Milli Vanilli (2023)

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Milli Vanilli (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

- We shouldn't concentrate too

much on superstar, you know?

It's a very dangerous thing

to talk about.

I know--I know a lot

of superstars...

- Yeah.

- And I look back

and I see--I don't see them

now, you know?

So the same could

happen with us.

Girl, you know it,

girl, you know it

Girl, you know it's true

- Milli Vanilli,

the striking European duo,

has made it big in America.

- First album went six times

platinum in 1989.

- It's quite a weird story.

One minute,

Milli Vanilli were there...

- Milli Vanilli.

- Milli Vanilli.

- Milli--

- Milli--

- Milli--

- Vanilli!

- And the next minute,

they weren't.

- New weasel boys of

the record world.

- Everybody participated,

but they were the scapegoats.

- Record companies are oddly

silent on the whole issue.

- People don't understand

the machine that is

underneath a pop act.

- We want to say thank you

to our producer.

- The evil genius,

I guess we could call him.

- If it wasn't for him,

this would not even take place.

- You get something,

but for that, you make

a pact with the devil.

- Imagine you have

everything...

- The fame, the fortune.

They were in a dream.

- And suddenly,

everybody turns against you

and you have nothing.

Overnight.

How do you handle that?

- It cost them everything.

- There is not another story

like this

in pop music history.

- It's been a while.

Oh!

Yeah, man, we were

young and fresh, man.

That's a normal t*nk top but

I think he just pulled on it.

You know, I mean,

we were fashion forward.

That was a big show in Germany.

Yeah, that was a cool vibe.

Hmm.

You know, Rob Pilatus doesn't

look right in this photo.

I can see the decline.

'Cause that's not

what Rob looked like

or was supposed to look like.

He was extremely strong,

but you can tell that

life took a toll on him.

Becoming friends

was inevitable.

I grew up in Paris.

When I turned 18,

I went to Munich, Germany,

ran out of money,

ended up being homeless for

a couple weeks.

It was cold so I had to

sleep in the train station,

but I was able to

get some jobs

teaching classes

with dance school,

'cause that was my background

in Paris.

And then one day,

I went to a party in Munich

and there he was,

Mr. Rob Pilatus.

He was a break-dancer.

He was onstage

doing the helicopter.

At the end,

when everybody gave him

his props and everything,

he saw me and he was like,

"Who the hell are you?

That's my turf!"

Because there were not

many Black people

in Munich at the time.

Rob and I were the only

dark-skinned people.

There were none.

Rob was older than me

by two years.

He had an infectious laugh--

Like, really loud, you know?

I was socially awkward.

You know, I was shy and

I was not fluent in German.

It was like big brother,

little brother.

He became my best friend.

But I felt like there was

something inside of him

that was--that was missing.

- Every time we talked about

that period of his life,

it was kind of like taboo,

but I understood his pain.

Growing up, my family

was so dysfunctional.

It was an abusive environment,

and I ran away.

So, just like me,

he was looking for a family.

We moved in together in

an attic of a friend of his.

Rob would take the bed,

I would take the sofa.

But there was, like,

a stereo system,

and that thing was on all day.

Music always

pulled us together.

We both liked dancing,

we were very social people,

so we started throwing

parties together.

And they were packed.

The girls were beautiful.

You know, we had a DJ,

and we brought the vibe.

You know, a circle

would be happening.

Rob doing break dancing,

and when he was done,

I would come in

and I would pop, lock,

bam, bam, bam!

And it brought

a lot of attention.

So we started doing shows

in this club, Piantz.

We loved to entertain

people, like,

make people like, "Aw, yeah!"

We loved that energy,

that roar,

and we wanna do more of this.

And the dream was to do

what we did in the club,

sing, perform, live the life,

to become the biggest pop stars

in the world!

- Hot girl, hot girl

I'm satisfaction, baby

Hot girl, hot girl

- We started dancing

for this TV show.

- Hot girl

We danced behind pop stars

of the '80s.

We ended up modeling as well.

We did some catalog.

We were making a lot of noise

in Munich at that time,

but it was like, how do

we get to the next level?

In order to become pop stars,

we had to have the look,

so we had to study

what makes a superstar.

And one thing we noticed was

the hair.

I know Elvis' hair.

I know Bob Marley's hair.

Marilyn Monroe.

Michael Jackson.

You could put, like, a shadow,

and you knew who that was.

We were like,

"Hell yeah, we're doing this."

And the hair came...

Like that.

Hoo!

The reactions were amazing.

Every time we went to

the clubs,

girls loved the hair,

loved the clothing--

they loved Rob and Fab.

- Go to the dance floor,

dansez

Voulez vous, dansez

- We put a band together,

Empire Bizarre...

- Hey

- And we played a few gigs.

We gave tapes to people.

We knew we were gonna be big.

- Dansez

- Since we were

spreading the word

of us getting into

the music industry,

we were starting to

get approached by people.

So one day, this guy came to

Rob and said, "Hey, you know,

we're gonna connect you with

Frank Farian."

Rob played cool to the dude,

but to me, he was like,

"Oh, my God!

Oh, Frank Farian!

You know this?" I didn't know.

Rob told me,

"Hey, Frank Farian,

he did Boney M."

I was like,

"Oh, wow, that's--that's big"

because Boney M., obviously,

was a huge group.

- There lived a certain man

in Russia long ago

- He was big and strong,

in his eyes a flaming glow

- Boney M. were a big hit

disco group in the '70s...

Boney M.!

- And they were huge worldwide.

- Huge!

- He could preach the Bible

like a preacher

Full of ecstasy

- Boney M. sold 80 million

records.

They had a number of

number one hits.

- "Rivers of Babylon."

- "Daddy Cool."

- "Sunny."

- I love the song "Ma Baker."

- Ra, ra, Rasputin.

- Ra, ra, Rasputin,

lover of the Russian queen

- A bananas song

and it's about Rasputin.

- Mysterious figure

in czarist Russia.

- When you watch video

of Boney M.

and you see Bobby Farrell,

you're like,

"Wow, that dude is awesome."

- It was on the radio,

at parties.

- Boney M. made music that

you could dance to

and get drunk to and have fun.

- But how did you four people

get together to form Boney M.?

- Well, it all came about from

our producer Frank Farian.

- If you work with

Frank Farian,

that's a high level guy.

We realized that this could be

the one we've been waiting for,

so we went to Frankfurt.

Frank Farian's

compound was huge.

And when they opened the door,

we were greeted by all those

gold records on the wall,

and it was amazing.

It was the kind of stuff that

you saw with Quincy Jones.

100 tracks, Neve console,

microphones.

It was incredible!

Frank and his secretary,

Ingrid Segieth,

they said,

"We're working on a project

and we're thinking that

you could be good for it,"

if we were interested.

Hell, yeah, we were interested.

Ingrid brought in

the recording contract,

and we never really

attempted to read it.

