Michael Jackson’s estate released a two-hour concert video on YouTube, Sunday, just as HBO premiered the first part of itsexplosive new documentaryLeaving Neverland, prompting criticism that the late singer’s family was deflecting from horrific allegations of sexual abuse.

Leaving Neverland, atwo-part documentarythat chronicles allegations from two men, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, who claim Jackson abused them as children, made its television premiere Sunday on HBO.

Jackson’s estate, which has sued HBO and slammed the documentary as “another rehash of dated and discredited allegations,” had other plans Sunday, dropping the concert footage on YouTube at the same time as the premiere.

Live in Bucharest: The Dangerous Tour, which was filmed in 1992, was put on YouTube “for a limited time,” a tweet from the estate read. Its run time is two hours, the same as part one ofLeaving Neverland.

The estate also announced that a second show,Live at Wembley July 16 1988, would hit YouTube Monday at 8 p.m., just asLeaving Neverland’s second and final part airs on HBO.

Jackson’s Twitter account had previously teased the concerts, and a tweet Sunday included a trailer for the show, featuring Jackson’s signature dance moves and enthusiastic crowd members.

“Don’t miss the magic from the King of Pop himself!” the tweets read. “Immerse yourself in Michael Jackson.”

Ron Wolfson/WireImage

leaving-neverland-2

“That’s a profoundly tone-deaf response to allegations of sexual abuse,” user @tedgesingwrote.

In a responsetweet, user @hatergene argued that the response was “perfectly on brand” for Jackson’s estate.

“They know what everyone else is talking about tonight and they hope this move will deflect the trajectory of the asteroid that is plummeting towards them,” he wrote. “Cynical yes but not tone deaf. They hear the tone. They just don’t care.”

Many agreed with the claim that the family shared the concerts as a means of distraction.

Both Safechuck and Robson claim the “Man in the Mirror” singer befriended them when they were children, and that their relationships quickly turned sexual.

Safechuck, who met Jackson when he was cast in the star’s 1986 Pepsi commercial, claims Jackson taught him how to masturbate, while Robson, who met Jackson when he was just 5 years old, says the star performed oral sex on him and kissed him.

Michael Jackson and James Safechuck.Dave Hogan/Getty Images

2750447DH03_E56978903

Jackson’s family has repeatedly denied all allegations put forth inLeaving Neverland, and said in a January statement the film was “yet another lurid production in an outrageous and pathetic attempt to exploit and cash in on Michael Jackson.”

Michael Jackson.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

ACR057517011

RELATED VIDEO: Michael Jackson Accusers Open Up About Once Testifying on His Behalf: ‘I Wish I Was Ready’ Then

Meanwhile, Jackson’s brothers Tito, Marlon and Jackie, as well as his nephew Taj, recently appeared onCBS This Morning, where they told host Gayle King they had not seen the documentary, but that the late pop star was “never inappropriate” with children.

CBS

jacksons

“I know my brother,” Jackie, 67, said. “I know what he stood for. What he was all about. Bringing the world together. Making kids happy. That’s the kind of person he was.”

“Michael’s training of me to testify began the first night that he started abusing me,” Robson alleged. “He started telling me that, ‘If anybody else ever finds out, we’ll both go to jail, both of our lives will be over.’ “

The men alsospoke with Oprah Winfreyfor a special calledOprah Winfrey Presents: After Neverland, which will air Monday night following the conclusion ofLeaving Neverland.

source: people.com