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Music
Paris Jackson was sandwiched between surviving Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr in the front row of the Stella McCartney show at Paris Fashion Week.
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The family feud between the Jacksons and the McCartneys (apparently) no longer exists.
In fact, Paris JacksonMichael Jackson’s 25-year-old daughter, sitting this close Paul McCartney, who went from friend to enemy of the King of Pop, in the front row of the Stella McCartney show during Paris fashion week on Monday.
After MJ purchased the rights to the Beatles catalog from his duo partner the “The girl is mine” and “Say say Say” In 1985, Jackson’s eldest son was crushed between two of the Fab Four (81-year-old Macca, on his right, and 83-year-old Ringo Starr, on his left), at the Fall/Winter 2024-2025 womenswear show. of Stella, Sir Paul’s daughter.
It was the ultimate détente between the designers, amid a star-studded audience that also included singer and rapper MIA, model ashley graham“The Good Place” star Jameela Jamil, British actresses Naomie Harris and Charlotte Rampling, and Starr’s Bond girl wife Barbara Bach.
Sharing her late father’s animal rights activism and environmental awareness, Jackson, a singer, model and actress, gave her support to McCartney’s ready-to-wear collection that promotes sustainable materials.
“It’s not just the animals,” Jackson told Women’s Wear Daily about the need for an ecological “change” in fashion.
“It’s the environment in general, it’s pretty much anything that’s not human on this planet. “I support it (and) how we can make it a safer place.”
Jackson noted that McCartney does not use animal leather in his products, instead preferring alternative materials. like mushroom leather.
“It’s about vegan and anti-cruelty stuff, but also about everything she does,” she said of her fellow daughter of music royalty.
“She’s very innovative and finding a way to make activism stylish.”
But things weren’t always so good between the Jacksons and the McCartneys. In fact, they were downright cold after MJ outbid Macca for the Beatles’ prized catalog, paying $47.5 million for the right to own and license his music.
“I think it’s unreliable to do something like that,” the Beatles legend once said. “Being friends with someone and then buying the rug they’re standing on.”
But after Jackson’s death at age 50 in 2009, there were rumors that he may have left the historic catalog to McCartney in his will. Although that turned out not to be true, Sir Paul had softened his attitude towards his former friend following his death: “I feel privileged to have been and worked with Michael,” he said.
And McCartney would finally regain the rights to all those Beatles classics (timeless tunes he made with Starr and his late bandmates John Lennon and George Harrison) in 2017.