hubert neal jr

all you need is love

In Uncategorized on November 24, 2009 at 12:49 am

Love, Love, Love. 
Love, Love, Love. 
Love, Love, Love. 

There’s nothing you can do that can’t be done. 
Nothing you can sing that can’t be sung. 
Nothing you can say but you can learn how to play the game. 
It’s easy. 

Nothing you can make that can’t be made. 
No one you can save that can’t be saved. 
Nothing you can do but you can learn how to be you in time. 
It’s easy. 

All you need is love. 
All you need is love. 
All you need is love, love. 
Love is all you need. 

All you need is love. 
All you need is love. 
All you need is love, love. 
Love is all you need. 

Nothing you can know that isn’t known. 
Nothing you can see that isn’t shown. 
Nowhere you can be that isn’t where you’re meant to be. 
It’s easy. 

All you need is love. 
All you need is love. 
All you need is love, love. 
Love is all you need. 

All you need is love (Paul: All together, now!) 
All you need is love. (Everybody!) 
All you need is love, love. 
Love is all you need (love is all you need). 

Yee-hai! 
Oh yeah! 
She loves you, yeah yeah yeah. 
She loves you, yeah yeah yeah.

the beatles/all you need is love

michael jacksons motown 25 glove sells for $350,000

In Uncategorized on November 23, 2009 at 1:56 pm

The glove was hailed as the ultimate collector’s item by auctioneer Darren Julien.

“It’s the Holy Grail of Michael Jackson gear.”

Michael Jackson’s glove sells for $350,000 at auction
Mon Nov 23 00:31:37 UTC 2009
By Chris Michaud

 

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Michael Jackson’s famous white glove sold for $350,000 at a memorabilia auction on Saturday, soaring far past pre-sale estimates, while a black jacket he wore during a 1989 world tour fetched $225,000.

The Jackson memorabilia was the highlight of an auction of hundreds of rock’n'roll items, including many not associated with the “King of Pop,” who died in June.

Darren Julien, CEO of Julien’s Auctions, which ran the auction, called the glove “the Holy Grail of Michael Jackson,” and many expected it to sell for far more than its pre-sale estimate of about $50,000.

With the added commission, the final price excluding taxes, ran to some $420,000.

The buyer was Hong Kong businessman Hoffman Ma.

Bidding for the black, strap and zipper-laden jacket Jackson wore during the 1989 “Bad” tour soared to $225,000, more than 20 times its estimate. With commission, the tab came to about $275,000.

Fans and dealers turned out at the Hard Rock Cafe in New York’s Times Square for the sale that included a car driven by Jackson, as well as David Bowie’s guitar and memorabilia from the Beatles to Bo Diddley.

“I never got to see Michael, and now that he’s gone this is the closest I could get,” said Jazmynn Moore, 19, a student from Manhattan.

The glove was worn by Jackson when he first staged the famous moonwalk dance at the 1983 Motown 25 television special. The opening bid of $10,000 leaped immediately to $120,000 before peaking at $350,000.

Most of the 80 Jackson lots consisted of items that came from friends and family to whom Jackson had given them, the auctioneer said.

Jackson was somewhat of a collector himself, having paid more than $1.5 million for the “Gone With the Wind” best picture Oscar statue at Sotheby’s auction, one of the highest prices ever paid for memorabilia at auction.

The auction house had valued the Jackson collection at $80,000 to $100,000. But Julien said such pre-auction estimates were intentionally conservative to help generate interest. Many of Jackson’s items sold for 10, or even more than 20 times the estimates.

Julien’s had been preparing for a huge auction of Jackson memorabilia in April that was canceled after an agreement with Jackson, who had filed a lawsuit demanding the return of certain items.

During the promotion for that sale, Julien’s had amassed a large database of Jackson collectors from Asia to the Americas, and many of the winning Internet bidders were from Japan or Hong Kong.

