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Michael Jackson moonwalk hat sells for $82,170

September 27, 2023 by entertainment.inquirer.net Leave a Comment

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A Fedora hat that belonged to US singer Michael Jackson, made of wool and lined with silk, is displayed before being put on sale at auction in Paris on Sept. 12, 2023. The hat is among items that will be auctioned at the Drouot Paris auction house on September 26, 2023. The hat sold at an auction in Paris on Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2023, for 77,640 euros ($82,170). GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT / AFP

PARIS—The hat that Michael Jackson wore just before performing his signature moonwalk dance for the first time sold at an auction in Paris on Tuesday, Sept. 26, for 77,640 euros ($82,170).

The black fedora had been estimated at 60,000 to 100,000 euros by the Hotel Drouot auction house.

It was the highlight among around 200 items of rock memorabilia, though the top price went to a guitar owned by the legendary bluesman T-Bone Walker, at 129,400 euros.

Jackson whipped off the hat while breaking into his hit “Billie Jean” during a televised Motown concert in 1983, at the height of his fame.

Moments later, he showed off what would become his trademark move—the moonwalk, a seemingly effortless backwards glide while appearing to walk forwards.

Music memorabilia has become big business.

Co-organizers Lemon Auction made a splash last year with the sale of the guitar smashed by Noel Gallagher on the night Oasis split up in Paris following a fight with his brother Liam. The instrument went for 385,500 euros.

This month, a series of auctions for items belonging to Freddie Mercury —including the piano on which he composed “Bohemian Rhapsody”—brought in a total of 46.5 million euros for Sotheby’s, attracting bidders from 76 countries.  / ra

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Michael Jackson moonwalk hat sells for $82,170

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The Haunting of Shirley Jackson

May 5, 2020 by jezebel.com Leave a Comment

In Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House, the floors and walls are unsettlingly misaligned, leaving inhabitants never quite sure how much to trust even stable-seeming surfaces. But it’s not just the physical instability of homes that haunt Jackson’s work. In Jackson’s fiction, the real horror often lies in the manic loneliness of women so desperate for—even entrapped by the idea of—stable domesticity that they abandon their dying mothers, poison their fathers, and die by suicide rather than leave the places they’ve claimed as home.

Both literary criticism of Jackson’s work and film and TV adaptations focus closely on the theme of home. Critics and readers alike have long mined Jackson’s personal life in search of a “cause” for her fiction, from her troubled relationship with her abusive mother to her turbulent relationship with her chronically unfaithful husband, literary critic and professor Stanley Hyman, who was both Jackson’s biggest fan and most consistent source of heartbreak. We Have Always Lived in the Castle, one of Jackson’s best-loved novels, runs just about 150 pages, but hundreds more have been written connecting Jackson’s agoraphobia and weight with the fact that the main character, Constance, fears leaving her home and spends most of her time in the kitchen. Pretty much all existing film and TV adaptations focus on the literal creepy house and seem to miss the point completely: Loneliness breeds madness, and both the terror and tragedy of a Shirley Jackson story stem from the prospect of belonging nowhere.

In Jackson’s opus, The Haunting of Hill House, the characters make a game of understanding what makes people afraid. “I think we are only afraid of ourselves,” Dr. Montague, their guide to the supernatural at Hill House, tells them. Luke, the playboy whose only care is inheriting the haunted house so he can sell it, answers that fear is “seeing ourselves clearly and without disguises,” while Theodora, the charming clairvoyant who also might be a lesbian, adds “of knowing what we really want.” But Eleanor Vance, the main character of the story, is the only one to speak what might as well be a thesis for much of Jackson’s work: “I am always afraid of being alone.”

Of all the characters in Hill House , Eleanor’s story is the one that most parallels the haunting opening paragraph of the novel, which tells the reader that, “No live organism can continue for long to exist sanely under conditions of absolute reality; even larks and katydids are supposed, by some, to dream.” And Eleanor, who has spent the majority of her life under the harshest of realities—caring for an abusive, invalid mother—has subsisted entirely on the dream of one day finding real communion with other people and a home of her own, accepting the chance to spend a summer in a haunted house for research purposes like someone who has won a dream vacation.

“Whatever walked [in Hill House], walked alone,” the opening paragraph tells us, just like Eleanor, and just like myriad other Jackson characters, from Hangsaman’s Natalie Waite to We Have Always Lived in the Castle’s Blackwood sisters. Life is lonely for the “mad” women haunting Jackson’s novels. To them, it’s the outside world that is the fairy tale and locked towers the lived reality.

