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Jackson's Neverland Ranch Faces Uncertain Future

ALEX VEIGA and JOHN ROGERS   07/ 2/09 07:47 AM ET   AP

Jax

LOS OLIVOS, Calif. — With Peter Pan as inspiration, Michael Jackson turned his lush Neverland ranch into a whimsical retreat with carnival rides, a chimpanzee named Bubbles and even a Disney-like train station where he could recapture his lost childhood.

But like the superstar's career, the property's idyllic image was tarnished when Jackson was accused of molesting a 13-year-old cancer survivor there in 2003. He was acquitted, but the scandal nearly ruined Jackson and drove him from Neverland forever. Over the last four years, the property fell into disrepair, and at one point it was weeks from being sold at a public auction.

The singer's death last Thursday renewed speculation about the future of the four-square-mile ranch. Will it be turned into a tourist attraction celebrating the King of Pop, much like Elvis Presley's Graceland pays homage to the King of Rock and Roll? Restored for his heirs to use? Or perhaps put on the market to cash in on the sudden interest in all things Jackson?

Like so many things involving Jackson's life and death, the answer is not simple.

First, the Jackson's financial affairs must be sorted out. A will was produced Tuesday, but it isn't clear if the family will contest it. Also, anything that would bring tens of thousands of people trooping through the hills of this bucolic wine region could face obstacles from people who pay tens of millions of dollars for the privilege of living here.

"If there's a little extra tourism around the neighborhood that's good," said Los Olivos resident Frank Palmer, who runs a barbecue stand in town. "But if it gets to the point where it's just too much, I don't know how we'd feel about that."

Already the gates to Neverland have become a makeshift shrine, adorned with handwritten notes, flowers, photos and other tributes left by fans who flocked to the estate about 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

On Wednesday, hundreds of parked cars lined both sides of the two-lane road leading to Neverland. About two hundred people crowded outside the estate, many of them journalists, their view of Jackson's English-style manor and other Neverland fixtures obscured by a slope of golden brown hills dotted with oak trees.

Although the ranch was buzzing with activity _ construction equipment coming and going along with gardeners and florists _ a family spokesman said Wednesday Neverland would not be the site of Jackson's funeral.

Colony Capital LLC, a Los Angeles real estate firm owned by billionaire Thomas Barrack, which bought Neverland and established a joint venture with Jackson last year, has said only that a decision on the future of the property will come "in due time."

Jackson bought the ranch in 1988 from developer William Bone, who built the house on the property, then called Sycamore Valley Ranch. The singer renamed the ranch and turned it into a fantasyland where he welcomed children.

The property was home to a coterie of animals _ tigers named Thriller and Sabu _ elephants, orangutans and a giraffe. And he built a mini amusement park with a carousel, two trains and a station that recalls the one at Disneyland's Main Street USA pavilion.

But his make-believe world came crashing down with the molestation charges and trial. After his acquittal in 2005, Jackson moved to Bahrain. The following year, he dismissed many of the Neverland staff after agreeing to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in back wages to avoid a lawsuit by state labor officials.

Left largely untended, the once manicured grounds grew wild and the train and carnival rides gathered dust. Eventually, much of it was removed.

In March 2008, his finances strained, Jackson defaulted on a $23 million loan to Fortress Investment Group, and risked losing Neverland, which was used to secure the loan. Barrack stepped in a few months later, covering the outstanding amount _ by then around $24.5 million. For $35 million, Jackson signed Neverland over to Sycamore Valley Ranch Co., a joint venture between Jackson and an affiliate of Barrack's Colony Capital.

In the months since, Barrack has begun to refurbish the property with landscaping and repairs to the swimming pool.

Turning Neverland into a theme park would take several years and cost hundreds of millions of dollars, said Dennis Speigel, president of International Theme Park Services Inc., a Cincinnati-based consulting and management firm.