We were not trying to say no

to this powerful producer.

Also, we would get, like,

1,500 deutschmark each,

and we were like,

"Oh, hell yeah. Where? OK."

When we signed that contract,

we toasted.

We were, like, breaking bread.

But then Frank leaned over

to Rob and told him,

"Don't f*ck with me.

Don't ever f*ck with me."

Several months went by.

They never gave us

any information.

That was driving us crazy.

Like, why don't

they tell us, like,

a date where we can come

to do the vocals,

or like, when do

we get started?

Finally, Ingrid called.

"Come to studio.

It's gonna be good."

Oh, man, we were pumped.

We went straight to

the studio.

And then once everyone is

in the room,

he plays a tune.

I couldn't believe that

this music was for us.

I saw colors.

I saw us onstage

singing in front of a crowd.

And then when

the music stopped...

It was like, wow.

You could still

hear those bells--

ding, ding, ding, ding.

He turned, and then,

you know, "folgen Sie mir."

You know, "follow me."

- It felt serious.

And then we end up

in this dark room.

Rob and Frank start talking

really fast in German,

so I can't really understand

everything,

but I can tell, like,

it's getting intense.

Like, they raise their voices.

Rob is looking at me with

his green eyes.

Like, he looks pissed.

Frank leaves and screams,

and then Rob turns to me,

saying,

"They don't want us to sing

on this record."

And I'm like, like--

So, I'm trying to speak.

I'm trying to talk to him

and trying to get

as much information,

but he was like,

"Just wait, wait.

"They don't want us to sing!

They want us to

lip-sync the song."

I'm like, "What?"

Why in the hell?

Like, he's playing us a song.

I'm trying to understand,

like, what do you mean?

I don't get it.

And that's where I--I--

I black out.

I remember thinking,

"This is weird.

Like, we don't want to

lip-sync."

That's when Ingrid

gave us the options.

What she conveyed to us

clearly is that

we signed the contract,

we got money--

if we didn't want to

take part,

we have to pay them back.

But Ingrid said,

"It's not just the advance

that we paid you,

"but also all the money that

we gave you

through the months."

We developed a debt

towards Frank Farian.

We were scared as hell.

I was 21 years old

and Rob was 24.

We had nowhere to go.

So we thought,

OK, it's one song.

You do that and you're out.

- Sunny

Yesterday, my life was

filled with rain

Sunny

You smiled at me and

really eased the pain

Sunny

Hold on.

I should not be so funny.

Serious.

This is serious.

Thank you, schatzi.

- Interview, "Milli."

Take one.

Camera A and B, mark.

- I've heard that

the name Milli Vanilli

is because of you.

- Oh.

- Is that true?

- That's true.

I was Frank's girlfriend.

I wrote the checks because

I was the financial controller

of Frank's company.

When they came into

the studio,

they looked fantastic.

I never saw people like that

so well-dressed

and good-looking and braids,

and Rob's eyes, green--

You couldn't stop

looking at him.

But they were

such good dancers.

- Frank needed American singer

like me.

He said,

"I'm gonna make a project

and you'll be the lead singer."

I said, "OK, let's do it."

- I'm from Houston, Texas.

Frank says,

"I have a new project.

Can you rap it?"

He wrote me a check

for $12,000.

Just keep your mouth shut.

- Frank said, "Linda, we're

gonna need backing vocalists."

So I brought in

my twin sister Jodie.

- And I looked at her, I said,

"If this is 'oohs' and 'ahs'

and 'I love you,'

I'm gonna sh**t you."

- I said, "Shut up."

He hits it, he says,

"I want you to sing this."

both: Ooh, ooh, ooh

- I love you

- I said, "Don't say it!"

The song is ready,

and the two guys--perfect.

- When they're told

they're gonna lip-sync,

what's their reaction?

- No problem at all.

They agreed and said,

"OK, when can we start?"

It was never an--an--

an argument.

Never ever. Never!

- So you didn't have to

convince them to lip-sync?

- No! Why?

They want to have success

and...

- Was there ever

a point you said,

give us the advance back

that we gave you.

- Gosh.

- No.

- No?

- No.

- You didn't ask--

- No, no, no.

This is not Frank's art--

artwork, yeah.

If they would refuse,

they can go back to Munich

and can...

go for...

or something like that.

Well, I, uh...

The first time I went to share

my side, uh,

I was young.

And if you're a young artist,

you can only tell what

they want you to tell.

But now, f*ck it.

I ain't keeping

my mouth shut for nobody.

Frank Farian, he was just a--

a genius of his art

of making money.

He knew exactly

what he was doing.

You know,

it's not the first time.

The same game was played with

Boney M.

Bobby was not a singer.

He was a dancer.

He was a dancer.

- And who sung?

Frank.

- And it sold

how many platinums,

how many golds,

you know what I'm saying?

- You're looking at him as

a producer

that made most his money

on Black artists,

and it worked.

Then years later, he came back

and did it again

with Milli Vanilli.

He took my voice,

he took their faces,

he put the project together,

he put it on the market,

and he got rich off it.

- Milli Vanilli was delivered

by Frank Farian,

and we were the distributor.

We only saw the pictures of

the both guys and the song.

Was nice-looking guys.

Internationally, they could be

sold because they were colored

and everything was--every--

it fits together.

The product was great.

The music was great.

The whole project is fantastic.

- No, we didn't know it.

I got tapes where--

me, I was told that

it's Rob and Fab singing.

- One day,

we're at a friend's house

watching "Formel Eins,"

this TV show...

- And then we see

Milli Vanilli.

- Milli Vanilli,

"Girl You Know It's True."

- Our name on television

on "Formel Eins."

We used to dance

behind the stars

who would come on this show,

and suddenly,

we're in the charts.

I mean, we went crazy.

Running, like,

we even broke stuff.

The song starts to blow up,

and it happens so fast.

Like, every week,

it was going up.

Boom, boom, boom,

boom, boom, boom, boom,

boom, boom, boom, boom,

boom, boom, pow!

- And the song just takes off.

It becomes a huge hit

in Germany.

- Nobody knew

it was gonna be a hit.

Not even Frank.

But once he's seen

it was rising,

then he started putting

more promotion into it.

- Suddenly,

we were in "Bravo,"

a youth magazine in Germany,

selling millions every week.

People that were not

taking us seriously

were suddenly like, "Hey."

And now it's going through

Europe.

So we travel up and down Europe

on television.

We were nervous.

"Can you drop your mic

a little bit?"

No, I'm gonna keep it there.

But nervousness translated

into excitement.

A minute ago,

we didn't want to do this,

but now, we want more.

We were so pumped.

You're in Italy,

you're in Spain,

you're in Holland.

- And then all of a sudden,

it hits the States.

Bam.

- I'm in love with you, girl,

'cause you're on my mind

You're the one I think about

most every time

And when you pack a smile

in everything you do

Don't you understand, girl,

this love is true

- They came in,

braids swinging...

