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Judge approves Jackson collectors' items
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The King of Pop is coming to calendars and collectors' coin cases after a judge approved several deals involving the singer's estate on Friday.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff signed off on agreements for Jackson-themed items including calendars, school supplies, posters and a commemorative coin. He also granted authority so that reprints of Jackson's autobiography "Moonwalk" can be sold in China, Korea and several Eastern European countries.

Beckloff also agreed to allow Jackson's estate to partner with Apple's iTunes to sell songs and videos of Jermaine Jackson's performance of the Charlie Chaplain song "Smile" at the pop singer's public memorial.

The deals were presented to the judge by the current administrators of Jackson's estate, attorney John Branca and music executive John McClain. Financial details of the agreements were not disclosed.

They offer a hint at Jackson's post-death marketability, and a pending deal may bring even more Jackson-themed merchandise to store shelves and electronics.

Beckloff has scheduled a hearing on Monday to decide whether to approve other deals involving Jackson, including a movie project that would feature the singer's final rehearsals and preparations for a series of comeback concerts in London.

Columbia Pictures has agreed to pay $60 million for the rights to footage shot for Jackson's "This is It" concerts, but the deal must be approved by Monday. The extra time was granted to give the singer's mother, Katherine Jackson, time to consider the proposed contracts and voice any opposition to them.

Beckloff is also considering a deal between the estate and merchandiser Bravado for worldwide distribution rights to several Jackson-themed products, including trading cards, apparel, lighters, stuffed animals that play Jackson's music and digital apparel and even tattoos for online games such as "Second Life."

The deals remain an important piece of the Jackson's financial puzzle and could offset potential losses by concert promoter AEG Live, which spent more than $30 million organizing the singer's 50-show comeback in London. A copy of an insurance policy covering the first 13 of Jackson's shows states it did not cover cancellations if the singer was found to have illegally possessed drugs or was involved in the "illicit taking of drugs."

Authorities are focusing on drugs administered to Jackson in the hours before his death, according to law enforcement officials not authorized to speak publicly. It remains unclear whether the drugs given to Jackson would nullify the policy, which could pay out up to $17.5 million.

An attorney for Branca and McClain stated in a court filing earlier this week that the deals are expected to bring Jackson's estate tens of millions of dollars.

Jackson died June 25 in Los Angeles and was heavily in debt. His music returned to the top of the charts in the weeks after his death, and attorneys for the current administrators of his estate have said they are hoping to quickly approve several deals to maximize profits from interest in Jackson's life.

Jackson's assets are being placed into a private trust. His three children and Katherine Jackson, who is their guardian, are slated to receive 80 percent of the superstar's estate, with the rest going to unnamed charities.

(AP August 10, 2009)

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