Since novels like Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle and short stories like “The Lottery” made Jackson one of America’s most famous horror authors, critics and Hollywood have tried to get to the heart of what makes Jackson’s work so enduringly scary. For some, it’s the ways she plays with the “female Gothic,” a genre that focuses on the preoedipal condition of longing for a mother’s love; for others, it’s the terror of the domestic juxtaposed with the innate need for domesticity. Both of these takes are easily backed up by details from Jackson’s own life. At the height of her success, Jackson’s mother Geraldine would send her letters berating her appearance in magazine photographs. Angry responses went unsent in favor of airy letters expressing best wishes, as if her mother had never suggested that Jackson’s four children must be ashamed of her weight, as Geraldine did when she saw her daughter’s photograph in Time magazine. There’s certainly plenty of evidence that Stanley was unfaithful and Jackson threatened divorce even as she wrote cheerful essays about manageable domestic chaos for Good Housekeeping . It’s easy to see why critics might find a raison d’etre for Jackson’s fiction in her home turmoil. And for Hollywood adaptations of Jackson’s work, the big scary houses at the center of Hill House and Castle provide plenty of spectral misery on their own, with no need to go digging in the text for what’s really scary about a Jackson story.

But the thing missing from much of both Jackson criticism and adaptations is her work’s simplest theme: madness is born of too much time alone. Jackson’s fiction is populated by women living on the margins, feeling shoved to one side in order for others to connect, which inspires irrational behaviors of the kind Jackson calls “not sane” in the opening of Hill House . Iterations of Hill House , beginning with 1963’s The Haunting , often fall back on depicting Eleanor as mad, which manifests itself in Julie Harris’s performance as a sort of shrill anger and paranoia. They often forget that she is, ultimately, lonely first and crazy only as a result of that loneliness.

Eleanor’s mantra on the drive to Hill House becomes, “Journeys end in lovers meeting.” That lover could be anyone: Dr. Montague, Luke, Theodora, or the house itself. Even her ultimate suicide, crashing her car into a tree, is an attempt to connect, to join the house she believes is inviting her in with messages that read “Eleanor come home,” which could just as easily be warning her to go away. There’s no way for Eleanor to tell, since she has no home, only the haunting memory of an overbearing mother she accidentally killed and an indifferent sister who uses her as a source of income. In one scene, missing from most adaptations, Eleanor begs Theodora, who already has a partner, to take her home:

“‘I’m coming with you,’ Eleanor said.

‘Coming where with me?’

‘Back with you, back home. I’—and Eleanor smiled wryly—‘am going to follow you home.’

Theodora stared. ‘Why?’ she asked blankly.

‘I never had anyone to care about,’ Eleanor said.”

In one critical interpretation of Jackson’s work, “House Mothers and Haunted Daughters,” Roberta Rubenstein writes that Hill House “psychologically… embodies the legacy of the all-powerful parents lodged within an insecurely developed self.” She points to the fact that the nursery is the most haunted part of the house; this theory puts Eleanor’s suicide down to a subconscious desire to re-enter the womb. But mostly, Rubenstein’s evidence lies in Jackson’s own unstable relationship with her cruel mother, making it easy to say that Hill House is a book about mommy issues, since nurseries and houses are closely associated with the maternal. Both the 1963 and 1999 film adaptations follow this line of thinking, making Eleanor’s connection to the house part of a desire to have a family, namely children, of her own. But both movie adaptations, and that critical read, are glossing over a key part of Hill House : Eleanor would go with anyone. It’s just that no one wants her.

The Netflix series The Haunting of Hill House is less an adaptation of the book than fanfiction set loosely in a world flecked with bits of Jackson lore—a scary house, characters named Nelly, Theodora, and even Shirley. It takes the yearning for motherhood and maternity many steps further, centering the series on a group of children who grew up in the haunted house. The credits open on cheerful family photographs and the first episode features myriad siblings calling one another in a time of distress and a mother sleeping on the floor next to her frightened daughter to comfort her back to sleep. All of these kindnesses would be entirely out of place in a Jackson novel, where the horror is having no one and watching others speak a language of connection that the main character simply cannot translate, leaving completely friendless, unloved characters like Eleanor reaching out only to have their hands slapped away by strangers, certainly, but also those who are supposed to love them most: mothers, siblings, and children.

