They Found This in Michael Jackson's Bedroom 😳
A discussion prompted by the release of the Michael Jackson biopic 'Michael' examines evidence found during the 1993 search of Jackson's Neverland home. The speakers highlight disturbing materials discovered in Jackson's bedroom, including NAMBLA publications with apparent handwritten notes by Jackson, as well as fingerprints of minors found on explicit magazines. The biopic's producers reportedly removed content addressing abuse allegations after being reminded of signed non-disclosure agreements with accusers.
Summary
The conversation is sparked by the release of a major Michael Jackson biopic titled 'Michael,' produced by the Jackson Estate, which has grossed nearly a billion dollars in roughly a month. The film covers Jackson's life from childhood through 1987, deliberately stopping six years before the first child sexual abuse allegations surfaced in 1993.
The speakers note that the film originally included a segment addressing and dismissing the abuse scandals, but this was reportedly removed after the producers were reminded that they had signed mutual non-disclosure agreements with Jackson's accusers. This legal constraint appears to have shaped the film's final narrative.
The bulk of the discussion focuses on evidence uncovered during the 1993 search of Jackson's home, conducted pursuant to a search warrant connected to the first abuse allegation. That case never resulted in criminal charges because the accusing family accepted a $20 million settlement. However, law enforcement reportedly found, in a locked box in Jackson's bedroom, two publications from NAMBLA (the North American Man/Boy Love Association) containing nude images of boys. One of these publications allegedly contained handwritten notes in Jackson's own handwriting expressing admiration for the boys depicted.
Additionally, investigators reportedly found a barely legal adult magazine in Jackson's room bearing the fingerprints of at least two minors, suggesting that Jackson had shown explicit material to underage boys. The transcript cuts off before the speakers finish their analysis of this evidence.
Key Insights
- The speakers claim the Jackson Estate-produced biopic originally included a segment dismissing abuse allegations but removed it after being reminded of signed non-disclosure agreements with Jackson's accusers.
- According to the speakers, the 1993 search of Jackson's home — conducted under a search warrant related to the first abuse allegation — uncovered two NAMBLA publications containing nude images of boys, found in a locked box in his bedroom.
- The speakers allege that one of the NAMBLA publications found in Jackson's bedroom contained handwritten notes in Jackson's own writing, quoted as reading 'What could be more joyful than these beautiful boys?'
- Investigators reportedly found fingerprints from at least two minors on a barely legal adult magazine discovered in Jackson's bedroom, which the speakers interpret as evidence that Jackson showed explicit material to underage boys.
- The speakers note that the first abuse allegation against Jackson never led to criminal charges because the accusing family accepted a $20 million civil settlement, effectively ending the legal proceedings.
Topics
Transcript
[0:00] You've been doing a deep dive on Michael Jackson. >> Yeah. Yeah. Why? >> That new biopic has earned almost a billion dollars in a month. There's a huge movie out right now called Michael and it's been put out by the Jackson Estate and all it does is chronicle the rise of Michael Jackson from childhood to 1987, which is 6 years before the first child station scandal. They originally had a piece on the end of it that addressed the scandal and tried to dismiss it, but then somebody called to their attention that they had signed a bunch of mutual non-disclosure agreements with his accusers when they [0:31] raided Michael Jackson's home in 1993 in connection…
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