
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/7924752/site/newsweek/page/3/
… The defense team also benefited when
Judge Melville allowed them to play a 19-minute video tour of Neverland ranch that
District Attorney Sneddon tried to get thrown out,
calling it a "puff piece" that was "self serving." But
Melville said that when he refused a defense request to physically take the
jury to the Neverland ranch, he "had in mind" a video presentation instead.
The film panned the 2,700-acre
property, with panoramas of the grounds, amusement park, lake and zoo. While no
children were filmed in the video, the jury could witness
Videographer Larry Nimmer, who
specializes in legal-evidence videos, rode one of three trains on the property
to take the footage. Inside, he included a shot of an “I LOVE YOU DADDY ... GET WELL” message that
The video seemed to underscore last
week's nearly three-hour video of
© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.
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Defense team videographer Larry Nimmer says Michael’s more normal than
we’ve been led to believe If you think Michael Jackson is an alien, an experiment in plastic surgery, a freak with a mental disorder or a child-molester who can’t stop touching his own (and apparently everyone else’s) crotch, you’re not alone. It seems just about everyone these days, from the TV newscasters to the tabloid magazines to everyday citizens going about their lives, think the King of Pop uses his royal power for strange (at best) or evil (at worst) deeds—whether they believe the “not guilty” verdict or not. But the Carpinteria-based videographers who
worked with “I found him a lot more normal a person than he’s perceived,” said Nimmer,
whose company Nimmer Legal Graphics helped During the process of working on these videos, Nimmer discovered that
public and media perception of the pop prince may be seriously skewed. And he
suspects the common suspicion that “My personal opinion is that no, he didn’t do it,” said Nimmer. Nimmer’s assistant Tom Friedman agreed. “Within about five minutes (on Neverland Ranch), I was convinced What does Nimmer (and his team) know? Larry Nimmer isn’t just a Instead, he’s an upper-middle-aged multimedia producer in Carpinteria who makes his living with Nimmer Legal Graphics, a company that provides video, scale models, graphs and other visual aids for court cases. With an impressive resume that includes shooting music videos (he was doing it two years before MTV started airing them), working for the CBS TV news affiliate in San Francisco, creating numerous documentaries and overseeing the Santa Barbara Film Festival—and that’s all in addition to carving a place for himself as the premier legal graphics producer in the tri-county area—Nimmer’s the real deal: an objective, professional media producer with no personal stake in this, or any trial’s, outcome.
And his assistants were similarly un-invested in the trial or their image
of All made a commitment to approach their job as objectively as possible. When Friedman and Nimmer went to Neverland to film the tour, for example, Nimmer said he didn’t want to use any videographic “trickery” to create a sentimental or skewed view of the ranch. And the video they made, which showed a beautiful, rolling and surprisingly conservative estate, wasn’t just the selection of the more pleasant or normal aspects of Neverland—it was, said Nimmer and Friedman, an accurate portrayal of what it was like to be there. “There were no weird pictures of kids, no pornographic titles on the shelves,” said Friedman. “I didn’t see anything at all that made me think, ‘If they see this, he’s going to fall.’” The ranch Three days of filming by Nimmer, with lots of help from Friedman and
assistance on nighttime shots by Strassburg, led to a 19-minute video that
jurors in the So since The process started with several days of visits, including all-access
tours for Nimmer and his assistants. “The prosecution made it out to be a place where only bad things happened,” said Nimmer, a tall, slender, bespectacled man with graying hair who could easily pass as someone’s science teacher. But he and his team said the mythical ranch is profoundly different than people might expect. Yes, there are elements that are fantastical, whimsical or opulent, but
for the most part, “it feels very normal, like a nice mansion,” said Nimmer.
“It’s kind of a cross between
The video seems to confirm this. Unlike the visions many of us might imagine—a colorful plastic landscape that would appeal to Tim Burton à la Charlie and the Chocolate Factory or a raucous, creepy, 24-hour carnival reminiscent of AI’s sin city—the ranch seems rather, well, tame. A modest gate with a low fence leads visitors onto a property of rolling lawns, idyllic lakes and ponds and lush, green trees. The real gate, up ahead, is only slightly bigger, and has only one security guard in a tower checking visitors. Inside, there is Jackson’s house, a Tudor-style mansion in hues of browns and reds; the amusement park, which is impressive but not sprawling, all-encompassing or even, at that moment, running; the zoo, which resembles the stables and barns on many area ranches except that this one has giraffes and monkeys instead of horses and ponies; and the trains, which even seem tasteful and muted, more like enlarged model trains (which they basically are) than amusement park rides. There is a full-sized movie theater, with posters of Disney movies in the foyer and display cases full of free candy that is handed out by staff. Visitors also get freebie toys and sweets at the main train station. But on the video, none of these elements seem anything other than ordinary. The only extraordinary thing about them is that they’re all on one property and that they seem to be made for the use of people who don’t live there. The only thing Nimmer found a little strange was the constant music coming from speakers throughout the property. “It was kind of neutral and happy … and at first it was kind of fun, and then kind of tedious. I wonder how his kids react to it,” said Nimmer. But otherwise, Nimmer and his team were impressed by how beautiful, tranquil and not that weird the ranch was. Especially Friedman, who’d imagined, “here’s this guy running around in his little, sad wonderland with giraffes frolicking in the fields when there’s so much poverty in the world and so many better ways to spend your money,” he said. But once at the ranch, Friedman said it was obvious the property was made
for the benefit of other people—and not to fulfill “This guy doesn’t get on his Ferris wheel every night and go whooping and screaming,” said Friedman. “I doubt very much he’s out there with a little balloon and a noisemaker riding it himself.” In fact, the video shows a small, modest jungle gym behind the main house made of wood, the kind “you’d see in a very moderate public park, like in Carpinteria,” said Friedman. This seems to be the place where Jackson and his three kids actually spend their time. “My guess is that he probably spends more time there with his kids than he
does frolicking around the amusement park,” said Friedman. Instead, said
Friedman and Nimmer, it seems clear that the park is there for the reason “Even though it’s his private estate, he’s given a great deal over to the public good. Who else does that? Tom Cruise? Does Bill Gates do it? Does Steven Spielberg do it? Does Barbra Streisand do it? Turn over vast landholdings to access to people? To kids?” said Friedman. “He’s very, very unique … and he’s sacrificed his privacy to do it.” The house Going inside And though the prosecution tried to paint Jackson’s mannequins as something strange, Nimmer said the dolls—one of which was a life-like butler at the front door holding a real plate of cookies, while another was a child playing upside down on a chair—“seemed to me kind of playful and fun.”