- Chest bumping...

with tights on.

- It was two Black dudes

with dreads coming into pop.

That alone was

the shock factor.

- Girl, you know it's true

Ooh, ooh, ooh, I love you

- The hair and the bandannas

and the shoulder pads.

- Yes, you know it's true

- It was a totally

different style.

both:

Ooh, ooh, ooh, I love you

- That's all we knew.

- They had it all.

Like, their visuals were

on point.

- I mean, they were

just eye candy.

It was yummy, yummy, yummy.

- "Girl You Know It's True"

becomes the number two hit

in the United States.

- "Girl You Know It's True,"

number two.

Oh, my God.

- It became a top five hit in

23 countries around the world.

That's Michael Jackson

level success.

- Ah!

- Great music, it just rises.

When those special ones come,

they come.

- As much as it wasn't

the right thing to do,

the power of

"Girl You Know It's True"...

I'm so in love, girl

Was pulling on us.

I'm so in love, girl

This energy, this hype...

- Do you want to party?

The love...

So from that point on,

we embraced the lie.

- What's up?

- Running.

- Yeah.

Number one.

- Every time we were

around people

or, like, taking pictures...

- OK.

- We knew,

you know, you know.

They don't know.

Do they know? I don't know.

- But it was too difficult to

say no to this new life.

"Girl You Know It's True"

just unveiled the beast in us.

- Yeah.

- We came from nothing

and now we were tasting

this pop star life.

To be adored, to be loved,

that became very addictive.

- I was nervous.

Being caught was something that

was always, always very aware.

- So, when will we have

your LP?

- Gonna come out in two weeks.

It's just like very pop

dance orientated music.

Are you ready here?

- For us, it was a surprise

that it developed immediately.

It was worthwhile thinking

about what you can do.

Do we need an album?

Yes, we need an album.

Do we need a second single?

Yes, we need a second single.

- I get the call.

"Frank needs to talk to you."

So I goes up to the studio,

Ingrid opened the door,

I go in.

Sit in the kitchen and wait.

He came out--took his time,

fixed him a coffee--

and then he said,

"I told you,

keep your mouth shut."

He says to me, um,

"They found out in Munich,

"from your promotion manager

or whoever,

"that you're the voice.

Don't want to

see you here anymore."

We didn't talk anymore.

That's it.

I was kicked to the curb.

- One night,

Frank Farian called me up.

He said, "John, I've got

a project I'm working on."

"I had a rapper, Charles Shaw,

who tried the situation

and he was not good so

can you come to the studio?"

So that's what I did.

He said,

"You got 10,000 D-marks,"

and I said, "Wow."

He said, "You're gonna do

the whole album with me."

- Frank said, "We're gonna be

doing more songs."

- We always asked,

"Where is Rob and Fab?

When are they gonna

start singing?"

Frank said, "They're gonna

record in the evening

when you guys are done."

- I used to have to go through

the back door

because Frank didn't want

nobody know

I was the lead singer.

- This is run like

a tight m*llitary operation.

It's on a need-to-know basis.

It was smoke and mirrors.

David Copperfield

couldn't have done it better.

We like it hot, don't we?

You want to get down with

Milli Vanilli?

They're coming.

It's a hit. Shake your booty.

"Girl You Know It's True."

- One, mark.

- Mark.

- Make sure everyone's phone's

on silent.

- That's a good idea.

- Clive is a--

is a gift-seeker.

He is like the Yoda of talent.

He knows.

He just knows.

- With Milli Vanilli,

Clive saw dollar signs.

"Girl You Know It's True"

is big now.

How can we cash in on

the immediate moment?

- Well, we moved everything up

as fast as possible.

- Clive would say every week

that we're missing,

we're missing, like,

a million dollars.

So we had to put

an album in motion.

But the album that's out

in Europe, "All or Nothing,"

was not strong enough

to release in America.

- Clive called up

Diane Warren.

- Diane Warren is one of

the biggest songwriters

there are in the country.

- I had written

"Blame It On The Rain"

when I was scheduled

to see Clive,

and he goes, I want you to

hear this new group I have.

And he played me

"Girl You Know It's True."

I'm like, "This is so crazy

"'cause the song

I'm bringing you

really sounds like

the follow-up to that."

It's even the same rhythm.

"Girl You Know It's True,"

"Blame It On The Rain."

I played him the song

and he loved it.

He sent it to Frank Farian

and they recorded it.

- Normally,

when you've given the producer

some repertoire

for them to record,

you want to be there

to make sure it gets done.

In the case of Frank, though,

he didn't want anyone

in the studio.

- It was very weird for us

to find the songs,

send them to Frank,

and then have them produce it

without any of our presence.

But the speculation that

we were somehow aware of

what was going on

behind the scenes in Germany

is simply not the case.

If an outside producer sends

in all the album credits,

you have to take it on faith

that represents what actually

happened in the studio.

There was no reason

to think not.

- Ah, there it is.

So this is the European version

of the album "All or Nothing."

You see Rob and Fab on

the cover, the first album.

That's their, like,

running man logo.

There they are on the back,

shirtless, of course,

'cause why not?

And let's see

who's credited on this album.

So it says musicians here,

and I don't see Rob and Fab

on here at all.

So, backing vocals, Jodie and

Linda Rocco, Charles Shaw--

produced by Frank Farian.

But this is the truth

in advertising version

that doesn't have them on it.

If I'm at a record label and

I'm putting out this record,

and I look at the vocalists and

the guys who are on the cover

are not listed in

the liner notes,

I'm gonna have some questions,

you know?

Like, that is a giant

red flag for me.

- That was the name of

the European album.

- Really?

OK. I didn't know that.

So that's--

I--

I don't know what to say

to that.

- Yeah, but we didn't

release that record, so--

- Really? I forgot about that.

- Woo, blame it on the rain

- Rain

- Yeah, yeah

Blame it on the stars

- Stars

- Ooh

- Rob Pilatus, my brother,

he loved "Blame It On The Rain"

because that was--

that was his thing.

- You said you

didn't need her

- "Blame It On The Rain" is

number one hit in 1989.

- They released "Baby Don't

Forget My Number," number one.

- "Girl I'm Gonna Miss You"

is the third number one song.

They have three number one

smashes off that record.

- That feels impossible.

- To satisfy your pride

- And once you have

three big hit singles,

you're gonna sell

a lot of albums.

- If an artist sells 500,000

and went gold, that's terrific.

- You let her walk away

- If an artist sells a million

albums, that's something.

- Got to blame it on

something

- But 8 million?

- It's one of the biggest

debuts of all time.

- Blame it on the rain

that was falling, falling

Blame it on the stars

that didn't shine that night

- To just come out of nowhere

and have a number one

debut album for seven weeks,

well, that just was unheard of

at the time.

- Blame it on the rain,

yeah, yeah

- Debut album,

hot right out of the gate.

