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Michael Jackson: Imperfect Icon
Michael Jackson was not a political artist. Yet his determination to treat people with AIDS respectfully made him more than a pop star.
This is a big world, with many remote corners where America is known only as a distant and different land. But Michael Jackson touched almost all of them.
The music star's death Thursday, at age 50 after suffering an apparent cardiac arrest is an international event. And we ought to recognize why that is so.
For all the eccentric – and ultimately unsettling – behavior that would see the "king of pop" ridiculed as the "king of weird" –-or worse-- Jackson was for a significant part of the 1980s and 1990s as much or more the face of America as Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush or Bill Clinton.
"He brought human beings together across the barriers of race and class and gender," explained Michael Eric Dyson, the author and commentator who is a professor of sociology at Georgetown University. "He projected into the world (the genius and strength) of African-American culture."
The better part of a quarter century before Barack Obama was credited with remaking America's global image, Michael Jackson presented the United States as a country where an African-American kid from Gary, Indiana, could on the basis of remarkable talent and drive -- as well as a musicologist's understanding of the soul and R&B traditions -- become fabulously successful, fabulously influential and fabulously wealthy.
"For all his tragic flaws as a human being, Jackson could legitimately be seen as the greatest entertainer of his generation," argues Richard Williams, the former head of head of artists and repertoire at Island Records who went on to become a savvy cultural commentator for Britain's Guardian newspaper.
One did not need to revere Jackson or his music to recognize that at a particular point in this country's long and complicated history of wrestling with its better angels and uglier demons, the singer projected to the world the sense and the promise of a multicultural and tolerant United States. Hip-hop empresario Russell Simmons summed it up: "Michael Jackson was my generation's most iconic cultural hero."
For a time, on the basis of the enormous popularity of his Off the Wall, Thriller and Bad albums, he was not just a dominant figure in popular music. He was the dominant figure in popular music. Inducted twice into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame – as a solo artist and as a member of the Jackson 5 -- he earned 13 Grammy Awards and 13 number one singles as a solo performer -- achieving worldwide sales in excess of 750 million albums.
The key word is "worldwide."
Jackson's 1991 hit "Black or White" charted at number one in the Australia , Austria, Belgium, Cuba, Denmark, Finland, France, Israel, Italy, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, Sweden, the Unites Kingdom, Zimbabwe and, of course, the United States.
"Black or White" was an angry song with an anti-racist message that was reinforced by a video digitally enhanced to show Jackson smashing windows with graffiti reading "KKK Rules" and "No More Wetbacks." The ubiquitous video featured the singer dancing with Africans, Asians, Native Americans, southern Asians and Russians.
Jackson was not an expressly political artist -- he told Ebony magazine in 1992 that "I never get into politics." Yet, because of his immense celebrity in the 1980s and early 1990s, his determination to treat people with AIDs respectfully (like that of Princess Diana and Elizabeth Taylor) took on significance that was both political and cultural. That commitment was most on display, following the death of Ryan White, when Jackson used public appearances – particularly one at Bill Clinton's inaugural gala -- to plead for more funding of HIV/AIDS research and care.
Jackson's charities were many: programs for refugees and the victims of violence such as Warchild, the "We Are the World" project and his own Heal the World Foundation, as well as the the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund, the Red Cross, UNESCO and for many years the United Negro College Fund.
His stumbles, especially in recent years, were disturbing, at times horrifying. There was about this desperate manchild more than a hint of the tragic and self-destructive.
The tragedy and the trials will be remembered, for a time.
But, as with Elvis Presley and so many brilliant artists whose lives ended after their stars had been tarnished, it will be the iconic influence – an influence stretching across boundaries of race, class, gender and nationality -- that is most remembered when we speak of Michael Jackson, and the ultimately most significant.
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100 Comments so far
Show All"For all the eccentric – and ultimately unsettling – behavior that would see the 'king of pop' ridiculed as the 'king of weird' –-or worse-- Jackson was for a significant part of the 1980s and 1990s as much or more the face of America as Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush or Bill Clinton."
And which of Jackson's many faces would that have been?
Michael Jackson left us years ago; his body just hung around too long.
I think that it's a mistake to try to place more importance on the lives and careers of cultual icons than they deserve. Yes, Jackson made his contributions to our entertainment and was more than amply rewarded for doing so. Beyond the excitement of his music and dancing, he really meant little else to any of us.
Perhaps now he has some peace. Those most directly involved with him need to see to the welfare of his children.
q
Well said.