"You could spend half a billion dollars in the blink of an eye for your rides, theaters, restaurants, bathrooms and parking lots," Speigel said. "It would be a huge gamble betting people would come out in big numbers."

One obstacle is Neverland's isolation, he said. The property is a two-and-a-half-hour drive north of Los Angeles and lacks surrounding infrastructure to handle large numbers of visitors.

Comparisons have naturally been made with Graceland, which receives more than 600,000 visitors a year and brings in $150 million for the economy in Memphis, Tenn. Graceland, though, is located on a main thoroughfare in downtown Memphis and is less than five miles from the airport. The nearly 14-acre property, with its white-columned mansion, also serves as Presley's final resting place.

Neverland is much less accessible. It's 41 miles away from Santa Barbara Municipal Airport and to get there by car requires driving a cramped and winding country road. The nearest town, Los Olivos, is about five miles away and would be hardpressed to host multitudes of tourists. And it's not clear if he will be buried there at some point.

"You want to have him on the site in Neverland. That's where Elvis is at Graceland," Speigel said.

So far, there's been no request or even inquiries made to the Santa Barbara County planning department for a change in Neverland's agricultural zoning designation, said county spokesman William Boyer.

The ranch was valued at $33 million in 2006, according to an accounting firm's report from 2007. But it's likely that property has dropped in value since then because of the housing market. But Jackson's death may change things.

"If they'd put it on the market right after the trial, I think it would have not been well received," said Rick Goodwin, publisher of Ultimate Homes and its parent publication, Unique Homes. "At that point in time, the dark cloud hung over that place. Death has a tendency to let people be more forgiving."

____

Veiga reported from Los Angeles. AP Business Writer Stevenson Jacobs contributed to this report

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LOS OLIVOS, Calif. — With Peter Pan as inspiration, Michael Jackson turned his lush Neverland ranch into a whimsical retreat with carnival rides, a chimpanzee named Bubbles and even a Disney-lik...
LOS OLIVOS, Calif. — With Peter Pan as inspiration, Michael Jackson turned his lush Neverland ranch into a whimsical retreat with carnival rides, a chimpanzee named Bubbles and even a Disney-lik...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnnygoodwud
08:39 AM on 07/06/2009
i'd bet a 'graceland north' in gary, indiana. close to chi-town, centerally located in the center of the country. easy access. they would welcome MJ and family with open arms. remember elvis made more dead than when he was alive. i'm sure joe knows that and will be 'promoting' the memorial.
02:04 AM on 07/06/2009
Maybe if we all clap our hands and say "I believe in fairies" Neverland will be rescued.

(Sorry... couldn't resist.)
12:05 AM on 07/06/2009
blame it to that DA.. who persecuted MJ.. Los Olivos does not deserve all that income from MJ's estate !

it sure could be a great money spinner-- greater than GRACELAND.. and it hs the grounds. but tough! NEVERLAND finally became MJ's anguish.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bude
My Brain Hurts!
01:19 AM on 07/05/2009
Bulldoze and forget it.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
10:17 PM on 07/04/2009
Finding Neverland
04:05 PM on 07/04/2009
FINANCIAL INDEPENDENCE DAY - STARVE THE BEAST

We're udnergoing a delveraging process. Expect the DJIA to bottom at 5000 or lower.

Americans are starting to come to their senses. The savings rate reached 6.9% last month,
the highest level in 15 years. This brought the level up to the long-term average. As usual,
the pundits on CNBC have concluded that now that we've reached the average, everything is
roses and the consumer can resume their free spending ways and save our economy. These fools
have no concept of history, averages or cycles. The savings rate has been in a downward
spiral for 30 years. Consumers have lost $14 trillion of net worth and 5,000 per day turn
65. Most people have miniscule retirement savings and 14.7 million are unemployed. The
savings rate will go up for the next two decades as people must save.

hat tip to: http://iamned.blogspot.com 4 the good articles
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texastrixie
I invented the internet.
11:08 AM on 07/04/2009
So simple to do this:
1) Bury Michael somewhere else and leave him there. Turning this into a burial shrine is not going to help. People want to go to Michael's grave, let them;
2) Open the ranch up as Michael's graceland;
3) Sell tickets over the internet, for set viewing times (twice a day - 9 & 1), and only allow in a number agreed to by the owners and the neighbors;
4) Make the neighbors happy by paying them a kick-back.

