During his life, Michael Jackson's hair was at the center of a legal dispute. When he filmed a Pepsi commercial, the pyrotechnics on the set set his hair aflame, leading to a lawsuit against the soft drink company. In that case, Jackson donated his $1.5 million settlement to the burn unit that treated him.
Now, after his death, his hair is raising an issue central to bioethics: What right do people have to control the use of their tissue?
During the ill-fated commercial–which some commentators think led to the singer's use of painkillers–executive producer Ralph Cohen picked up charred hairs from the floor. John Reznikoff, a hair collector, purchased the hair and now has an arrangement with an Elk Grove Village, Illinois company, Life Gems, to create man-made diamonds out of the carbon in Jackson's hair.