Friedman agreed, saying the mannequins were “not threatening … If he’s got
the money and it tickles his funny bone, why not? ... I don’t think it’s
sinister or creepy or implies that the guy’s a sexual predator,” he said,
comparing Friedman also noted that the house itself, while large, wasn’t excessively so. The rooms were human scale, he said, reasonably informal and reasonably comfortable. “There were no grand public rooms, no mirrored ballroom where Michael, in the certain moment, would appear and come down off a large balcony,” he said. “It was more like a ranch house than a palace.” And both men noted that there were signs of real life all over the house
and the property: from Outside on the lawn, there were also tricycles that obviously had been used over and over. “The scooters and little bicycles were battered and just regular … it showed the presence of regular little kids,” said Friedman. “He could get each of those kids a solid gold jet-propelled tricycle, but he just had regular little tricycles. It shows there’s a very human side to this guy.” Nimmer agreed and, in fact, made sure he got shots in the video of the trikes, the jackets and even a note reading “I love you
even more than that … get well soon” that “I wanted to convey to the jury the fact that he is a father and they’re
real kids and they have a real relationship,” said Nimmer. In addition to the
items he saw around the house, Nimmer also said In fact, Nimmer took particular issue with the documentary, made by Martin
Bashir, which showed “Bashir did not include a lot of the positive stuff about Michael that was shot in the documentary,” said Nimmer. The verdict But when it came to deciding whether “I found it surprising how the media could come up with so many stories based on so little information, when each day there wouldn’t be that much more to report on … They spend a lot of their time speculating,” said Nimmer, who still said he found media coverage—and the spectacle outside the courthouse—entertaining. It was just too bad it was at the expense of someone’s life, he said. Nimmer said the media seemed to perpetuate the myth of “People in our country tend to be very conservative and suspect bad intentions and in general think Michael Jackson’s a fool because he’s childlike, whereas I think it’s really refreshing,” said Nimmer. “I’m kind of upset how people automatically dismiss him because he’s childlike.” As for the accusations themselves, Nimmer and his team said most of them just didn’t add up. For example, the accuser’s mother said she was held at Neverland against her will, without any way to leave or any idea what time it was. But Nimmer’s video shows the posh guest house the woman easily could have left, the clocks all over the property and the scores of staff—including security guards, housekeepers, an administrative team and groundskeepers—who were too numerous, and seemed too down-to-earth, to make likely conspirators or captors. “I didn’t see any cameras in the trees, monitors on the walls, didn’t see any bloodhounds or electrified fences, any pits with sharpened stakes,” said Friedman. “She could have walked to the road and climbed over the fence.” Another accusation was that the accuser’s brother came up the stairs to The prosecution’s claim that Jackson had a house full of porn seemed less likely, said Nimmer, when he visited Jackson’s library of 200,000 books—which ranged in topic from art history to old Hollywood to child-rearing to religion, and made up only a part of the star’s full 700,000-book collection. And assistant Chrissy Strassburg said, after seeing video of the accuser’s mom saying how much she trusted Michael during a time when she thought the camera was off, that there was no way she could believe the woman was telling the truth about being held at Neverland. The man With the evidence seemingly stacked in Nimmer, who only actually met the pop star once, the day From video footage, though, he and his team got all kinds of insight into the star’s life: the debilitating chiding he got from his father and cousins about his “fat” nose and bad skin, which may have led to the plastic surgery he had later in life; the young Jackson’s practice of using the money he made performing to buy candy for the neighborhood kids, which naturally extended to a place like Neverland; the way Jackson tried over and over to correct Bashir when he implied that he liked having sex with boys, when what the pop star said was “When you say the word ‘sleep,’ you said it as if it’s sexual. ‘Sleep’ is getting in bed with somebody because they don’t want to be alone when they sleep,” Strassbourg quoted. And like the jury, they all came to a unanimous decision: Michael didn’t do it. What’s more, they understand where he’s coming from. “I don’t believe it’s necessarily wrong to sleep in a bed with a child,” said Nimmer, who used to share a tent with his sons and their friends on Indian Guide camp-outs. “It was kind of like a sleepover, and clearly there wasn’t anything sexual going on there.” Friedman agreed. “I don’t see anything wrong with him having kids sleep in his bed with him,” said Friedman, who used to look forward to sharing a bed with his grandfather during childhood holidays. “It’s a sweet gesture. I think it’s very intimate.” The bottom line, says Nimmer, is it makes him sad
that “It’s an incredible hoax that the accuser’s family has pulled off to, one, monopolize the life of a superstar and, two, monopolize the world media by coming up with a bogus story,” he said. “Which I believe it is. And which the jury seems to believe it was.” |
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