No large crowds hanging around because they won't be able to get in, steady traffic streams (in all definitions), and with Michael's popularity, the max number of visitors for the next 10 years. Have the locality and the state pass a special Michael Jackson tax on each ticket so that govt's get something for the extra police that will need to be permanently hired, and so that the entire state gets a kicker too.
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12:19 PM on 07/03/2009
Have to borrow a phrase from Poe and call it Nevermore Ranch.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bude
My Brain Hurts!
09:14 AM on 07/04/2009
You talking about Transylvania West?
11:46 AM on 07/03/2009
Hey!

Open a homeless shelter!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bude
My Brain Hurts!
08:36 AM on 07/03/2009
What does Bubbles want, did anyone ask Bubbles?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BabaLou7
Insignificant, yet eternal God Fractal
01:54 PM on 07/03/2009
How about asking Joe the Plumber? He talks to G*d.
03:50 PM on 07/03/2009
He's hearing voices alright, but it may not be God.
12:06 AM on 07/06/2009
yap.. BUBBLES is sure smarter than you.. GENUIS,IN FACT!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RedStateCenterLeft
05:03 PM on 07/02/2009
There are too many zoning problems that would make this deal doable. Ex: Graceland has plenty of parking across the street from the house on busy Elvis Presiey Blvd. The access issues would just be too much.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
04:28 PM on 07/02/2009
Folks you apparently do have a clue as the the surrounding neighborhood, it's full of wealthy individuals who own wine estates many of them leaders in entertainment and business (aka Bo Derek lived there, Ralph Story a local LA TV host retired there, the Firestones of tire fame now have a winery) they are very very protective about keeping the land rural, they will put up a long fight to keep it from becoming a kitschy tourist attraction, and the local government is not very keen on letting development of same proceed. Seems to me the 'graceland' would be more appropriate for Gary Indiana where I think the house is now kinda a museum & etc.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
05:19 PM on 07/05/2009
VERY true - it is the retreat of the VERY wealthy . . . not easy to find, get to or stay . . although Fess Parker has a VERY nice restaurant there . . . and a winery . . . Micheal was NOT a welcomed addition to the "community" and Los Olivos kept it pretty quite . . . .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidwayneosedach
03:41 PM on 07/02/2009
In this economy even the venerable 6 Flags is headed toward bankruptcy. I don't see how Neverland - a Disneland knockoff would draw great numbers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
forty8r
Gerrman Freethinker
12:41 PM on 07/02/2009
Once they get to permit to plant Jackson at Neverland will be the deal. They will earn over $15 to $25 million in revenue easy with about 2,000 vistors a day or so LA is a big metropolitan area compared to Memphis. You don't need to invest in a lot of fancy rides etc maybe only $100 million and you will get a 15 to 20% return. Not bad for in my opinion for a guy who was not half as talanted Elvis and led such a defiant life style.
03:17 PM on 07/02/2009
No, no and a thousand times no. Do not foul that land any more than it has been. That is grazing land and should be nothing more. if you want a circus put it somewhere else.
03:27 PM on 07/02/2009
Yup, its's a no-brainer.

Disagree with you about his not being talented, though. He was extremely talented.
12:34 PM on 07/02/2009
***Close that boy buggering factory down***

It's a shame that these days, the mere accusation of crime is enough for some planks to take that as a sure sign of guilt.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bude
My Brain Hurts!
08:41 AM on 07/03/2009
It's a little worse than that, Mr. President.