Not to take anything away from Jackson's mourners, but all the media hype and personal wailing over Jackson (how many news cycles will this last?) is a symptom of a much larger societal dysfunction.
I do hope this one tortured soul has peace. I hope this for every tortured soul. Basically, all of us.
"(How many news cycles will this last?)"
My guess, years. The autopsy results will take a week or two and if the findings are as bizarre as some of the people close to him suggest the fall-out from that could last years more. Also the legal battles over his estate and finances will carry on for many more years.
Will his music hold up for years? My guess, yes. With Michael’s passing his questionable life choices will no longer be a distraction from his gifts of music, dance and style which may well entertain us for many generations to come.
Agreed!
Beyond the strangeness of MJ's transgendered, transracial personae, beyond his considerable charisma and talent as an entertainer, what will remain in my mind is this picture of a tragically abused and used human being (as were all the Jackson kids) who was never allowed to be a normal child or person.
Shame on the cruel and heartless Jackson parents for what they allowed themselves to do to all their children. All the money, fame, or talent in the world is not sufficient compensation for such abuse.
Poet
You've been watching too many Hollywood movies Poet - although that sounds harsh.
Always blame the dad eh? Dads are universally bad people in this age aren't
they?
Any blame on Michael's side? Any? It wasn't the Dad that thrust the needle into his son's arm time after time.
Could be, the father was simply looking at a bad reality (racial discrimination, civil rights, the 60's) and trying something that he thought might work to bring him and his kids out of it.
Corporal punishment was considered normal in that age - nobody knew any different.
Today we're trying something different - pharmaceuticals among other things.
As for blaming the Dad, you might want to get his story first, also the kid's.
“Milton Friedman’s misfortune is that his policies have been tried.”
---John Kenneth Galbraith
bvconway, I am one of those who blames his dad - because I do feel that a sensitive child (which MJ probably was) could carry the scars all his life, no matter how much success they achieve externally. Many, many years ago, I read the book called "Emotional Intelligence" which talks about how conventional IQ is so meaningless and what really mattered was emotional balance. I'm pretty sure Michael Jackson's disturbed behavior in later life had something to do with his childhood.
But again, after reading your post, I've to think, yeah, his dad probably did what he thought was best for the kids, and most likely with no malice towards them. Maybe he himself had issues to sort out - who knows?
I wouldn't take a simplistic approach of blaming only the dad - because MJ's life could have turned out differently if he had found a great partner in later life. I think it's important - because once someone is scarred in childhood, the healing is hard - so another person's love does help in the healing. But being a celebrity makes it all the more difficult to find true love. I'm not offering any conclusions here - I'm just thinking out loud...about a tragic story.
I truly wish people worldwide would stop wasting their time trying to outdo each other in being supposedly so saddened and sorry that Jackson is dead.
There's so much more in the world that fervently cries out for recognition and emotion rather than a performer who supposedly was an outstanding cultural 'icon' and who people delude themselves over that he was just 'troubled'.
If the baby he dangled over a hotel balcony had dropped, or people pressed charges rather than being persuaded to be paid off, and if Jackson had've been around rather than sculking off to a country to beat the heat, then the world would have had a much different opinion of Jackson.
Everyone can stop drinking the Jesus Juice now.
Panem et circenses: for this, the American 'people' mobilize. Meanwhile, in Iran . . .
There is so much I love about Michael Jackson's music. I even saw his biography on TV years ago. I was the only one in my family who bothered to watch the life of Michael Jackson growing up in Gary, IN. Jackson's father abusing MJ all throughout his childhood put me in tears. My parents would nag me whenever they caught me listening to Michael Jackson and even when the media kept persecuting him, they and my two brothers used to side against him. I even tried to tell them that MJ grew up abused and yet wanted to help and heal but they wouldn't listen. The media persecuted MJ and now they're still doing it. Whatever MJ's personal faults, I still loved his music and what he did to join in the efforts to fight aids unlike most celebrities.
I often used to wonder and comment - if only there hadn't been that kind of childhood trauma in Michael Jackson's life...
