Well said !
I actually believe she should have NEVER have an Instagram or Facebook or Tweeter account. Those places just bring in
more problems than do any good.
Its already known that many artists and musicians actually do donate alot of their money to worthy causes,
without even making it a public annoucement. Only years later do we find out what they did.
Look what PRINCE and George Michael did for years and was only discovered after their deaths.
- After Prince's death, stories of his quiet, behind-the-scenes charity started to come out. Civil rights leader Rev Al Sharpton took
to Twitter to describe him as a "sincere humanitarian" and told how Prince would give him money to convey quietly to people such
as the family of Trayvon Martin. He also donated a quarter of a million to solar power startups, another quarter to an organisation
helping struggling families in South Carolina, and another quarter to a dance academy in New York. An entire million dollars went
to a Harlem-based non-profit organisation for inner-city children living in poverty.
- As with Prince, the full extent of George Michael's generosity only became clear after his death. His contributions to Band Aid,
Live Aid and Comic Relief were already well known, but he kept other donations out of the press, ranging from £2m donated to a
counselling service for children and young people, to small hand-outs to strangers such as a woman he saw on Deal or No Deal
who needed £9000 for IVF treatment. He gave large lump sums to cancer and HIV charities, and volunteered quietly at a homeless
shelter. He also donated the proceeds from his huge hit live version of Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me with Elton John to
charities including a centre for those affected by HIV and AIDS, and a trust which helps the families of terminally ill children.
And rather than leave it in private hands, he purchased the piano on which John Lennon wrote Imagine for £1.45m and
gave it to Liverpool's Beatles Story Museum.