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By the way, Weird Al had to buy the rights to the tune before he could play it.
Yes of course, and notice I did mention that Wierd Al had to pay MJ royalty for the tune as it used for commercial purpose. It has nothing to do with doing parody or doing a straight cover version. Thousands of performers mimicked MJ and Elvis dance moves on stage, even complete with replica clothings, whether amateur or professional. I didn't hear MJ and Elvis complained or sued. The point is they're not claiming to be MJ or Elvis. They're actually paying a compliment to them as masters by learning, mimicking and practising all those moves (tricks in the case of magic).
A good and gracious master would be well pleased. Only a petty one throws a tantrum with a thin and untenable disguise under intellectual property rights.