There was this wellspring of creative genius in him that appealed to the common people, without cheapening their taste. How many can start a trend in music or dance moves that gets copied around the world, into the next generation? We take music videos for granted today. But it was MJ who showed to the world the power of this medium, and I can say that I have never come across a music video of MJ that uses cheap props such as scantily clad women or obscene displays of wealth or mindless graphics. Either by design or just naturally, he seemed to have maintained a certain level of decency in his songs and videos while supremely entertaining at the same time. His concerts were trendsetters too - not just in their technical extravagance - but in his personal commitment to entertain his fans. While Michael Jackson clearly enjoyed the power that money gave him and sought it actively (buying the rights for the Beatles catalog, e.g.), looking at his whole life, I think money was clearly secondary to him - though the latest concert tour was planned perhaps as a desperate attempt to raise enough money to pay off his debts. I think Michael Jackson's life would become a classic case of what childhood abuse and trauma can do to a supremely gifted person. Abundant energy, creative genius, gentle, but disturbed soul and Greek tragedy are phrases that come to mind whenever I think of Michael Jackson...The 'king' will live on in my memories...
"While Michael Jackson clearly enjoyed the power that money gave him and sought it actively (buying the rights for the Beatles catalog, e.g.), looking at his whole life, I think money was clearly secondary to him - though the latest concert tour was planned perhaps as a desperate attempt to raise enough money to pay off his debts."
Well, with the rightwing media persecuting him and robbing him right and left, he had to do something to pay off his debts. Otherwise, I wholeheartedly agree with your reply.
Right. "Power" is the wrong word to use here. I'm not sure he was always surrounded by those with his best interests in mind, either. I meant the acquisition of the Beatles catalog rights as a compliment - because even in a money-making venture, he managed to find quality.
I sometimes wonder if his life would have been completely different if he had lived in a different country - maybe in Europe (like ABBA), with a normal childhood, but with the same creativity and energy. I always felt that Europeans connected to his songs such as the Earth Song much at a much deeper level...maybe my imagination...
One has to wonder that if were even half the amount of media coverage that has been devoted to Michael Jackson were to be focused upon what actually occurred on Sept. 11, 2001 [as opposed to the less than credible findings of the 9/11 Omission Report] then the truth might actually emerge regarding the events that transpired on that heinous day of 9/11/01.
I agree. I'll grant that MJ's death (did he really die, or is he going into hiding like Ken Lay?) may be news but not 24/7 for the next few weeks. The happiest person right now because of this is Mark Sanford. By the time the news tires of MJ, most people will have forgotten who Sanford even was. Besides the ill-covered what-really-happened-on-9/11, what about: where's Rumsfeld and what's he up to?; same with Wolfowitz, Cheney, etc. Maybe planning an Iranian War?
Great, so now we have moved on from Neda Soltan, the Iranian "martyr," to more important things, namely the death of Michael Jackson. I say let MJ rest in peace and, for MJ's fans, continue to enjoy his music.
In my eyes there were two Michael Jacksons. We were the same age, and so I remember when he first started with the Jackson Five. There was the Cowsills, the Jackson Five and the Osmond Brothers. I had their record and like a lot of girls who were between the ages of 10-13(the pre teen years) Michael Jackson was liked. I know some girls had crushes on him, though for me my crush was Barry Cowsill (who died in Katrina).
Then there were the years when he became solo and really made some great music. He was one of the greatest dancers of our generation, though John Travolta in Saturday Night Live made the hearts of ladies swoon. Michael Jackson was a very talented man. I choose to remember the good things about him today. He helped others with his We are the World Concerts. He did make a difference in this world. That was the good side of Michael Jackson.
The 2nd side of him was the weird side. The pictures in the later years didn't look like the same Michael Jackson that I grew up with. I believe that when someone dies that we should not speak ill of the dead. This is the time to think about the good that he did in life.
My heart goes out to his family as they are grieving the lost of a son and brother.
Yes, it is sad to be confronted with the actual fact, but I agree, with quickstepper, that "Michael left us years ago". It seems our greatest earthly challenge is to learn to love ourselves - no matter the abuse from outside sources. Unfortunately, many prefer to self-destruct. And the intention becomes reality. Entertainment success? Yes. Personal success? His name is added to a long list of others.
My favorite MJ song:
http://www.youtube.com/watchv=1zpTQCQEFhg&
feature=PlayList&p=3D4DD6E34E664F83&playnext
=1&playnext_from=PL&index=2
** You'll have to piece together the link
Did you mean Michael Jackson's "Man In The Mirror"? There's a cleaner way to post YouTube links - just click at the link where it says "URL" somewhere near the top-right (in the video info box), then copy using Ctrl-C. Also, your link above is missing a "?" between "watch" and "v" :). Anyway, here's the link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1zpTQCQEFhg
Thanks.
