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Music Manager More Interested in Boys Than Bands
Written by Lou Pearlman Writer   
Tuesday, 23 October 2007

Lou Pearlman

 Take 5 with manager Lou Pearlman at an autograph session at Universal Studios in Los Angeles in 1999. Some of the band's members, along with other boy band members managed by Pearlman, now accuse the imprisoned impresario of exposing himself to them and showing them pornography. (Orlando Sentinel/ MCT/ Landov)

By RUSSELL GOLDMAN
Oct. 10, 2007

Awaiting trial on bank fraud charges and accused of scamming thousands of senior citizens out of millions of dollars, Lou Pearlman, the pop-music impresario who founded the Backstreet Boys, now faces the prospect of life in a big house very different from the 15,000-square-foot mansion he once occupied outside Orlando, Fla.

Just what took place in that house -- complete with movie theater, video games, pool table, swimming pool and a planned bowling alley -- has become the focus of a series of very different allegations by young men who claim Pearlman acted inappropriately, molested them or sought to exchange sex for help with their careers.

 

In the November issue of Vanity Fair, Pearlman, for the first time publicly, is described by several former singers, aspiring singers and their parents as a lecher, who used the same deceptive charms to cop cheap feels off teenage boys as he did to allegedly bilk 1,400 investors out of more than $300 million.

Pearlman has since denied the allegations from prison.

In the late '90s, just as the Backstreet Boys and 'NSync, Pearlman's biggest boy bands, hit it big in the United States, Pearlman was grooming a stable of youngsters to take their place. After auditioning, these kids, some as young as 13, were relocated to Orlando where they would regularly rehearse and spend their free time at Pearlman's home.

Another group of young men regularly at the house were a staff of personal assistants, some of whom told Vanity Fair they were promised jobs in bands in exchange for providing sexual favors to Pearlman.

While some boys and young men heard only rumors, others told Vanity Fair and ABCNews.com that Pearlman exposed himself to them, showed them pornography, took them to strip clubs, gave them sensual massages and openly propositioned them. They also said they saw other young people leaving Pearlman's bedroom late at night.

"Some guys joked about it. I remember [one singer] asking me, 'Have you let Lou b*** you yet?'" Steve Mooney told Vanity Fair. In his early 20s Mooney worked as Pearlman's personal assistant and lived in his home for two years in the hopes that he would be put into one of Pearlman's bands.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 23 October 2007 )
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Lou Pearlman Battles Boys' Touching Tales
Written by Lou Pearlman Writer   
Tuesday, 23 October 2007
Lou Pearlman Battles Boys'
Touching Tales

pearlman_100907_fresh.jpg
FRESH TOWEL? Pearlman
Accused of defrauding investors of as much as $500 million, boy-band impressario Lou Pearlman has spent the last four months quietly locked up in a Florida pen awaiting trial on federal charges. But he's not about to take the latest nasty allegations against him lying down. At issue is an explosive article in the November issue of Vanity Fair that claims the rotund producer who discovered such pop princes as *NSYNC, Backstreet Boys, and O-Town had inappropriate relationships with many of the young men and boys he made famous.
Among other charges, writer Bryan Burrough alleges that Pearlman frequently groped his young band members, showed them porn, and, in one graphically described instance, suggests an aspiring young singer perform a sexual act on him in exchange for a spot in a band.

Since his incarceration, on the advice of his attorneys, the usually voluble businessman has kept remarkably tight-lipped, declining to speak to any media outlet besides Radar, which snagged a brief jailhouse interview with him in October. But in light of the "slander" generated by Vanity Fair, Pearlman says he can no longer keep quiet. "A great deal of that story needs to be corrected," he says, claiming that many of the magazine's sources had their own axes to grind, and he complains that he never had a chance to respond to any of the story's charges. "This article is clearly biased and one-sided without substantial evidence."

Radar reached out to the pop Svengali through a close friend of his this week, offering him a chance to correct the record. Asked whether anything sexual or inappropriate ever went on with his artists, Pearlman tells Radar, "We are all good friends and had a normal friendship with no inappropriate activity." Asked whether he's gay, Pearlman says straight up, no. "I don't think there is anything wrong [with having one's] own sexual preference, but no, I've never dated nor have I been interested in men sexually."

After the jump, we present Pearlman's point-by-point response to the story that is burning up the blogs ...

On Phoenix Stone, an early edition Backstreet Boys member who claims Pearlman crossed the line with Nick Carter:
LOU PEARLMAN: "Phoenix Stone left the Backstreet Boys and was replaced by Brian Littrell. He came back years later, and I tried to help Phoenix again, but his fan base never materialized. He brought a frivolous [lawsuit] soon after when he couldn't find his fame. It was settled amicably, I thought."

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LOU: NO TOWEL COULD FIT ME
Written by Lou Pearlman Writer   
Tuesday, 23 October 2007

October 10, 2007 -- DISGRACED boy band founder Lou Pearlman - who created *NSYNC and the Backstreet Boys and launched Justin Timberlake's career - is finally speaking out about the Vanity Fair article that depicted him as a pervy pedophile. Pearlman - who was accused of inappropriate behavior with Nick Carter and wrestling boys in a towel that conveniently fell off - told Radaronline's Tyler Gray the VF story is "one-sided." "I think Vanity (un)Fair sought out anyone who had a lawsuit or grudge with me or my company to help make disparaging remarks. They never sought any proof or checked for accuracy," Pearlman said. He denies any sexual misconduct. As for the towel incident, porcine Pearlman told Gray, who is writing a book on true crime and boy bands, that the story was made up: "I've never owned a towel that could wrap all the way around me anyway." A Vanity Fair spokeswoman said, "Mr. Pearlman's comments are ludicrous. We stand by our story."

 
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