"Here's Milli Vanilli.

What do you want to do

with it?"

Well, we want to play it.

We want to dance to it.

We want to have fun with them.

Can we get them in the studio?

We want to meet them.

- Blame it on the rain

that was falling, falling

Blame it on the stars

- At that point,

what are we gonna do?

Should we bring them over?

Should they do the MTV tour?

Then that all kicks in.

- Blame it on the rain

- Labels saw we were growing

in the charts in America.

- Blame it on the rain

- Our presence was needed.

But Frank didn't want us

to go to America.

- Frank was apprehensive

because of the big secret,

obviously.

- Frank was concerned that

they would go to America

and f*ck up everything.

- America had our heart.

"We want to go to the US.

USA! USA!"

Coming to LA for us was like

we're living the dream,

we're doing things.

- A'ight?

- Kick it.

- Hollywood, Malibu.

The girls are hot there, too.

Oof.

- Cold coolin' at a bar

- We got a manager,

Sandy Gallin...

- But like

Mick Jagger said

- He was like a big player.

- I can't get

no satisfaction

- He had Michael Jackson

at the time,

Dolly Parton--tons of people.

That's why he had us,

to handle people like

Milli Vanilli.

- Funky Cold Medina

- I was truly,

in the beginning, a fan.

I said to them,

"You know, I've never been

a manager before,"

and Rob said, "Well, we've

never been pop stars before."

I was like, "OK, here we go."

My first job was putting them

on the MTV tour.

- It was gonna be

our first tour in America--

a 107 city tour

in eight months--

so we had to put

a band together.

- I was the band leader then.

We had rehearsed,

we were flawless.

Everybody was really

invested in this gig

'cause it was

the new hottest sh*t, you know?

After we had been approved,

Rob and Fab disappeared.

They were gone.

So we were just rehearsing

with no artist.

And I start going, "These guys

must be really, really good.

"They don't rehearse,

they don't f*cking do nothing.

They--

what the hell's going on?"

We started asking

more questions.

We got to realize, this musical

director at the time

is programming this Oberheim.

There's where the vocals are.

And then we understood,

"Oh, they're lip-syncing."

So we said, "OK, we're in

a lip-sync band."

They said, "Don't say anything

about this to anybody else."

"Fine."

- The show would play

to packed arenas.

Rob and Fab were two sexy

performers selling hits,

and they did a really

bloody good job at it.

- Yeah!

Girl, you know it's true

Ooh, ooh, ooh, I love you

Yes, you know it's true

- The audience loved them.

- Yeah!

- It was very powerful.

- Girl, you know it's,

girl, you know it's

Girl, you know it's true

Girl, you know it's,

yes, you know it's

Girl, you know it's true

- Performing is a drug.

That euphoric feeling allowed

us to just forget everything.

- Milli Vanilli,

the European duo,

now one of the hottest

groups in America,

made a special trip to the

Disney MGM Studios theme parks

where we arranged

for them to have

an exclusive interview session

with some of

their most loyal fans.

- Wherever you've performed,

has anything really

embarrassing happened to you?

- Yeah.

- It was super hot that day.

"Downtown" Julie Brown

introduces us as usual.

- I decided to take a break--

the show had been going now

for a few months--

and it was while

I was in my trailer

I heard the crowd, like,

getting a little bit rowdy.

- The vocals that were

being cued from the emulator

started repeating.

Girl, you know it's--

Girl, you know it's--

girl, you know it's--

Girl, you know it's--

It was like--

sh*t!

- As I open my door,

I saw Rob go flying by.

- Rob and Fab were gone,

and I'm onstage still with

the guitar player and the

drummer going "What the f*ck?

Do we continue the song on

or what are we doing here?"

So, of course,

there was outrage.

I was furious.

"What the f*ck, you know?

Find him!"

- Rob was pissed.

He was like, "f*ck that!"

He lost his cool.

- Rob had gotten hold of me

to say,

"I don't know what to do."

You know, he was scared.

He kind of exploded.

It was the moment where

it just burst open.

And at that time,

we didn't know

what pressure he was feeling

because we didn't know

the load they were carrying.

- On the rain

that was falling

- When Milli Vanilli blew up,

I was a program director at

WILD radio station, Boston.

1090 on the AM dial.

The only Black station

within miles

of Boston, Massachusetts.

The guys came to our radio

station for our morning show.

And I remember

them sitting there,

and when I heard them talk

for the first time,

I'm like,

"Oh, they sound very different

than they do on the record."

- Please welcome Milli Vanilli.

- Once they started doing

promotional dates,

it became pretty clear

that something was strange.

- Fab, how are you

finding Australia?

You enjoying it?

Sydney?

Syd-ney. Syd-ney.

Melbourne. Melbourne.

- It just seemed that

they weren't comfortable

communicating in English.

- Who inspired you

the most, Rob?

- Uh, diff--difficult.

- You could tell

they were sweating b*ll*ts.

People were starting to,

you know,

giggle a little bit

on the sides.

- Fab, you speak English,

right?

- Yeah, I can, too.

- Who are your--

- And it was easy to

kind of latch on to that

and make them a joke.

- You are Germany,

and I'm from French.

Oh.

- There's a way that

I think some people knew.

Blame it on the rain

- Arsenio Hall is someone who

had been around the business

a long time and had seen a lot.

- Man, I think Milli Vanilli

doing cr*ck.

I don't think--

- It seemed bad to

a lot of these folks.

- Those pants too tight.

They going--

- They knew something was up.

- Privately, I thought, like,

you know, "Did they really

sing everything?"

- Girls!

crowd: Girls!

- Hey, boys!

crowd: Hey, boys!

- Yeah!

crowd: Yeah!

- Girl, you know it's--

girl, you know it's true

Ooh, ooh, ooh

- I'm in love with you, girl,

'cause you're on my mind

You're the one I think about

most every time

- We didn't sing on

those records.

- Don't you understand, girl,

this love is true

- We didn't even sound like

those records.

We were lying.

Lies are taking the elevators

while the truth

takes the stairs.

I knew that at some point,

the truth would rise.

They were gonna catch us

at some point or another.

This load on our shoulders,

it was getting heavy and heavy

and heavy.

- I was a little bit

tired by it, yeah.

- We drank more,

took more dr*gs,

to be able to, like, numb out.

- I think next time,

next time, maybe--

should we ask them to sing

next time?

- Um...

This, uh..

- They got double platinum.

They got gold records.

Everybody else got

a gold record of my voice

on their walls.

That's my voice!

You end up drinking,

you end up taking dr*gs

to not think about

what's really happening

in reality.

Then my manager that I had

at that time said,

"Well, you know what?

We're gonna do interviews.

You're gonna go live."

I was singing before

Milli Vanilli

even thought about

becoming stars.

I went abroad and said it

in a TV show,

it's my voice.

