Five wrong myths about Michael Jackson.

We may never have evidence that the famous singer Michael Jackson sexually abused Wade Robson and James Sifcak at the farm “Neverland”, when they were teenagers, as they both claim with conviction in the new HBO documentary “Arratia from Neverland”. But the matter is about the secret personal life of [...]
But this issue is about Jackson's secret personal life, which he deliberately left with many of his unexplainable choices to the public, making millions of his fans think, speculate, spread rumors and myths. Here are the five most common myths about him.
Myth No. 1: Michael's father sexually abused him as a child
Jackson has been repeatedly accused of sexual misconduct with children. He reached an agreement with one guy, for a lot of $20.25m in the early 1990s, was acquitted at a trial in 2005, on charges of abusing another guy, and is now subject to the documentary “Arrati from Neverland”.
Could he be repeating a new cycle of abuse? Biography J. Randy Taraborelli writes in her 1991 bestseller: “Michael Jackson, imagination and madness”, about speculation about the sexual abuse of the Patriarch Joseph Jackson's family against his son, “the years of the music industry”.
That same year, Michael's sister, La Toja Jackson, wrote a book with memories of “What is it like growing up in the Jackson” family, accusing his father of sexual abuse, and Sister Rebby. But later, she rejected these claims, and no one in the Jackson family confirmed any of these rumors.
The king of Popus openly recognized his father's physical violence. He wept in front of the camera during a 1993 interview with Oprah Wyfrey while accusing his father of physical abuse. (Zozof Jackson remembered that epidos:” I beat him with a key and a belt, I've never beaten him with a baseball bat.) Michael had many times the opportunity to blame his father for sexual abuse, but he never did. And there is no known evidence to support this claim.
Myth No. 2: Michael Jackson was homosexual or assexual
The singer insisted that he was not gay, but some journalists and biographers suggest that he was not very sincere. Ian Halperin, author of the 2009 book “exposed: Michael Jackson<x1, claims Jackson was gay. Taraborelli suggests that he had a romantic male friend, and Randall Sullivan, author of the unseen “: The strange life and tragic death of Michael Jackson” of 2012, calls him “pressual”. Sullivan claims, without any real evidence, that the singer was a 50-year-old virgin “, when he passed away.
The problem with such theories is that women who were able to know the truth opposed them. Jackson's former wife, Lisa Marie Presley, said the couple's sexual life was “very hot”. Likewise, other women have shown romantic relations with him, including Ola Ray, videxlip star “Thriller”
Myth #3: Michael Jackson wanted to be white.
In 1987, after the album “Thriller” made Jackson the world's greatest music star, he then released the “Bad” album, with several hits on musical parades. But his skin looked whiter than in the video “Thriller”. Many fans speculate that Jackson, who had become a star through the studio “over Records” in the early years of É70s, was also intended to succeed in the white audience.
Greg Tate, an African-American critic, called Jackson “another black man who had gone crazy, because his mirror, tells him his face doesn't match the Nordic” ideal. Steven Schaviro, a white writer, thinks that “in a white supremeist society, he wanted to become white”.
But Jackson insisted on the contrary, and there was never any evidence to challenge that. He told Winfrey in the 1993 interview, that he whitened his skin with cream, because of vitiligo, a disease that caused multiple scars on his throat, and that was also verified by autopsy after his death in June 2009. Jackson added:”
Myth #4: Michael Jackson didn't invent the famous dance “Mionwalk”
Jackson performed with this kind of threat during his hit performance “Billie Jean” in 1983. Was that the move, the act of a genius artist? Michael's sister La Toa said in 2004, that she was taught this move by a professional dancer named Jeffrey.
She was actually referring to Jeffrey Daniel, Jasper Candy and Cullen Jackson, who had shown up during a threat called boogaloo. Jackson later complained that the King of Pop stole the authorship of that movement.
In fact, in the 1988 memory book “Moonwalk”, Jackson mentions “3 boys, “, who taught him the bases of the threat on the road. But Jackson had a completely new vision of this movement: ” I walked back and forth at the same time, like walking on the moon” he crossed.
Myth No.5: Michael Jackson died without his nose.
After Jackson's death, an article in “Rolling Stone” wrote:” The body lacked prosthesis, which he normally placed on the tip of his damaged nose”. But an expert in Los Angeles, Ed Winter, said speculation over the lack of noses was “ably false.
Note: Steve Knoper, an editor in “Rolling Stone”, is author book “MJ: Michael Jackson's genius”
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