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The MJAP just tweeted this an hour ago.User Actions Following TheMJAP@TheMJAP"Michael Jackson: As You've Never Seen Him Before." Or, er, a hologram of Earnest Valentino in action? #StopTheLies You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login …
just watched the performance several more times. i have to admit the more i watch, the more i appreciate it. i am still seeing 2 different faces, imo. the dance routines are simple and not as smooth & fluent as that of a younger person, ( u would think if it's not real make it as best u can) i thought the moonwalk was messed up but it seems like it's changed. the beat seems 1, 2, 1, 1-2, 1, 1-2. but, the movement with the rhythm is on point, but stiffer ( i know what that's like :icon_rolleyes:) i love that with mj, his being in sync with every bing, bam & boom of a beat. i have to admit at the end when he sat down and propped his leg across the arm of the chair, i did FEEL something. so my analysis right or wrong crazy or not, :Pulling_hair: i think at least some (if not all) of it was him. older & stiffer with some kind of morphing face. some of his movements reminded me of sofurgofromashes.
think it was marlon who said he would know him anywhere by the shoes. wasn't it michael himself i think that said the fans know him by his movements ?
Watch this for yourself, and pray for protection, spiritually, before you do! It’s creepier than ever, and chilling to the bone! Warning! This video contains EXTREMELY GRAPHIC and sexually suggestive content.
Not only is it creepy to watch Michael Jackson, who is dead, appear totally real on stage, dancing and singing with extremely sexually graphic female dancers, but there is so much satanic symbolism in this video, I can’t even begin to explain! The name of the song, the costumes, the dance, the props—you name it, IT’S IN THERE! I am also pretty sure that all of the dancers, the scenery, props and more are also holographic images. As a side note, it begins by hinting at martial law with a SWAT team coming out on stage doing a dance! Any symbolism there? Pretty obvious, if you ask me.
The Secret Of Michael Jackson's IllusionTHE GRAND ILLUSIONAudiences at Sunday's Billboard Music Awards ceremony were treated to a performance of Slave to the Rhythm by none other than the late Michael Jackson himself. Though widely mistaken as a hologram, the performance by Michael Jackson was the result of computer-generated images, live performers and a touch of illusion known as Pepper's ghost. Here's how producers mixed fantasy with reality:SAN RAFAEL, Calif. — Michael Jackson came back to life last Sunday on the Billboard Music Awards telecast. And the team that orchestrated his high-tech resurrection is beaming through their fatigue."It scared us to death to create an image that had to look, feel and function for four minutes like an entertainer everyone in the world knows," says Frank Patterson, CEO of digital effects firm Pulse Evolution. "You have to see his eyes and moves and believe it was him."After a week of social and online media speculation about how the effect was pulled off, Florida-based Pulse exclusively invited USA TODAY to its Bay Area studios, located in the former headquarters of George Lucas' Industrial Light & Magic, to explain the details behind Jackson's performance of Slave to the Rhythm, off the late singer's new album, Xscape.But first, a plea. "It's not a hologram," says Pulse Executive Chairman John Textor, sitting in the room where the Jackson effect was crafted with Patterson and visual effects supervisor Stephen Rosenbaum, who worked on Avatar.So what is it? "An illusion," Patterson says.Indeed, Pulse refined a 19th-century magician's technique called Pepper's ghost, which Textor — then leading Oscar-winning graphics company Digital Domain — also employed to summon the ghost of slain rapper Tupac Shakur at the Coachella music festival in 2012. The effect involves projecting an image on glass or plastic at a 45-degree angle, which brings that image into the viewer's field of view.But the Jackson illusion was infinitely more complex to pull off. "Tupac had no hair, and just stood there, where Michael had to be all over the place," Patterson says.There is also a videoLink to article: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login