Music is from Frank Farian

and not from Milli Vanilli.

And Frank denied it all.

His words were--I can

remember them to the day--

"This artist is a liar.

"Look the way he's dressed.

"The Black guy.

He's just trying to

make money."

- Ingrid!

She said,

"Frank don't want you to be

"talking out there to nobody.

Keep your mouth shut."

"How could you say that?

You're just trying

to get publicity."

Milli Vanilli fans?

Oh, man.

Death threats.

"Your next show, this and this

is gonna happen to you."

- The phone rang and

it was Charles Shaw.

And I didn't know who he was,

and he said, "I'm the real

singer of Milli Vanilli

and you have to help me."

So I called Sandy right away

and I said, "I just got this

weird call from this guy.

He says he's the real voice."

"Ah, just a crazy person.

Just ignore it."

- It didn't interest anybody.

You get tired of trying to

lead a jackass to water

and make him drink it.

- People wanted to believe

they are really singing

these songs

because it was

a good production.

It was entertainment.

- It's a magic trick pulled

off in front of you onstage,

and the audience usually

wants to be deceived

in a magic show.

So if everyone benefits

from a scam like that,

including the audience,

it's very easy to

look the other way.

- Everyone got his bonus,

everyone was happy to be

successful,

and the people are happy to

have this record.

We all together were in

a very nice flow of success.

- Mo-mo-mo-money rules

the world

It's still

the same old greed

- Successful music is

a great money machine.

- Their videos are hot,

their songs are hot.

- Singles, albums,

maxi singles...

- Buy it now.

- The album made

$580 million.

They had sold approximately

46 million records, global.

There was merchandise,

keychains,

ticket sales to the concerts.

- It's Milli Vanilli.

Milli Vanilli!

What a show. What a night.

- We're going to

a Milli Vanilli concert.

- They could've recorded

the alphabet, the phonebook.

You name it,

they were selling it.

- Their logo is

the running man

and it symbolizes

the pursuit of success.

If they do any better

next year,

they're gonna have

to find a new logo.

- At that time,

Frank Farian was worth

almost half a billion.

- Money rules the world and

don't you love that cash?

- They continued to steamroll

through the end of the year.

- And the winner is...

Milli Vanilli.

- They won three

American Music Awards...

- Milli Vanilli.

- Milli Vanilli!

- This train was moving.

- Thank you to our producer,

Frank Farian,

to our manager, Sandy Gallin.

- We'd like to thank

Clive Davis.

- Money rules the world

- Arista, BMG,

they were cashing in

the bucks.

- Money, money

- And the whole thing with

Milli Vanilli

would have kept going if

they had not been nominated

for the Grammys.

- Well, because--

no, but, see,

most everybody knew

the secret, and I didn't.

They never told me this,

so I just assumed they sang,

you know?

So we're at a conference

meeting and I said,

"I think Milli Vanilli could

get nominated for a Grammy."

I thought "Blame It On

The Rain" was a Grammy song.

They laughed at me and

they're like, "Trust me,

Milli Vanilli's never gonna

get nominated for a Grammy."

So I called

National Academy of

Recording Arts and Sciences.

They put me right through

to Mike Greene's office,

the president of NARAS.

I had no idea how somebody

actually does get nominated,

and he said,

"Oh, you just put it on

"your management company

letterhead,

'please consider

Milli Vanilli for a Grammy.'"

So I typed it up and faxed it

off to the Academy.

Never thought another thing

about it.

So when that ballot came out

and Milli Vanilli was on it,

like, just everything

hit the fan.

Clive called Sandy

and threw a hissy fit,

and then Sandy called me

absolutely furious,

like, "Look what you've done!"

I'm like,

"why doesn't anybody want them

to have a Grammy award?"

- If Milli Vanilli had

been nominated for

the lip-sync awards,

that would've been fine,

but they got nominated for

this prestigious musical award

and they were up against

people who produce music

and write music and sing.

They were up against

the Indigo Girls...

- Closer I am to fine

- This incredible folk duo

who sang

these beautiful, deep songs.

They were up against Tone Loc.

- Funky Cold Medina

- Tone Loc made brilliantly

constructed records,

full of incredibly clever

rhythmic artifice.

- Sweetness

- Neneh Cherry, who had

a really interesting debut

album and had a lot to say.

- We always hang in

a buffalo stance

- Back to life

- Soul II Soul changed

the way R&B music sounded.

They changed the way

music moved.

- And so, if I'm one of those

artists,

I'm like, "These guys?"

- We knew that the Grammys

were the highest standard.

Then here we were,

you know, Rob and Fab.

Not only that,

they want us to perform live.

- I thought, how the hell are

they going to do the Grammys

when it's all live?

Live-sing.

- Michael Greene was

the head of NARAS at the time.

I remember taking a picture

with him, and him saying,

"Be sure you do it right

tonight."

Money, money, money

makes the world go 'round.

- We're at the Shrine.

I remember getting out

of the car and going in.

On that day, it was pressure.

- Ladies and gentlemen,

Mr. Mike Greene.

- Thank you.

This is a great night

for music!

- Yeah, boy!

- All the stars are

in the building.

- Woo-hoo!

- Finally, it was our turn

to be on that stage.

Cold sweat.

- Well, girl,

you know it's true.

It can only mean Milli Vanilli.

- Hit it!

- I'm in love with you, girl,

'cause you're on my mind

You're the one I think about

most every time

And when you pack a smile

in everything you do

- Performing in front of

the Grammys

with all those artists,

that was nerve wracking.

- And this is true

- Girl, you know it's true

- All those people who spent

years of their lives

to get to this point,

and we got here pretty fast.

- I remember sitting there,

and I think the entire industry

knew at that time

that it wasn't them singing.

That was great.

I was actually--I was supposed

to be in that number.

I don't know what--

- When he called out

the nominees,

you know, it was like, "Man."

- This year, the nominees for

Best New Artist

are making all kinds of music.

- Each one of them express

themself in a unique way

that commands attention.

- Now, the nominees for

Best New Artist are...

- Do Rob and Fab

deserve the Grammy?

- Neneh Cherry.

- That's a tough one.

We didn't sing on

the record, so...

- Indigo Girls.

- No.

But...

- Milli Vanilli.

- For the pain and everything

that we suffered...

- Soul II Soul.

- And the hard work that

we put into,

do we deserve it?

- Tone Loc.

- A very small part of me

says yes.

- And the Best New Artist is...

- Rob and Fab deserved

the Grammy.

- Milli Vanilli.

"Oh, my God."

Frank goes,

"Now, everybody's watching."

- Uh, we want to say

thank you very much,

but we want to say

there are a lot of artists

here in this room,

there are a lot of artists

outside in the world

who could achieve the same

award that we achieved today,

and it's an award for

all artists in the world.

Thank you very much.

- Thank you.

- It was a joke

that went too far.