Ghosts and external eeriness are easier to translate to the screen, but they’re not what truly haunts Hill House. “God, God—whose hand was I holding?” Eleanor exclaims at one point in the novel when she thinks she’s survived a terrifying night by gripping Theodora’s hand in the dark only to discover in the light that she’s been alone all along. No one was holding her, and no one ever will, since in a few short chapters Eleanor will die by suicide after being asked to leave by the group she’d hoped would become her first and only friends. The idea of clinging to nothing and thinking it was love is every bit as horrifying as holding hands with a ghoul in the dark, though no existing adaptations get anywhere near the heartbreak that goes hand-in-hand with the horror of that scene.

The 2018 adaptation of We Have Always Lived in the Castle doesn’t fare much better. The film gets the plot correct: the Blackwood sisters have lost their entire family, save their Uncle Julian, in a poisoning incident involving the communal family sugar bowl, for which the oldest sister, Constance, has been tried and acquitted. The acquittal hasn’t stopped the town from turning on the girls, leaving them pariahs in their mansion with Constance afraid to leave the property. The arrival of a handsome male cousin leaves the younger sister, Merricat, so jealous of losing her sister’s attention that she lights their home on fire, which the villagers take as an invitation to tear the property apart and kill Uncle Julian. In the end, Constance realizes she was wrong to try and escape with Cousin Charles, settling into a life where she depends solely on her sister.

Critical interpretations of the novel see Merricat and Constance as two sides of the same coin—Merricat content with domestic roles and Constance wondering if there might be a way to escape. Again, this read rings true when aligned with Jackson’s own life, cooking and cleaning while being the main breadwinner for a philandering husband who, according to one of Jackson’s essays, did not know how to turn on the stove. In the film, Constance is all beneficent smiles, whether she’s dancing with Cousin Charles and dreaming of Italy or attempting to politely discipline Merricat for destroying his bed, while Merricat is all grimacing sulkiness, quietly understanding everything wrong with Charles’s arrival.

But what criticism and the film seem to miss is the fact that Merricat’s first-person narration deftly obscures the reality that Constance is knowingly living with a murderer—her sister, who poisoned the entire family as a 12-year-old in order to be alone with Constance. She devotes all of her time to protecting Uncle Julian from potential further harm by covertly managing her sister’s emotions and never letting her uncle fully realize that he is living with his would-be killer. Constance is not an agoraphobic, food-obsessed stand-in for Jackson, or if she is, then her character belies far more desperation on the author’s part than has been written, because Constance is a hostage. A hostage who loves her captor, but also a person who is not free to leave without inviting more murder. Considering a husband results in the destruction of her home and the death of her uncle, proving to Constance that the outside world is even more dangerous than a life with Merricat, and the novel ends with the two living in the wreckage of a boarded-up house, contemplating eating the children who play on their lawn. Merricat declares that she will keep all other living creatures, right down to spiders, from ever approaching Constance again. “We are so happy,” Merricat says in the final line of the novel, though it’s impossible to know if Constance has ever felt a moment’s happiness or ever will, bound now forever to Merricat. That’s the horror of We Have Always Lived in the Castle .

The film, however, opens with the women cleaning their broken house and Merricat beginning work on writing her story, completely in control of the narrative. It ends with Merricat scaring children off the lawn and Constance clinging to her like a hero. “I love you, Merricat,” she tells her sister in the final line, as Merricat watches Constance walk away, both of them with the air of mutually smitten lovers.

Though we don’t have any Jackson screen adaptations that truly get to the heart of what’s so scary about her work, we do have a legacy of scary shit inspired by the lessons she taught other masters of deeply disturbing art. Sylvia Plath, Stephen King, Gillian Flynn, and Otessa Mosfegh are all devotees of Jackson, to name a few. Reading “Louisa, Please Come Home,” a short story in which a teenage girl runs away from her wealthy family to playact as a working-class shop clerk, only to have her family angrily send her away when she finally returns home, it’s easy to see kernels of Amy Dunne in Gone Girl . Stephen King’s The Shining , a book superficially about a haunted house that’s actually about the loneliness born of trying to love an alcoholic, takes the terror of often quiet domestic cruelty and literally explodes it, creating something both scary and true. Plath’s The Bell Jar owes at least some of its heartbreaking loneliness to Hangsaman ’s Natalie Waite, and Mosfegh’s Eileen could be a second sister to either Mary Katherine Blackwood or Eleanor Vance.

