Tourist from Dallas Lana Brown (right) cries as she hugs her 10-year-old son Tovre as they mourn the death of pop star Michael Jackson outside UCLA hospital in Los Angeles. -- PHOTO: AFP
LOS ANGELES - TEARS flowed outside a hospital here on Thursday as hundreds of Michael Jackson fans gathered to mourn the loss of the music legend, stunned by his sudden death at the age of 50.
Crowds gather at MJ's childhood home
GARY (Indiana) - HUNDREDS of fans have crowded the street outside Michael Jackson's modest childhood home in Gary, Indiana, after word spread that the 'King of Pop' had died in Los Angeles at the age of 50.
Some fans formed a prayer circle on Thursday on the front yard of the small white frame home where Jackson grew up. Others left stuffed animals and notes expressing their condolences.
BEIJING - THE death of Michael Jackson gripped China on Friday, as fans spoke of how his music became the soundtrack for the nation's early years of opening to the outside world nearly 30 years ago.
'I was in love with him and his music when I was in college,' Wang Fang, a 45-year-old businesswoman, told AFP.
TOKYO - MICHAEL Jackson's legions of Japanese fans expressed shock and grief Friday at news of the sudden death of the 'King of Pop", while even the country's politicians paid tribute.
'I am just shocked. One of the world's great men has died,' said Masato Tanaka, a 30-year-old bass player who was shopping in downtown Tokyo. 'He was a star no matter what he did. I think his fans of the world believed in him.' 'It becomes so lonely without him,' said Mayumi Takeda, 35.
'Right today I can't believe we might have lost the best entertainer this world has ever seen,' sobbed Lana Brown, 49, from Dallas, overcome with emotion as she struggled to come to terms with the news.
Ms Brown, who described herself 'as the biggest Jackson fan ever' was on holiday with her family in Los Angeles when her friend phoned to tell her that Jackson had collapsed and was being treated at the UCLA hospital.
Like hundreds of others, she made her way to the hospital, hoping against hope that Jackson, whose music and dance thrilled generations of fans, would pull through.
'I left my office. Everyone should. It's so shocking. Because you think someone like Michael Jackson will live forever, like Peter Pan,' Yoshiko Plair, clasping a sunflower for her icon, told AFP.
The 49-year-old real estate agent heard the news, like so many others, via a text message on her phone when she was in the bank.
Dropping her business, she rushed home, put on her 'Thriller' T-shirt and hustled her sister and two children to the hospital to stand vigil.
'He changed music, he's the reason all that black music is on MTV now,' Ms Plair said. 'I followed him from that first song. I'm going to mourn him today and probably for the rest of my life.' She added she was going to stay until the hospital officially announced Jackson's death. 'I want to hear with my own ears, I can't believe it until I hear it myself.
Student Ashley Leon, 20, also decided to come after hearing of the news of Jackson's collapse.
'I called my room mate who is the extreme Michael Jackson fan because, you know, this is one of the biggest things we'll live through in our lives. We all grew up with his music.' The crowd swelled through the afternoon in the bright summer sunshine waiting for news of their hero.
And most of them brushed off the past scandals that had blighted Jackson's life, after he was charged with and then acquitted of child-molestation. 'You know Michael Jackson has his stuff going on. You knew he's crazy. But he's Michael Jackson,' said Ms Leon.
While Ms Brown was more emphatic saying: 'All of that did not matter to me because I knew it wasn't true.' -- AFP