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Jackson 5

You know we love the Jacksons, to us regardless of any drama they are music royalty, BUT there is one little Jackson in this picture who is making us laugh really hard because the photographer did not get his angles quite right! LOOOOOOOL. Can you guess who?

O and check out little Marlon’s chest!

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We got this picture from http://j5collector.blogspot.com/
Support their site and visit them please

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Bobby Taylor a brief outline of his story…

Bobby Taylor co-wrote with me for The Elgins, Mary Wells, Rare Earth, and so so many others, often turning his work around overnight.

Bobby Taylor sits over morning coffee and talks of the magical days of Motown music in the ’60s, when black pop artists from the Detroit label were vaulting over the recording race barrier and galloping through the white market.

Taylor had already signed his own group with Motown: Bobby Taylor and the Vancouvers. Now, in the summer of ’68, he brought in a group of young kids he wanted to introduce to Motown owner Berry Gordy, the Jackson 5. It should not be surprising that Bobby Taylor was somewhere in the Jackson 5 mix.

The 63-year-old singer/composer/producer had only one big hit himself–”Does Your Mama Know About Me?” in the mid-’60s–but he seems to have hung out with practically every important R&B and pop artist of the second half of the 20th century.

As a child prodigy, Taylor grew up in a Washington, D.C., housing project “doo-wopping” on street corners with a long, skinny kid named Marvin Gaye, played with Louis Jordan, hung out with Big Mama Thornton, performed on TV on Ted Mack’s Original Amateur Hour alongside good friend Gladys Knight, formed Bobby Taylor and the Vancouvers up in Canada with guitarist and backup vocalist Tommy Chong (who later turned to comedy with Cheech Marin).

Once fired a then-unknown guitarist named Jimi Hendrix because “his solos went on too long, like about a half an hour, and he played his guitar so loud you couldn’t hear the rest of the band”; toured for a while with George Clinton, played command performances for the Queen of England and “that guy with the big nose in France” (Charles de Gaulle); and got discovered for Motown by Mary Wilson and Flo Ballard of the Supremes.

Bobby recorded three albums for Motown, and recently had all his unreleased tracks released in the U.K. on a new CD. He is constantly remembered for his Northern Soul classics like “Oh I’ve Been Blessed” and the incredibly rare single on Mowest, “Just A Little Bit Closer”, but the killer was the album track “Don’t Be Afraid” which is beloved as one of the greatest classics. But around 1970, Motown’s hold on its great artists began to weaken. “Berry Gordy pulled the hooks on me in 1971,” Taylor says. He left the company, suing for unpaid royalties. Taylor says that he won the suit, but has still not gotten his money.

Bobby recorded for Playboy, Epic, Philadelphia International, and made a whole album for Motorcity, including this fabulous remake of his biggest Motown hit.

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A man who views the world the same at fifty as he did at twenty has wasted thirty years of his life.
Muhammad Ali

Friendship… is not something you learn in school. But if you haven’t learned the meaning of friendship, you really haven’t learned anything.
Muhammad Ali

I am the greatest, I said that even before I knew I was.
Muhammad Ali

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Designed by movie palace architect John Eberson and built by Maximillian Dubois in 1924, Gary’s Palace Theater was the place to see vaudeville acts and motion pictures in the City of the Century in the roaring twenties.

John Eberson (1875-1954) was born in Cernauti, Bukovina, part of Romania in 1875 and immigrated to the United States in 1901. He studied electrical engineering at the University of Vienna. He settled in St. Louis, MO. and began working for Johnston Realty and Construction Company and in 1904 set up his own practice which he moved to Chicago in 1910.

The theater, an anchor in downtown, was shuttered in 1972. In 1987, three Gary doctors tried to bring the Palace Theater back to life, buying the building at a tax sale for $30,000. They planned to invest between $500,000 and one million dollars to renovate the theater, the adjoining restaurants and storefronts and 27 apartments. They eventually abandoned the deal after the first restaurant opened was unsuccessful.

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