Macaulay Culkin, a close friend of Michael Jackson and the star of the Home Alone movies revealed in a recent interview how an undisclosed group of people allegedly connected to Sony Music approached him and his mother in 1993 and offered them a large sum of money to publicly claim that he had been s£xually abused by Michael Jackson, who was facing ch!ld mol£station allegations at the time.
“I vividly remember a night in 1993 when a group of people came to our home claiming they were connected to Sony Music. I don’t really want to mention names, but they said they were part of the company. They offered me and my mom a large amount of money around a million dollars or more to testify against Michael Jackson and claim that he had s£xually abused me during my time at the Neverland Ranch. They told me it was the right thing to do because they believed Michael Jackson was a dangerous person. I immediately told them no! because why would they want me to do something like that to a man who was my best friend at the time and had never harmed me? My mom actually told me to consider accepting the offer because she thought it could be beneficial for us, and she wondered if Michael might have done something without me knowing. But even though I was young at the time, I completely rejected the offer, and they eventually left.”
He also added that, looking back on the situation, he believes he understands why those allegations were being made against Michael Jackson. He claimed it was connected to a dispute involving Sony Music and Michael Jackson’s ownership stake, including his interest in the Beatles catalog. He alleged that the accusations were part of an effort to pressure Jackson into giving up his assets.
@jamster83 As it should. Such a misleading and inaccurate account of events with so many omissions and factual inaccuracies. I cancelled my netflix cuz i do not wish to support content that I believe spreads misinformation.
Jenny’s story of spending time with Michael & the Arvizos at Neverland is so, so important. Please take a listen. You can hear more of her story by watching Square One on @PrimeVideo
The new NETFLIX doc. is 100% debunked. Don't let them brainwash you.
Keep canceling your Netflix subscription or AT LEAST let this mockumentary flop.
Michael Jackson was found not guilty/Innocent a loong time ago. That's a FACT. Stop doing this.
#MJInnocent#WatchSquareOne
Well, let’s just say that the people who make documentaries debunking anti-MJ media will have a field day with this one. You could pause at every line and say "Hold on, that’s not what actually happened.”
I lost count of how many lies this contained.✌️#MJInnocent
Netflix just repeated the same lies about Michael that’s been debunked years ago.
It’s clear that they were bitter about the success of the Michael movie.
And then Lee Junho used the same song for his Instagram post 😝 He really knows everything and has been watching us since forever. No one can convince me otherwise 🫣
Netflix’s Cashero drops into the holiday drama landscape with a premise that sounds wild on paper but feels eerily reflective of real life. It’s not just another caped crusader story. It’s a story about value, cost, and what we’re willing to pay for goodness in a world that always seems to want more.
At first glance, Cashero feels like a light, quirky spin on the superhero genre. But as the episodes unfold, what makes it special isn’t just the powers or the action scenes
it’s how the drama uses them to ask the audience something deeper: What does it mean to be a hero when doing good has a literal price tag?
Kang Sang-ung (played with grounded charm by Lee Jun-ho) is not your typical superhero. He’s a civil servant
someone who lives day to day, dreams of owning a home, worries about bills, and tries to make sense of life like any of us. When he suddenly inherits a strange power from his father, it comes with an unexpected condition: his strength only works as long as he holds cash and every time he uses his powers, he loses money.
This twist cash powered force is both hilarious and haunting. It turns flying into a fiscal decision and saving someone into a budgeting exercise. And that’s where Cashero starts to feel familiar, even poignant. Financial tension isn’t just a background theme
it is the main conflict.
Cashero doesn’t just give you a superhero story
it gives you a mirror. It’s not the deepest drama of the year, nor is it the most polished. But it offers something rare: a genre piece that feels introspective and playful at the same time, with just enough heart to make you smile and think.
Cashero is worth the watch especially if you enjoy stories that are imaginative, heartfelt, and quietly reflective about what heroism really costs.
#Cashero
@dohyunize That’s so him! Kang Taepoong’s character is so well written. I love how he’s not afraid to express his mind and go after what he wants, whether in life or love. He has this innocence paired with a level of maturity that is so endearing 🥹💓