Madonna Book:

Video Slut: How I Shoved Madonna Off an Olympic High Dive Got Prince to Fit into a Pair of Tiny Purple Woolen Underpants Ran Away from Michael Jacksons ... So I Could Bring Rock Videos to the Masses



   Madonna

  Music Videos
  Pictures
  Lyrics
  Posters
  Music
  Movies
  Books
  News
  Video News
  Bio
  Unofficial
  Candid Photos
  Latest Photos
  Desktop
  Screensavers
  Wallpapers
  Pics
  Video Clips
  On TV
  Articles
  Blogs
  eBay
  Gossip
  Photos
  YouTube

  Celebrity Books




Madonna Book:
Video Slut: How I Shoved Madonna Off an Olympic High Dive Got Prince to Fit into a Pair of Tiny Purple Woolen Underpants Ran Away from Michael Jacksons ... So I Could Bring Rock Videos to the Masses



Book
Video Slut: How I Shoved Madonna Off an Olympic High Dive, Got Prince into a Pair of Tiny Purple Woolen Underpants, Ran Away from Michael Jackson's Dad, ... So I Could Bring Rock Videos to the Masses
List Price: $16.00Publisher: Faber & Faber

Salesrank: 1822167

Released: May 11, 2010
Our Price: $10.88
Media: Paperback

Editorial Review:

When video killed the radio star, Sharon Oreck was calling the shots.

Will There Be Fruit? takes an irreverent look behind the scenes of the music-video industry during its eighties heyday. Oreck, one of the top producers of all time, bluffed her way into the business with no experience whatsoever and went on to produce more than six hundred video shoots with Madonna, Sting, Mick Jagger, Prince, and several members of the increasingly unstable Jackson family—not to mention a cadre of delinquent caterers, deranged interns, self-absorbed record executives, and malfeasant animal trainers.

Oreck also shares the at turns hilarious, biting, and poignant story of her origins as a single teen mother, disowned by her middle-class parents, and of her journey from welfare to kung fu movie sets to film school. She approaches her own delinquency and that of the superstars she encountered with humor and candor and points a finger at the corporate restructuring that brought down the music industry. The result is an acerbic but sympathetic account of the outrageous effects of fame, power, and money on people in the entertainment business. No one is spared, especially herself.