On June 27, 1948, Shirley Jackson published “The Lottery” in the New Yorker. The story focuses on a small town’s custom of stoning one of its residents to death each June in a ritual act of commonplace brutality that exists, seemingly, because it’s always existed. That summer, Jackson would receive 150 letters about the story from fans and detractors alike and would continue to receive them for the rest of her life. And whether readers loved the story or hated it, most of the letters asked the same question: What is this story about?

The question of what Jackson’s work is “about” is one that persists over half a century since much of it was published, yet the recent revival of interest hasn’t seemed to push us any closer to “getting it,” at least not in any screen adaptation we’ve had so far. But maybe our understanding of Shirley Jackson has manifested itself in other ways, lonely characters inhabiting the shadows of other great works, mad and feral.

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Dr Michael Mosley recommends popular heart-healthy drink to boost your longevity

September 27, 2023 by www.express.co.uk Leave a Comment

Loose Women: Dr Hilary discusses how to live longer

Claiming more than 160,000 lives each year in the UK alone, heart disease poses a major threat to longevity .

Fortunately, Dr Michael Mosley has shared one popular drink could help tackle both.

Speaking on his BBC Radio 4 podcast Just One Thing , the health guru said: “I’m about to do just one very British thing that’s not only a great stress buster but could also lower my risk of heart disease and help me live a longer and healthier life.

“I’m having a cup of tea .”

If you already contribute to the millions of cups of tea that are drunk in the UK on a daily basis, you might be onto something.

READ MORE Dr Michael Mosley shares the unripe fruit that could lower bowel cancer risk

Dr Michael Mosley recommends heart-healthy tea to boost your longevity.

Dr Michael Mosley recommends heart-healthy tea to boost your longevity. (Image: GETTY)

The reason why the humble cuppa could benefit your heart and longevity comes down to tea leaves being packed full of polyphenols .

Boasting a wide range of health benefits, these plant compounds seem to be particularly beneficial for supporting your heart and brain health .

Don’t just take Dr Mosley ’s word for it, as research also backs the effects of tea on a longer lifespan.

A study of nearly half a million people in the UK found that those who drank two or more cups of the warming drink a day had a significantly lower risk of dying.

Don’t miss… Dr Michael Mosley shares the unripe fruit that could lower bowel cancer risk [DIET TIPS] Your mug could determine your tea’s health benefits, study suggests [STUDY] Three ‘best’ teas to lower cholesterol and keep high blood pressure in check [EXPERT]

“The benefits of tea seem to be most pronounced when it came to stroke and heart disease.

“The benefits of tea seem to be most pronounced when it came to stroke and heart disease.” (Image: GETTY)

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“The benefits of tea seem to be most pronounced when it came to stroke and heart disease,” Dr Mosley added.

What’s more, the positive effects remained even when people added milk or sugar to their brews – good news for the fans of the classic builder’s tea.

According to Professor Andrew Steptoe, Head of Behavioural Science at University College London, who appeared on the podcast, it’s more important how long you leave your tea bag in the hot water than what you add after.

The professor said: “You need to have enough time for the bioactive compounds to operate.”

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From a healthy diet to exercise, there are many ways to boost longevity.

From a healthy diet to exercise, there are many ways to boost longevity. (Image: Express.co.uk)

Steptoe has also observed the benefits of drinking tea on cardiovascular health and found that the popular drink could lower inflammation and platelet activation.

He said: “ Inflammation which is a general process within the body that may increase risk of heart disease.

“Platelets are very small cells that circulate within the bloodstream and are involved in wound healing and stopping bleeding but they can clump together which may increase risk for heart disease .”

Therefore, Dr Mosley recommended popping the kettle on and making your brew. “It could relieve your stress, protect your heart and give your brain a boost,” the podcast host added.

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  • Dr Michael Mosley shares the unripe fruit that could lower bowel cancer risk

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Jimmy Fallon wouldn’t be on late night without Lorne Michaels

September 27, 2023 by www.avclub.com Leave a Comment

If you or a loved “erratic” workplace behavior , you may be entitled to financial ( or at least emotional ) compensation. If the Tonight Show host won’t fork that over himself, you could try bringing your concerns to the source of it all: Lorne Michaels.

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Fallon owes both stages of his television career to the Saturday Night Live creator. In a new episode of the “ Strike Force Five ” podcast (via The Hollywood Reporter ), Fallon revealed that it was Michaels who “went to bat” to get him his first hosting gig, despite the fact that he didn’t really want it at first.

