no doubt's about Jackson's character.
"I fully trust Michael, he is a pure innocent human being, he brings so much joy into the lives of people," he said.

Innocent
In the programme Jackson introduced Bashir to a 12-year-old named Gavin, who he befriended as the youngster fought cancer.
The boy said he battled his illness with the help of Jackson and that his parents were happy with their friendship, and saw nothing wrong with him sharing a room with the star.
Jackson insisted his love for children was entirely innocent and had nothing to do with sex.
"My greatest inspiration comes from kids... it's all inspired from that level of innocence. I just love being around that all the time," he said.
Bashir had "unprecedented" access to the singer for the 90-minute documentary, Living With Michael Jackson.
He followed Jackson for eight months, interviewing him several times and spending time at his Californian ranch, Neverland, which includes a zoo and a full-scale fairground.
Bashir was present during the infamous "baby dangling" incident in Germany recently when Jackson held his baby son over a balcony to show waiting fans beneath.

Adoption plans
Jackson denied that had been wrong, saying any criticism was "ignorant" - a word he also used to describe media criticism of any other aspects of his life.
"We were waiting for thousands of fans down below, and they were chanting they wanted to see my child, so I was kind enough to let them see. I was doing something out of innocence," he said.
"I love my children, I was holding my son right and strong... I wasn't going to let him fall," he said.
He said he wanted more children and was considering adopting two from each continent.
The singer said he wanted to "live forever" and "totally" identified with the immortal children's fiction figure Peter Pan.
Questioned about the apparent change in his skin tone over the years, Jackson said he had the condition vitiligo, which made him lose skin colour and meant he was allergic to the sun.
Elsewhere in the programme, the singer is shown trying to teach Bashir his trademark "moonwalk" dance.

Source: BBC
__________________
[url]\"http://www.audioscrobbler.com/user/Grobbel/\" target=\"_blank\"> [img]\"http://www.denness.net/rpi/username/Grobbel\" alt=\" - \" /></a>
Grojlach is offline