I found this article while searching the net. Im not sure if its true or not but Im pretty sure it is. All I know
is that it is so touching and sweet, and I just want to warn you that you might need tissues. Its pretty sad, but a very sweet story, so I just wanted to let you know its a tear jerker. Let me know what you think of it.
~Jamie
'N Sync: Fulfilling Dreams
"Bananas have no lips. Peel banana, peel peel banana..."
A soft, sing-song voice croons through the ward of the German children's hospital. Nurses
stand around, not saying a word, their lips pressed together with smiles. At the center of the
attention is a young, curly-haired Adonis, surrounded by children, some of whom will never
get better. He is cross-legged on the floor, at their eye level, singing simple poems. And
although the children do not speak English, the point of this meeting reaches them. "Lean
to the left, lean to the right..." he sings, and the children break out in laughter as they follow
his movements. When the meeting is over, the children gather around him, clutching pads
of paper for him to sign. Nurses thank him for stopping by. He smiles lightly and leaves
without a trace. On the ride down the elevator, none of the doctors take notice of his watery
red eyes and quivering chin.
Outside of the hospital, he hops into a waiting limo and returns to his life as Justin
Timberlake, the youngest member of the American quintet, 'N Sync. His four bandmates
are involved in a project today. Justin, sick with a nagging case of laryngitis, chose his
activity for the day. At this point in time, he seems more saint than sex symbol. He is just
17, but this sudden meeting makes his face seem older. "We haven't been there in a
while," he says, shivering and bundling up into a quilted jacket. "It's very sad, because there
were kids here last year who you knew wouldn't be there the next time. Actually going back
makes it more realistic."
Justin arrives back at his hotel, where a steady stream of adoring fans stand out side.
Taking notice of the arriving limo, they instantly break out into a screaming frenzy. Justin is
tired, worn out from constant travel, and although he denies it, a bit crinkled from the
shedding of a few tears. Yet out into the mob he wanders, surrounded by heavy security
and a faceless sea of adolescence. "Justin!" one screams. "I love you!" He patiently
shakes hands and signs more papers. A ball whizzes by his head, just barely hitting him,
and that's when security rushes him insides. Justin is in the lobby, a bit shaken, and hidden
behind the teenage mask of cockiness is a sign that he is, in fact, terrified of the mass
hysteria.
Sauntering through the lobby at that particular moment is Justin's bandmate, Chris
Kirkpatrick. Chris, considered ancient at the age of 27, is a severe, dangerous looking
fellow who sports his hair in an array of tiny braids. One sentences from him changes that
initial impression. "Yo!" he screams across the lobby, causing a few people to turn in
annoyance. "They've got free cheese in the dining room!" Chris is childlike in demeanor
while Justin, ten years his junior, is quiet and guarded. On the ride up in the elevator, Chris
can hardly contain himself from telling a joke he just got off the internet. Stopping off at a
middle floor, we get out... but Chirs cannot contain himself from pushing every button in the
elevator, which will make it stop at every floor in the building. This is all it takes to send
Justin into a laughing hysteria.
I meet with the boys in a suite of rooms. JC Chasez, 22, is something like the typical
boy-next-door, almost naive, but very driven. Joey Fatone, 21, a teddy bear-like fellow with
facial hair, is feeling cheeky today, and hugs every female in sight. Ending out the mix is
Lance Bass, 19, very blonde with a kind faace, who talks gently with a smile. "See this?"
says Joey, turning his face to reveal a red scratch, not too big, but deep enough to be
hurtful. "Where did you get that?" I ask, and my question causes the other four boys to
exchange knowing glances. "Fingernail, " he says. "See the shape? It's shaped like a nail."
It turns out that Joey received his prize just moments ago, working his way through the mob
of fans. A girl tried reaching up to touch his hair, and somehow she ended up scratching
her idol when the crowd surged forward. Joey is quick not to blame, however. "Security
made us come inside, " he says. "I'm sure she would have apologized, if she had been
given the chance." Nobody is going to take a chance with the wound, as it is quickly rinsed
with alcohol. "Joey always gets hurt, " says Chris, light-heartedly but at the same time
concerned. "He used up a lot of makeup on our first European tour. All those black eyes to
cover up." "What can I say?" says Joey, smiling. "I'm just lucky." Nobody asks anybody else
about anything else regarding that day. Instead they gather in one room for lunch. They
seem rather unspoiled and simple popping open soda cans and piling Swiss cheese and
assorted meat onto slices of bread. "Where's the caviar?" I ask jokingly. "Haha!" Justin
cries with his mouth full, clearly feeling better after his fuel charge. "We ate some of that
once, and all of us spent the day taking turns in the bathroom on the bus. We were sick.
Except Joey." Joey stands across the room, hears the comment, and pats his stomach with
a smile.
After the meal, it is time to head down to a local radio station for an on-air interview. The
fans still wait outside, but security isn't taking any more chances. They are escorted out a
back way, where it is quiet. The limo drives around to the front, where the girls see it and
once again begin their charade. One girl manages to climb up on the back of the limo. The
driver, infuriated, blows his horn and slams the brakes. We always check behind us when
we drive off, " Chris explains, "to make sure nobody is lying dead in the street." The traffic
is heavy on this late day, and the ride is long. But it gives 'N Sync enough time to
comtemplate the immediate givings of life. "Yeah, we cry sometimes," says JC, speaking
of the downside of fame. "You feel lonely. Isolated. I think that's normal. But we accept that.
We're doing something we want to do. We're going to enjoy this opportunity while it's here."
"You cry?" asks Chris teasingly. "Not I!" "Chris cries when he reads fan mail, " barks
Lance. "He's happy because people like him." "Chris cried every night the first week of our
first tour," laughs Justin. "So did you," says Chris, blushing. "OK, I take that first comment
back." 'N Sync may be well loved in Europe, but they only recently broke out this year in
their homeland, where they now spend most of their time. This trip back to Europe is to
basically let their fans know that they are not forgotten. "It has always been this crazy here,"
says Joey, waving his arms around. "We'd go back home to Florida, live anonymously, go
to movies, clubs, whatever." "Yeah, it was like a game, " says Chris. "To go from insanity to
being nobody, really. Well, there were some fans. But for the most part, it was like telling
somebody you were in a band big overseas, and they laughed at you. Like it was some
huge pick-up line or something."
Reaching the radio station, I am ready to leave the group when I choose to venture inside. I
sit through the interview, listening as the guys churn out pre-planned answers to fans
through an interpreter. After an hour, I follow them to a back room, where a worker's
daughter is waiting patiently. She is 10 years old, is dying from a rare form of cancer which
has stunted her growth, yet she told her father she refused to leave this world until she met
her idols. She is brutally honest. "I have something to tell you, " she manages to whisper,
and Chris bends down to listen, and nobody else can hear. The guys pile back into the
limo, and Chris joins them a few minutes later, waving at fans. Once he hops inside, his
eyes are red and teary, his face showing the same hollowed expression that Justin
displayed hours earlier. "She told Chris she feels safe enough to let go now, " explains a
female, smiling. Chris, biting a fingernail and trying to remain composed, looks out the
window and ends on one thought. "That little girl, " he says, "is what makes everything
worthwhile."