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Living with Michael Jackson

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Living with Michael Jackson
GenreDocumentary
Directed byJulie Shaw
Presented byMartin Bashir
StarringMichael Jackson
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Production
Executive producerJeff Anderson (Tonight)
ProducersJames Goldston and Julie Shaw
Production companyGranada Television
Original release
NetworkITV (UK)
ABC (US)
Release3 February 2003 (2003-02-03)

Living with Michael Jackson is a television documentary in which British journalist Martin Bashir interviewed American singer Michael Jackson from May 2002 to January 2003. It was broadcast in the United Kingdom on ITV (as a Tonight with Trevor McDonald special) on 3 February 2003, and in the United States three days later on ABC, introduced by Barbara Walters.[1] Jackson took Bashir on a tour of his home, Neverland Ranch, and discussed his family, unhappy childhood, plastic surgery and relationships with children.

In November 2003, the BBC aired Louis, Martin & Michael, a documentary by British filmmaker Louis Theroux, who had lost out to Bashir to make the documentary.[2] The following month, following controversy raised from Bashir's documentary, Jackson was charged with seven counts of child molestation and two counts of intoxicating a minor with alcohol,[3] all of which he was acquitted of in a court of law in June 2005.[4]

Summary

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Living with Michael Jackson begins at Neverland Ranch, where Michael Jackson and Martin Bashir tour the estate's grounds and face off in a go-kart race. Jackson explains that he writes his songs by composing lyrics and not the music, because the music "will write itself." While watching archival footage of the Jackson 5, Jackson recalls painful memories of abusive treatment at the hands of his father, Joe Jackson, and explains that this is why he never laid a hand on his children.

At the Four Seasons Hotel in Las Vegas, Jackson speaks about his love life, his changing physical appearance and his children. Bashir meets Jackson's children, Prince and Paris, who wear masks to conceal their appearance. Jackson then goes to Berlin, where the "baby dangling" incident occurs. Jackson visits Berlin Zoo and a charity auction and receives a humanitarian award at the Bambi Awards.

Back at Neverland Ranch, Gavin Arvizo is interviewed and states that it was Jackson's support that helped him beat his bout with cancer. Jackson admits that sometimes, when Gavin stayed with him, the singer let him sleep in his bed while he slept on the floor. When asked what he gets out of his involvement with children, Jackson replies that he gains joy, because "my greatest inspiration comes from kids."

During January 2003, Bashir meets with Jackson in Miami for the final interview and brings up the subject of his face. A visibly upset Jackson says that he has only had two operations on his nose in order to facilitate his singing. Bashir concludes that Jackson wanted to change his appearance as a result of his troubled youth. He repeatedly questions Jackson about why he invites children into his room. Jackson defends himself stating that such activity is natural when the children are of close friends or family, and that "many children," including Macaulay and Kieran Culkin, have slept in the same bed as him. Jackson strongly denies any sexual motivation for this.

Reception

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Criticism

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Following the documentary's transmission, Jackson felt betrayed by Bashir and complained that the film gave a distorted picture of his behaviour and conduct as a father.[5][6] He said that in the final version of his interview, Bashir used only material that supported the negative view Bashir was portrayed as holding towards Jackson. In response, Jackson and his personal cameraman released a rebuttal interview, which showed Bashir complimenting Jackson on his abilities as a father and his grace under pressure.[7]

"I haven't seen that documentary," remarked the American singer Madonna, "but it sounds disgusting, like Bashir exploited a friendship. Publicly humiliating someone for your own gain will only come back to haunt you. I can assure you, all these people will be sorry. God's going to have his revenge."[8]

Noel Gallagher, the guitarist for Oasis, slammed the documentary as "typical British journalism". In an interview with Ian Dempsey on Today FM, he said: "I was quite annoyed at the fact that one of the biggest stars that ever was or ever will be, they managed to get access to him for how many months and there was an hour and half programme on him and they mentioned his music and his art for maybe two or three minutes. Did you learn anything new about Michael Jackson that you didn't already know? He's off his nut, he's got a huge house, he's got a lot of money, we all knew that anyway. I would rather have had an hour and a half programme telling me how he wrote the album Off the Wall and the one after that." Coming to Jackson's defence, Gallagher said: "I mean, so what if he climbs trees? Any man that has got a fairground in his backgarden and can say to a child, 'I'm going to build a water park behind that mountain,' give him a round of applause. He seems like a very passionate and caring father, so let's not tear him up."[9][10][11]

Bashir stated: "I don't believe that I've betrayed Michael Jackson at all. I agreed that we would make an honest film about his life. The film was fair to his musical achievement and gave him every opportunity to explain himself. I'm not accusing anybody of being a child molester or a paedophile."[12] Bashir was the first witness for the prosecution in Jackson's child molestation trial.[13] He refused to answer questions from defense attorneys.[14] Following Jackson's death in 2009, Bashir said Jackson "was never convicted of any crime, and I never saw any wrongdoing myself, and while his lifestyle may have been a bit unorthodox, I don't believe he was a criminal."[15]

In 2021, Jackson's UK publicist, Mark Borkowski, stated that he had discouraged him from giving an interview to Bashir.[16] That same year, many Jackson fans demanded an investigation to examine the circumstances surrounding the documentary after it was revealed that Bashir, as a reporter for the BBC's Panorama, had used forged documents to secure his interview with Diana, Princess of Wales in 1995.[17] Jackson's family also reacted by criticizing Bashir for hoodwinking him and manipulating the footage, and stated that they were considering legal action.[18]