And once they crossed

that line into

something that

people really care about,

that was the beginning of

the end for Rob and Fab.

- Once they won the Grammy...

Once they won the Grammy,

they hung they selves.

- The afterparty

for the Grammys,

oh, man, we were already faded.

I remember having to listen

to Mr. Clive Davis.

We were so high

that it took a lot of energy

to just keep the stuff

together.

- Frankly, Rob and Fab didn't

do themselves any favors.

They were just acting arrogant

and, frankly, obnoxious.

"I have no time.

Who's Paul McCartney?"

- When they won,

Rob and Fab were way up here,

these big stars that

just won a Grammy.

And the bigger they got,

the more celebrity

they became.

They had to have Avin

in the limousine,

sushi in the dressing room.

- They wanted for nothing.

- The stardom made them crazy.

- Rob said, "Oh,

can you turn on my voice?"

And Frank said,

"It's not your voice!"

Believe it.

It's Brad Howell's voice.

- He was singing with

my voice during playback

and believing

that's his own voice.

They were believing this.

- They started to forget

the reality

that they didn't sing.

- So they were doing

this interview one time

and they said they were better

than The Beatles.

Think about waking up

every day and knowing that

you don't sing

any of the vocals,

and then saying you're better

than The Beatles.

I mean, that takes, like,

giant stones.

You've really gotta believe

your own bullshit to say that.

They got caught up in it.

- At that point, they thought

they had the power,

and they did, to some degree.

They said, you know,

"We're in control now."

Millions and millions of

dollars were at stake

and people depended on them.

Frank depended on them.

Clive depended on them.

Everybody depended on

Milli Vanilli doing their job.

- Frank Farian was already

preparing album number two,

"Keep On Running,"

and they wanted us

to get back to Germany to go

promote the second album.

But Rob and Fab were done.

We wanted to sing.

We wanted to come out

as singers.

- At Arista,

we had a weekly luncheon

in the conference room.

One day, Clive got a call and

he walked into the kitchen.

And then came back out

and he goes,

"They want to sing on

the second album."

And I remember him saying,

"That's not gonna happen."

"Oh, but I would like to sing."

"Yeah, Rob, it's impossible.

"You cannot sing and

Fab cannot sing,

so please stop talking."

- We couldn't continue

to be his marionette.

Hey, listen.

Done with this.

So we started to lawyer up,

and then that's when

we found out

we signed a contract

for multiple albums.

We had no clue.

So to get out of under

the thumb of Frank Farian,

we played a game

of cat and mouse.

Our MO was to hurt him.

Let's push him to a brink

where he's gonna break,

and then he's gonna say,

"You know what? I'm tired.

Go away."

You know, we didn't show up

to the video of

"Keep On Running."

And we told him,

"More money. More money."

He's like,

"No, I'm not doing that!

What else do you want?"

They told Frank,

"If you don't give us 150,000,

"we will go to the producer

and telling them that

we are not the guys

who singing on the tape."

- The story broke in

"The Los Angeles Times"

and all hell broke loose.

- Frank threw Rob and Fab

under the bus.

- I knew it from the start,

you would break my heart

But still, I had to play

this painful part

You wrapped me around

your little bitty finger

- He basically brushed it off

and said,

"You know, yeah,

they didn't sing..."

- I just don't know

what I should do

- "And who cares?"

- Very quickly after that,

the whole train

came off the tracks.

- It's a tragedy for me

to see the dream is over

And I never will forget

the day we met

Girl, I'm gonna miss you

- The pop music world's

in shock tonight--

- With the revelation that

pop duo--

- Milli Vanilli didn't sing.

- So, girl, you know

it's not true.

Well, I am shocked.

- It was the lead-in story

on all the news.

- More embarrassment today

for the pop singing group

Milli Vanilli.

- Milli Vanilli turns out to be

a lot of phony baloney.

- And it didn't just

hit America;

it hit worldwide.

- One pop group this week

has been involved in

a feverish controversy.

- And then NARAS got involved.

- There's too many doubts

that have been cast now

for us not to go forward and

try to find out the truth.

The credibility of

the Grammy depends on it.

- Having to give back

their Grammy,

it's the only time that has

happened in music history.

- There was no recovering

from that.

The only way that that could be

ridden was to own it.

- Robert Pilatus

and Fabrice Morvan.

- Come together. Come together.

- Come together, guys!

- Right here! Right here!

- Right here.

- Straight ahead.

- Fabrice and me,

we lived together in a project

with two other musicians

in Munich.

We--we had nothing to eat.

We weren't happy.

We wanted to be stars.

We want to get up on top.

So suddenly, this guy gave us

a chance and we took it.

He gave us a little bit money.

- We were young, naive,

and we believed him.

It was an opportunity for us.

- We feel really, really sorry

about our fans,

but we just hope that they

understand that we were young,

that we just wanted to live

the life the American way.

- Of course.

Yeah.

- You're absolutely right.

I was seduced.

You have to understand

we were seduced,

we were abused,

and we felt very guilty,

and we're happy that

it's over, you know?

We don't understand

that it's us,

the two little guys

from Germany,

the victims who has

to play suddenly

the crux of a trial

that we are not.

- I will describe it like this.

You get something,

but for that, you make

a pact with the devil.

- I think you should

go with this tape.

We give you each a tape.

You can take it to

a scientist--

- But you could--

- OK, I demonstrate!

f*ck it. I do it. Let's do it.

Girl, you know it's true

Ooh, ooh, ooh, I love you

- I'm in love with you, girl,

'cause you're on my mind

You're the one I think about

most every time

When you cr*ck a smile

in everything you do

- Yeah, I understand--

I really understand them.

I have to say

I understand them.

- That's a good question, but--

- A lot of your fans--

a lot of your fans will be

very upset by the fact

that the only way

you can explain the charade,

the farce, the fakery of

the last year, two years,

is money.

- It's not.

This is fame--

- There's no other reason.

That's the only pressure

that Farian put on you,

was financial--

- Do you live in a project?

Did you live in a project?

We had no money,

we wanted to be stars.

We think we are talented.

We love to be onstage.

That's our first aim.

It wasn't money.

If we wouldn't have accept that

at the start,

we knew we would be

still in Munich.

I would still work at

the McDonalds.

- OK, thank you very much.

- Thank you very much.

- They ate 'em up like sharks.

- They were

the town spectacle.

- New weasel boys of

the record world.

Did you know they were exposed

for not actually appearing on

their Grammy-award winning

record album?

- They do not sing...

- Do not sing on it at all.

- On their own record.

- Ooh, ooh, ooh,

you are through

- The response was swift

and it was harsh.

They stopped playing on radio,

Arista Records took it

out of circulation,

and then, to top it all off,

there were, like, two dozen

class action lawsuits

from fans who were just pissed.

- A California woman who

bought the album for her son

is suing to get a refund.

- When I listened to the music,

I would sort of picture them

singing,

and that's--that's how

I looked up to them.