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While Fallon initially saw himself going the film route after his six-year tenure on SNL , Michaels knew Conan O’Brien was considering leaving Late Night and presumably knew the perfect guffaw to fill the space. “He goes, ‘Would you ever want to do a talk show?’” Fallon said. “I go, ‘I don’t think so… In six years, ask me, and if I’m around I’ll think about it.’”

Michaels did just that, but it was Fallon’s wife who pushed him to take the offer. “‘You have to take this job. You’re one of three human beings to ever do this,’” Fallon recalls her saying.

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He continued: “So, I call Lorne, and I go, ‘I’m in. I’d love to do it.’ He goes, ‘Great. NBC doesn’t really want you. But we have to talk to them.’” Fallon also noted that he wasn’t even on NBC’s list at the time (he hadn’t really been in any movies and still didn’t have great name recognition), but Michaels still “went to bat” for him, telling the network “‘either you do this with Jimmy, or I’m not involved,’ or something like that.”

Fallon would go on to host Late Night from 2009 to 2014 before landing at The Tonight Show the same year.

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Here’s the one thing that could persuade Michael Eavis to hold Glastonbury Festival in 2018

June 26, 2017 by www.mirror.co.uk Leave a Comment

Michael Eavis has already confirmed Glastonbury Festival will not take place next year in order to allow Worthy Farm’s grounds to recover from this year’s spectacular.

But the 81-year-old has admitted he’s already regretting that decision and there is one thing that could make him change his mind…

Chatting at a Speakers Forum Q&A yesterday, the music lover confessed there’s one act he’d love to see on the Glasto stage and joked he’d even consider holding Glastonbury in 2018 if they agreed to perform.

Michael Eavis has admitted he’s already regretting the decision to not stage Glasto in 2018 so the grounds of Worthy Farm can recover. (

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“There’s one band I want to reform – if they reform I’ll change my mind,” he said, but declined to name just what band he was thinking about.

However, he did add: “It’s not One Direction!”

While Eavis was keeping mum on his dream band for the Pyramid Stage, he did speak about other acts he’d love to welcome to future Glastonbury Festivals, even if some seemed unlikely.

He’d love to see The Smiths back together, quipping: “I haven’t told them that yet – that’s next week’s job.”

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Ed Sheeran closed this year’s Glasto with a performance from the Pyramid Stage. (

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Radiohead were also headliners, performing on the Pyramid Stage on the first night of the festival. (

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Fellow headliners Foo Fighters also put on a blistering performance on the Pyramid Stage. (

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Eavis also suggested the band he was thinking of wasn’t Pink Floyd. “They aren’t going to get back together, are they?” he said, probably referring to the schism between Roger Waters and David Gilmour.

He said he’d love to get Fleetwood Mac together and on a Glastonbury stage.

“They’ve got so many managers,” he said. “We can’t get them to agree a price.”

“Stevie Nicks would be good. Maybe we’ll get here her on her own.”

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Eavis also revealed that the “nicest band that never played” was The Grateful Dead while John Martyn was the “nicest act” who did play.

According to Somerset Live , the Glasto founder said of staging the music festival: “It’s hard work. But I’m as high as a kite. I’ve been very busy and I’m already regretting taking a year off in 2018.”

He said that his daughter Emily has already told him “don’t start that again”.

The festival will take a break in 2018 for a fallow year before returning with another sure to be stellar lineup.

Jeremy Corbyn made an appearance at Glastonbury Festival, which Eavis called “fantastic” during his Q&A. (

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On the subject of making the festival longer – maybe a whole week, Eavis said it would be too expensive with every day costing £1M in security.

He added that dealing with 23 neighbouring farmers is difficult but “they are reasonable about rent.” He said the idea of holding an event away from Worthy Farm: “did bring them together a bit”.

Of Jeremy Corbyn’s appearance on Saturday, during which he received a signed copy of the Labour manifesto, Mr Eavis said: “It was fantastic.”

David Beckham and Michael Eavis pose for photographs outside a completed house in a housing development in Pilton village in Somerset. (

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David Beckham, Michael Eavis and his grandsons Noah and George plant a tree outside a completed house in a housing development in Pilton village in Somerset. (

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Meanwhile, Eavis was joined over the weekend at Glastonbury by David Beckham, who also joined him to plant a tree at a nearby social housing development.

Eavis and Beckham together officially opened a new block of housing in Pilton village, which was started by Eavis in 1996. It uses land donated by Worthy Farm.

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