Rebuttal video

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In an attempt to repair his image, Jackson released a rebuttal interview, The Michael Jackson Interview: The Footage You Were Never Meant To See, broadcast on Fox in the US. Despite NBC reportedly bid US$5 million for the footage, Jackson sold the footage to Fox for £1.6 million.[19][20] The interview was aired on Sky One in the UK.[21]

Presented by Maury Povich, the special contains material which Bashir omitted. It also features new interviews with people close to Jackson, such as his former wife Debbie Rowe, parents Joe and Katherine Jackson, brother Jermaine and close friend Elizabeth Taylor. In this interview, Rowe claimed it was at her request that the children wore masks in public.[20] She also pointed out that the concept of "sharing a bed" can be misunderstood: for example, she herself likes watching television in bed; when she has a visitor, they both watch television together in bed. It also contains interviews with Bashir giving very different opinions to those he had given in interviews and in his original voice-over narration. He is shown praising Jackson as a father as well as saying that he thinks it is wonderful that he allows children to come to Neverland, though he had made previous statements that Neverland Ranch was a "dangerous place" for children (a direct contradiction of his later statement that he did not believe Jackson was a criminal).[7][15]

The footage shown in the rebuttal documentary was privately filmed by Hamid Moslehi, who stated that he was not "secretly" videotaping the interviews as was popularly believed. Moslehi said Bashir knew they were also filming, but that Bashir probably did not know that when he told his camera crew to cut, that he was still filming.[22] Part of the footage was not aired because Moslehi refused to hand it over, owing to a financial dispute with Jackson.[23][24] It was found by police in a search of Moslehi's home in November 2003, and showed the accuser's family praising Jackson.[24]

Fourteen million people watched the Jackson rebuttal documentary.[25] The program's UK debut on Sky One drew more than two million viewers, making it the third-biggest show in the channel's history.[26]

Ratings

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The UK airing had 15 million viewers while 38 million watched the 2-hour special on ABC.[7]

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On 14 March 2003, the BBC produced a special spoof parody of the documentary, entitled "Lying to Michael Jackson." The sketch showed Jackson, played by comedian Lenny Henry, being interviewed and followed around for the documentary by Bashir, played by Rowan Atkinson.[27] The miniseries was also parodied in the British sketch comedy series Bo Selecta.

References

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  1. ^ Stanley, Alessandra (6 February 2003). "TELEVISION REVIEW; A Neverland World Of Michael Jackson". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 June 2009.
  2. ^ "Singer Jackson whipped by father". 13 November 2003 – via BBC News.
  3. ^ Broder, John M. (19 December 2003). "Jackson Is Formally Charged With Child Molesting". The New York Times.
  4. ^ "Jackson cleared of child molestation". The Guardian. Associated Press. 13 June 2005.
  5. ^ "Michael Jackson's statement". CNN. 6 February 2003. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
  6. ^ "Jackson complains to TV watchdog". BBC News. 6 February 2003. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
  7. ^ a b c Low, Valentine (27 June 2009). "Michael Jackson: PR suicide with the help of Martin Bashir". The Times. London. Archived from the original on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 28 June 2009.
  8. ^ Rees, Paul (May 2003). "Listen very carefully, I will say this only once". Q. pp. 84–92.
  9. ^ "ShowBiz Ireland - Noel Gallagher backs Michael Jackson after the Martin Bashir Documentary". www.showbiz.ie.
  10. ^ "Noel Gallagher Backs Michael Jackson - Pop-Music.comPop-Music.com".
  11. ^ "Oasis star stands up for Jackson". Belfasttelegraph.co.uk. 6 February 2003.
  12. ^ "Jackson acts over legal claim". BBC. 17 February 2003. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  13. ^ Glaister, Dan (2 March 2005). "Martin Bashir takes stand". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 29 January 2019. Retrieved 28 January 2019.
  14. ^ Left, Sarah (10 March 2005). "Q&A: Michael Jackson court case". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 6 August 2019. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  15. ^ a b Kadri, Anisa (16 July 2009). "Jackson documentary to air tonight". Digital Spy. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  16. ^ "Martin Bashir: Michael Jackson's UK publicist warned star against now-infamous interview". Sky News. 22 May 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  17. ^ Power, Ed (21 May 2021). "Michael Jackson fans demand an inquiry into his Martin interview: do they have a case?". The Telegraph. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  18. ^ Hill, Patrick (22 May 2021). "Michael Jackson's family threaten to sue Martin Bashir for 'hoodwinking star'". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  19. ^ "No Lacko Of Jacko". CBS News. 6 February 2003. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  20. ^ a b Mills, Merope (22 February 2003). "Jackson exacts revenge on Bashir in two-hour TV rebuttal". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  21. ^ Johnson Jr, Billy (21 February 2003). "Michael Jackson Interviewer Contradicts Himself In Behind The Scenes Footage". LAUNCH. Archived from the original on 19 June 2003.
  22. ^ "Michael Jackson King of PoP".
  23. ^ Time Waster (20 December 2004). ""Hero" Videographer Sues Jackson". The Smoking Gun. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  24. ^ a b "Inside The Michael Jackson Grand Jury". The Smoking Gun. 15 February 2005.
  25. ^ de Moraes, Lisa (26 April 2003). "Jackson Opens Up, Really, But Fewer Seem to Care". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  26. ^ "Jackson reply draws 2.4m viewers". 4 March 2003. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  27. ^ "Lying To Michael Jackson - Starring Rowan Atkinson for Comic Relief BBC 2003". 2 January 2014. Archived from the original on 12 December 2021 – via www.youtube.com.
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Preceded by RTS: Television Journalism
Programme of the Year

2004
Succeeded by