An expensive tribute. Queen Elizabeth II‘s funeral was an event unlike anything the United Kingdom has ever seen — and the cost reflected that fact.
02.09.2022 - 20:45 / etcanada.com
Debbie Rowe breaks down in tears as she discusses her ex-husband Michael Jackson’s drug addiction in a candid new documentary.
Rowe was interviewed for “TMZ investigation, Who Really Killed Michael Jackson?”, admitting she wishes she’d have done more when he became addicted to painkillers.
The pair were married from 1996-1999. She’s the mother of their two children Paris and Prince.
READ MORE: Michael Jackson’s Kids Paris And Prince Pay Tribute On His 64th Birthday
Rowe says in the doc, “I should have done something and I didn’t,” according to the Daily Mail.
She adds, “There is a number of people that died from addictions and in some way I was part of it.”
Rowe is an American dermatology assistant and previously worked for Beverley Hills dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein, who died in 2015, for 27 years.
Klein was said to have given Jackson all sorts of drugs, with Rowe telling the doc: “I was basically as bad as him [Klein] and I am so sorry I participated in it.”
Jackson died at age 50 following a drug-induced cardiac arrest in June 2009 at his home in Los Angeles.
READ MORE: Neil Gaiman Says Michael Jackson Was Almost Cast As Morpheus In A ‘Sandman’ Movie
His doctor at the time, Conrad Murray, was jailed for involuntary manslaughter but was released in 2013 after serving less than two years of a four-year sentence.
An expensive tribute. Queen Elizabeth II‘s funeral was an event unlike anything the United Kingdom has ever seen — and the cost reflected that fact.
TMZ Investigates: Who Really Killed Michael Jackson,” detailing how she once worked for famed Hollywood dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein, who gave the pop king Demerol — an addictive and powerful opioid. “I was basically as bad as [Klein],” Rowe, 63, shockingly states in the doc — airing tonight on Fox.
WATCH: First responders in the Michael Jackson case break silence Almost everyone can remember where they were on June 25, 2009 when the news broke of Michael Jackson's death.The music legend, who was just weeks away from kicking off another massive concert show, died from cardiac arrest caused by a an overdose of propofol and benzodiazepine overdose given to him by Conrad Murray, his personal physician.A legal battle followed and Michael's death was eventually ruled a homicide, but even today the details of his final days remain murky... until now.The TMZ documentary Who Really Killed Michael Jackson? is packed with exclusive and never-before-seen interviews about the King of Pop's final days, from the substances that killed him to the people involved in his addiction.Set to air in Australia on Monday September 12 on Channel Seven, the documentary will delve into the "downward spiral of addiction and despair" that haunted Michael's last months despite publicly seeming like he was on top of the world.It also exposes new details about Dr.
pop legend Michael Jackson’s death in late June of 2009.The 50-year-old “Thriller” vocalist was found unresponsive in his Los Angeles home after suffering cardiac arrest brought on by the anesthetic propofol — a drug reportedly routinely administered by Jackson’s physician, Conrad Murray.The death was ruled a homicide and Murray took all the blame. He was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and was sentenced to four years in prison, serving just under two behind bars.
Rapper Nicki Minaj shouted out Michael Jackson and Whitney Houston in her Video Vanguard Award acceptance speech at the 2022 MTV Video Music Awards.After a small hiccup of not having her phone — which had her typed-out speech — on stage, Minaj read off what she wrote about her opportunities, collaborators and more.“Let me tell you something,” she began after performing a medley of her hits. “I don’t want to miss out rolling the music on me but I never ever in my life have written a speech, and today I jotted something down on my phone, and I gave it — I gave my phone to Joe and he’s not up here with it.