(Editing by Peter Cooney)

ive always liked this guy

In Uncategorized on November 19, 2009 at 10:45 pm

Stedman Graham reflects on family, leadership and, of course, Oprah


November 11, 2009 

SCRIPPS HOWARD NEWS SERVICE

His accomplishments as a consultant, businessman, author and speaker are not the first things that come to mind when one thinks of Stedman Graham. He is Oprah Winfrey’s significant other, and he has no problem with that role.

He wrote You Can Make it Happen: A Nine-Step Plan for Success, and his latest book, Diversity: Leaders Not Labels, deals with what it takes to be successful.

He is scheduled to be the featured speaker at the ARC National Convention in Pittsburgh on Thursday. ARC supports people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Graham was chosen, in part, because he grew up with siblings who had disabilities.

Q. How did growing up with disabled siblings impact you?

A. It certainly made me stronger. I was able to build a strong foundation based on patience and being able to understand more of who I was as a person and what made me tick. That was probably the biggest impact.

Q. You have talked about leveraging your own worth. How did you learn to do it?

A. Well, it took a long time to do that because most of us focus on the external world to define who we are. In my early 30s I began to realize it’s not about the external world and how they define you. It’s how you define yourself. You need the skills to do that. You also need the ability to set goals, and you need the education on top of that.

Q. Was there a particular moment in your life when you decided it wasn’t about the external?

A. When I realized that the world puts you in a box, you know? I had always been frustrated because I had a race-based consciousness. I thought it was about the color of my skin. I realized it was about my lack of understanding of how to process and think and to take education and information and make it relevant to my purpose. The missing piece in my life is that I didn’t have a purpose. I just went along and did the same thing every day. And then everything you learn, you forget because it has no meaning for you. You are not able to make it relevant to who you are as a human being because you don’t know who you are. So you have no identity.

Q. Once you figured it out, how did you keep from being tied up in someone else’s worth?

A. Because I’m focused on my own worth. So when you focus on your own talents, your own skills, your own purpose, you understand who you are and you understand what you’re passionate about. Then you aren’t worried about anybody else’s passion. You worry about your own passion.

Q. But you know you are in a unique situation with Oprah. There are people who define themselves through their spouse, their children’s accomplishments. How do you avoid that?

A. Lose your ego. Move more into humility and figure out that your worth is based on what you do every single day. It’s based on your habits. It’s based on your accomplishments. It’s based on your goals. You have to realize everybody is equal because everybody has 24 hours. The question becomes, what will you do with your 24 hours? Just because you are in the media, just because you are on TV, just because you are famous, just because you are in a particular field that may be more high-profile doesn’t mean you are more significant than anybody else. It is just how you define yourself and how you define your work.

Q. Does it bother you knowing that people are endlessly fascinated with your relationship with Oprah?

A. You know, it is what it is and that’s fine. I’m perfectly happy to be with a woman who reaches 20 million people a day in 15 countries and who helps women all over the world and who is, you know, a genius. And who has a strong sense of character. Who is a strong communicator. Who is a wonderful, warm person and also who is a great cook. And who is dynamic and has her own mind. So I’m perfectly happy being with someone like that.

Q. Did dating Oprah change the trajectory of your life for the better, or did you make the most of the situation?

A. It just gives you more exposure to the world, so hopefully you are doing something productive and you are helping people. Through the nine-step process I help people to define themselves and to understand how to build an identity for themselves. Of the 6.6 billion people in the world, probably 5.9 billion of them don’t have an identity. So I try to help people all over the world find out who they are based on my experiences and based on what I’ve been looking for. To me it’s a pretty good way to free yourself from the external world and start investing in yourself as a human being so you can reach your potential.

Q. Stedman, how do you identify yourself?

A. Human spirit — the highest possible level. I’m a spirit that connects to people based on how I feel and how I think. So that’s first off who I am, and then secondly a human being and then half African-American, half Native American and so you know you can categorize it all different ways. Businessman, author, speaker, whatever.

Q. But, first and foremost the spirit?

A. If you can connect with your spirit, it gets you beyond race. You can assimilate anywhere in the world, become a citizen of the world based on connecting through your spirit as opposed to labels and limiting yourself based on that box you are stuck in.

- suntimes.com