- They sued them for fraud

and racketeering.

- Listen carefully

to this important message

about a pending

Milli Vanilli lawsuit

that may affect your rights.

- I remember being surprised

by the animosity,

and the amount of anger

behind that

seemed outsized

for what happened.

- I mean, Milli Vanilli,

to be clear,

had a largely white audience,

so a part of the betrayal

that was felt was,

"I can't believe

I listened to these Black guys

singing these songs and

it really wasn't them."

- You're gonna have

a movie now,

"The Milli Vanilli Story."

Is that beautiful?

I play Fab, one of the dudes

in Milli Vanilli.

- Girl, I love you

- I love you

- It was really ugly to see

that sort of hostility

directed at Rob and Fab.

- Rob Pilatus told

"The LA Times" that

his family back in Germany was

getting harassed as well.

- Management was gone.

Label was gone.

- No representative of

a major record company

would discuss them with CNN

on camera.

- Frank came out of it

unscathed.

- Rob and Fab deserved to

be called out, certainly.

But it was weird that

people didn't come down on

Frank and Arista and Clive

in the way that

you would think.

There was plausible

deniability, I think,

for Arista, anyway.

I mean, it was easy for them

to say, "We didn't know,"

and nobody could prove that

they knew it,

so they got off the hook.

- I mean,

I just know personally,

that we knew before

the Grammys,

so there's no--there was

no question about it.

- Yeah, maybe six months

before.

"Why didn't anybody from

the label speak out,"

is that what you're asking me?

- Yeah.

- That's a--

that's a good question.

I mean, I can't--

I have to answer truthfully,

and I would have to say that,

that, yeah, I believe that

Clive felt that this

not only wasn't good

for Arista,

but wasn't really good for

his reputation

and for his, you know, history.

- The record company and

industry has all of the power,

so they're gonna use

everything they can

to point the direction at

Rob and Fab.

"Don't look at,

we sold these million records.

"Don't look at the fact that

someone inside of our industry

"had to have known

this was going on.

"No, it's these two guys

who barely speak English.

It's their fault."

- Not only did Frank have

no problem

exploiting Rob and Fab,

but he also seemed to

think them foolish

and beneath him.

And just like his lineage of

treating Black artists as

disposable,

he chose to get what he needed

and disposed of them.

- We regret it.

- We regretted it...

200,000 times.

Lying in front of my mom,

lying in front of the job.

- Everybody.

- Lying in front of everybody.

- They were young,

just like me,

looking to achieve something

in the music branch,

just like me.

So what do you do?

You followed the light,

but it's the wrong light.

At the end of the tunnel,

the light goes out,

and what happens?

Don't nobody care.

It's just another scandal.

- And the number one new job

for Milli Vanilli, "Who cares?

Just as long as we don't

hear from them ever again."

- Just when you thought

there couldn't possibly be

another twist to the story--

- So, you know,

the thing about Frank,

he's always a step ahead

of everybody, right?

He had already recorded

the second record,

and he dropped it,

like, right after

this whole thing blew up.

- Frank Farian called me up

and said,

"John, now you and Brad are

gonna be stars of the show."

Elaborate on the microphone

Pumping some knowledge

'cause my brain ain't stoned

- It's called

The Real Milli Vanilli,

"The Moment of Truth."

But again,

it's all another facade.

This guy was never

in the band.

He's just another guy

who Frank recruited.

- That girl had nothing to

do with the first album,

she had nothing to do with

the second album.

- We are still on that album,

Jodie and I.

But Frank said, no touring,

no video, no being seen.

- Listen to what he says

- "Linda, hope you understand.

"I have a certain

look that I want.

You're not Black."

- I'm not into bragging,

strutting, or bigotry

Or bigotry

- Don't ask me how I felt.

Well, go ahead, ask me.

- Yeah, how did you feel?

- I felt horrible!

- Oh, I was incensed.

- Keep on running, baby

- You've got to be kidding me.

It was almost as big a lie

as the first Milli Vanilli.

- Keep on running

- This was Frank's MO.

- Baby

- He already did Boney M.,

and then Milli Vanilli,

and he's like, "Hey, man,

this is

my 'Fast and Furious 10'."

I'm just gonna keep

making these things

because you love 'em,"

so why would

he change his stripes?

- Do you know what they are

doing now, Rob and Fab?

- Well, they have

a new single out--

- It's not out yet.

- It's not out actually.

They don't--

they don't have a label.

A lot of record companies are

scared to touch them right now

because, well, if you know

somebody can't sing,

why produce them?

- So you want to sing

a little bit for us?

- Yeah, we come in here

with our live band

and we would love to sing.

- No, how about right now?

Sing something off your album.

Um...

- Some of the verse from

the first single?

- Uh, yeah, OK.

Girl

Back together.

- Girl

both:

Do you want to get it on

Then tell me now

- Now Rob and Fab are

courageously trying to

make a comeback,

real voices and all.

both: I just want to be

your everything

- For the last year, they've

been working on a new album,

on the dance steps,

and on the singing.

They've got a new sexy video.

- Girl, can you tell me now

Straight up what's up

- So what's a man

supposed to do

Oh

- Do you want to get it on

- So this is

the "We Can Get It On"

12 inch LP single by Rob & Fab.

They're just, like, badasses,

you know?

They're like,

"Yeah, we're hot. We know it."

The expectation of the record

was based on curiosity alone

they could sell a million

copies of the record.

But the Rob & Fab album

sold 2,000 copies worldwide,

which is not good.

- By the time the

Rob & Fab record came out,

people were just

not that interested

in the spectacle anymore.

- That's when we...grew apart.

Rob was going in

his own tunnel

and didn't want to come out,

really.

- The team Rob and Fab

had fractured.

He didn't see me as--

as his brother anymore.

And that hurt.

- Now, where have you been

for the past six years?

- Well, the past six years,

I was in Los Angeles

undercover, you know,

doing my thing.

- You have an accent.

Where are you from?

- I'm from Paris. I'm French.

- From Paris.

- Yeah.

- Now, listen,

you've got some new music...

- That's true, yeah.

- And you are actually singing

on this damn thing.

- That's right.

- Yeah.

Put it together

for Fabrice Morvan.

- Come on, children

both:

If you see what I see

And you know what I feel

- For me,

performing was vindication.

both:

And we'll find a solution

- I was able to, like,

blossom as a singer

and do what I was supposed

to do in the first place.

Everybody,

join the love revolution

- Lovely!

- Come on.

- Hi, baby.

- Hi.

- Hey, listen.

Do you ever see Rob anymore?

- Well, we don't talk

as much as we used to

because he's doing

his own thing,

I'm doing my own thing,

you know?

We kind of went apart,

you know?

Bands broke up and

they do their own thing.

- Sure.

- That's what happened.

- You done joined

the love revolution.

- That's right.

- Where do I sign up?

- I was at The Viper Room.

