It is interesting to observe the evolution of the lyrics through the song "Cheater." The early lyric sheet from 1986 has a very sad tone:
"I hurt my backbone baby. I start to givin' up. Life is an agravator. The bills are pillin' up. I broke my radiator. No time to fix it now. No place to lay my body. This stuff ain't good for me. I really want to shout. Life is an agravator. I plan to give it up".
The final lyrics externalize the depressive aspect onto "somebody who tell him he should give up." He transformed his depression into a fighter.
@LiberianGirl779 At the same time, he smiled, found the strength to care for others and offer support, even though he himself was in great need of support. He had incredible strength of spirit!
Pages over pages of rhapsodizing and marveling by studio engineers about Michael's superhuman vocal abilities:
"Michael was 40 years old when he recorded 'Blue Gangsta.' His mental attitude combined with his physicality was at its height. The calisthenics he was pulling off, the highs and lows, the loud and quiet, and the way he worked the microphone, I mean, I learned so much from Michael, it was ridiculous.”
“I have learned that it is what you put in your mind mentally, what you think and do, that makes the person, and you can put any mental object into this mind and it will bring it to reality.
So this means we can program ourselves to be the people we want to be, what ever the subject matter is, live in it by a mental physical program. Studying all the greats in the field and becoming greater.”
It was precisely after the 2010 auction that fans transcribed the text from photographs of the lot and published it on music platforms (including Genius), registering it as an "unreleased poem/song."
Sony didn't ban the song. There's no proof. Engineers like Brad Sundberg say Jackson had full creative control. The song was never recorded—only a sketch of lyrics on paper exists. No vocal demo, music, or studio version.
بتخيل الاغنية اللي كتبها مايكل لفلسطين Palestine, don’t cry بنفس فايب وإحساس أغنية Heal the World. بس للأسف سوني منعت مايكل من إنتاج وإصدار الأغنية في ألبوم History، لأنه لو نزلت كان بتأثر في العالم بشكل قوي وكبير جدًا 🇵🇸 💔
The lot was officially described as "Two pages of working song lyrics written by Michael Jackson on British Airways Concorde paper." Ultimately, the draft went into a private collection.
@iba_nne21@godchaelgagson Sony didn’t ban the song. No evidence supports the claim it was forced off the HIStory. Engineers like Brad Sundberg say MJ had full creative control at his peak. The song was never recorded—only a lyric sketch on paper exists. No demo, music, or studio version. #MichaelJackson
Emmanuel Lewis has consistently defended Michael Jackson’s innocence and strongly refuted all allegations against the late pop star.
He has frequently spoken about their close bond, referring to Jackson as his “big brother” and a “kind soul.”
Key Statements and Defenses
Clarifying the Relationship
In the wake of documentaries and intense media scrutiny, Lewis explicitly stated: “I was never a victim. My big brother Michael was nothing but a kind soul and a role model to me and my family.”