Obama speaks out about Michael Jackson’s death

 

barack-obama1michael-jacksonPresident Barack Obama, who sent a private condolence letter to the Jackson family, spoke publicly about the death of Michael Jackson Thursday.

“I’m glad to see that he is being remembered primarily for the great joy that he brought to a lot of people through his extraordinary gifts as an entertainer,” Obama said in an AP interview.

The president said he grew up on Jackson’s music and “I still have all his stuff on my iPod.”

“I think that Michael Jackson will go down in history as one of our greatest entertainers,” Obama said. “His brilliance as a performance also was paired with a tragic and in many ways, sad personal life.”

Michael Jackson’s Will Revealed

michaeljacksonandmother

In Michael Jackson’s will, created in 2002, the entertainer named his 79-year-old mother, Katherine, as the guardian of his three children:  Prince, 12, Paris, 11, and Blanket, 7.  If his mother is unable to care for the children, Jackson named Diana Ross, 65, as their guardian.  Jackson left his assets –valued in 2002 to be $500 million–in a family trust and named attorney John Branca and music executive John McClain and accountant Barry Siegel as executors, reports People.