I was outside.

I see a dude stumbling

across the way.

As he was falling,

his body turned

and I looked into his eyes

and I was like,

"Oh, my God. This is not true."

I'm looking at Rob Pilatus.

So I crossed the street,

I picked him up,

and I said, "Hey, Rob.

It's Fab."

"Rob, it's Fab.

Where do you live?"

And then he said, "There.

So we ring the doorbell.

We're like,

"Hey, we're there with Rob.

Like, this is

where he live, yes?"

"Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Bring him in.

"It's our boy, man.

We--you know,

he--sometimes,

he just wanders."

And I'm like,

"Oh, that looks like

a cr*ck house to me, man."

They were doing heavy dr*gs

in that--in that room.

I'm not surprised

'cause I heard

that's what he's been doing

for a long time.

But to actually see

my brother in the street

looking like this,

and looking back at

my dude in his prime...

Man, it was like, "Phew."

I didn't know what to say.

- What'd they do?

They just pulled you over?

- Yeah, they pulled me over,

man.

Unfortunately.

- He was lost.

Everything had failed.

He had not been satisfied with

anything that he'd ever done.

- He came back from

Oberberg Clinic

and he stayed at a hotel

close to my house.

Next morning, 10:00,

I called, no answer.

11:00, no answer.

12:00, no answer.

At 2:00, I said, "I'm going to

the hotel right now."

And we go to his door

and the chain was from inside,

so the house master

has to open it.

And--and he was laying there

on--on the floor,

just with shorts.

Yeah.

And I was...

- The call came in.

"Rob is dead."

I was like, "Wow."

And then I went into, like,

a state of shock.

And I didn't move for

a long time.

- I lost a family member.

I lost a brother.

I lost someone that was there

with me, walking in my shoes.

You know?

That's it.

When I went to Holland,

I was running away

from my past.

- He'd introduced himself

as Fabrice,

but I didn't know who he was.

He had such short hair,

and he has a different face

when he has short hair.

So in the beginning, actually,

when we were dating,

people were like,

"Hey, Tessa, hey, Tessa."

"Hey, I'll see you tomorrow,"

and, you know,

I was the one being recognized.

So there was no signs that

he was Milli Vanilli.

We had just fun together,

and we were working out

together,

and we had those dates.

I start to really

like this guy,

and you talk with

your friends about,

you know,

your new dating experience.

One of them said,

"Dude, that's Milli Vanilli.

Hello."

And I was like, "Well, OK.

"If that's Milli Vanilli, fine,

because I like Fabrice, so..."

- I didn't think she would,

like, want to be with me.

I had to tell her, "Listen,

my life is not great."

- I was like,

"Well, don't worry, you know?

I got you."

- You already, Sach?

Drum roll.

- One, two, and three.

Flip!

- Oh!

When Sacha came,

when Solange came,

and now Vince and Paris came,

then things started

flourishing all around me.

What?

- Hey, Sacha, look!

He's holding the bottle.

- That's a first.

Look at that.

- Cute.

- It's amazing

to realize that

there is another side

at the end of the tunnel.

- Together.

- Together?

- Pink.

- You want pink? OK.

It changed everything for me,

and that part was like,

"Hey..."

Well done, Sach.

"You don't have to be ashamed

about nothing."

- Because of the way

human beings and

their minds are built,

Milli Vanilli's legacy is

they deceived the public

and tried to get away with it,

and then they didn't.

But what it should be

is a cautionary tale.

- All of the answers about

how pop music is made

rest in this story.

What we want to believe

our pop musicians to be

versus what they actually are.

- Show business is all part of

an illusion.

- But that is what pop music

is supposed to do.

It's supposed to take us to

an elsewhere.

Even if we say, "These people

deceived the public,"

so f*cking what?

Who was this harming?

- Ooh, ooh, ooh, I love you

I've met people that told me,

"Because of your voice,

my daughter's here today."

- It was such a big thing

for a lot of people.

- So many people went to their

high school prom with that.

That was good music,

and it's good music today.

- There's no real crime here,

if we're being honest.

But it cost a life.

It also cost both of them

lives that they could have had.

And the heartbreaking thing is

that their legacy then became

that of a punch line.

- There was a time when

I would avoid going in public

because when I heard someone

laugh,

I always thought it was

directed to me.

But now I've reached a point

where I've embraced the past.

I'm proud of being

Milli Vanilli.

I'm proud of being who I am.

We're going back down

memory lane with some more.

Woo

Got to blame it on

something

Got to blame it on something,

come on

Blame it on the rain

that was falling, falling

Blame it on the stars

that didn't shine that night

Whatever you do,

don't put the blame on you

Blame it on the rain,

yeah, yeah

When people think of

Milli Vanilli...

You can blame it

on the rain

The one thing I want people

to think of is that

when you fall...

And the rain don't care

You can stand back up.

You got to blame it

on something

Blame it on the rain

And Rob is part of that.

I am honoring his name

every time I perform onstage.

Whatever you do,

don't put the blame on you

You fall, you stand back up,

and you reinvent yourself.

Yeah, yeah

That's the legacy.

Blame it on the rain

that was falling, falling

crowd:

Blame it on the stars

- That didn't shine

that night

Whatever you do,

don't put the blame on you

Blame it on the rain

Yeah, yeah

- Baby, don't be shy

when you're holding my hand

'Cause as time goes by,

you got to understand

It's you

- That it's with you

- Ba-ba-ba-ba baby, in your

eyes I see it so clearly

That our love is so strong

and you never go wrong

- Baby

- I did the best for you

- So when you're in doubt

and you're needing someone

Baby, call my line,

call me anytime

- Baby

- I'll be there for you

I've been searching high

- High

- I've been searching low

Ba-ba-ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba baby

Don't forget my number

- Ba-ba-ba-ba,

ba-ba-ba-ba baby

- Love is stronger

than thunder

Ba-ba-ba-ba,

ba-ba-ba-ba baby

Don't forget my number

Love will see you through

- I've been searching high

I've been searching low

Want to spend my life

With you

Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba

And I dance with you

Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba

Love will see you through

Ba-ba-ba baby, in your eyes

I can it so good

That our love is so strong

and you never go wrong

- Baby

- I do my best for you

So when you're in doubt

and you're needing someone

Baby, call my line,

call me anytime

- Baby

- I'll be there for you

You, you

I've been searching high

- High

- I've been searching low

- Low

- Ba-ba-ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba baby

Don't forget my number

- Ba-ba-ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba baby

- Love is stronger

than thunder

Ba-ba-ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba baby

Don't forget my number

Love will see you through

- I've been searching high

I've been searching low

Want to spend my life

With you

- Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba ba-ba

Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba

Love will see you through

- Baby, call my line,

baby, call my line

- Call me anytime

- Ba-ba-ba-ba baby

Don't forget my number

Love will see you through

- Is Eddie OK?

- I don't know.
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