Ever since CD deactivated links I've had problems.
thriller and billie jean were incredible efforts, both musically and visually, and MJs talents are beyond debate, but I always understood the importance of the contributions of Q, the also amazingly talented Quincy Jones...not to take anything away from the young and awesome kid-version of MJ, or the billie jean-era MJ I referred to...once the pedophilia thing started, though, I found it impossible to ignore, which is what I have to struggle to do now to even tolerate hearing this music...I don't believe excellence in an art, or a sport, or being rich enough to buy the Beatles' catalog or famous enough to woo Elvis' daughter, cancels out sexual victimization of children...this doesn't deny his own childhood world may have been full of trauma as well as success, just that neither responsibility nor character are selective...what a pity to have such talent, and such enjoyable music, forever tainted by such abhorrent behavior...
Like Jackson, Borax Obysmal is also undergoing a change to his appearance. He is looking more and more each day like George Wanker Bush.
Michael Jackson wasn't a sellout unlike Obama. At least Jackson tried to help. It was his father who abused him in his childhood and later the rightwing media who persecuted him and don't get me started with Nancy Grace and her sick ilk. Please don't tie MJ to Obama.
Michael Jackson's songs never have been my cup of tea. If he did charitable deeds and such, that is to his honor, naturally. But I persist in thinking that songs and music are one thing, and that charity is another thing (Bill Gates, too, does charitable deeds).
At any rate, I never had much to say about Michael Jackson, and I still don't, really, save for these observations:
Michael Jackson's musically productive years are nearly exactly coextensive with the Reagan years. Somehow, the narcissism of the man, his craving for fame and adulation, and his embrace of the Warholian attitude of art as business seemed to be the perfectly spectacular and diversionary match to Reaganism and its pathologies.
After those years of triumph, Michael Jackson just couldn't keep up with his surgeons any more and he appeared increasingly as a massively mismanaged business venture, beset by sex scandals and endless lawsuits -- a bit like the Republican Party.
"After those years of triumph, Michael Jackson just couldn't keep up with his surgeons any more and he appeared increasingly as a massively mismanaged business venture, beset by sex scandals and endless lawsuits -- a bit like the Republican Party."
One difference though. MJ did not do what he was accused of while the pols involved in sex scandels and questionable business practices were proven guilty or at least confessed knowing they couldn't get away with it. I do not believe the rightwing media nonsense against MJ just like I don't believe them on almost anything they spout out.
Yes, he was cleared of those accusations. But I did not say that he was guilty of the charges leveled against him. I merely said that he was beset by scandals and lawsuits. Yes, that does differentiate him from the Republican criminals.
What do you mean by "Michael Jackson's musically productive years"? Of course he was young and bursting with energy during the Reagan years. But you seemed to have missed out on Michael Jackson's evolution on to different themes in the 1990's. You probably didn't care much for "the Earth Song" (and its superb video) or songs like "You're not alone"...or his live performances in the 1990's...such as the one in Munich (where he performs the Earth Song among others)...
No, no, I did not miss out on his 90's things.
All I have to say is Michael Jackson was a good man. I'm sorry to see him go. May his soul rest.
He is now moon walking to that great child-care center in the sky.
Bubbasouth, that is disgusting !
Ray Berthiaume
I was amazed at how differently we took Bubbasouth's comments. My first reaction was: What a beautiful image. I think Michael was an eternal child, a Peter Pan if you will. I think he is quite at home with the young ones of heaven.
Michael Jackson is surely banging kids night and day now that he does not have to worry about the law. Good riddance you pathetic child molester.
Michael Jackson could not be proven guilty of child molesting in any case brought against him unless I missed one. Please show evidence and provide us a link to a case where he was actually found guilty of molesting a child or shut your face.
There is a lot of difference between a legal verdict of "Not Guilty" and Innocent.
I don't know if that's what BubbaSouth meant but he should have spelled it out more clearly.
I've never paid much attention to Michael Jackson because I never liked his music and celebrities simply do not interest me. Even though I was raised near Detroit and grew up on Motown, I honestly hated hearing him as a little ten year-old boy singing about romantic love, and I hated hearing how his father slave-drove the Jackson Five to fame. I regard the rise of the Jackson Five as the beginning of the end of the Motown era.
My take on it is simple: if you take a baby elephant from the wild and force it to learn and perform circus routines, it will suffer emotionally and die young. I think that's just what happened to Michael. He was used and abused as a child, then, as a "star," pampered and indulged by sycophants. He never had a chance at a normal life, and was clearly mentally ill from a very young age. Now it's all over but for a few months of pretentious adulation, tabloid gossip and retrospectives. The celebrity industry will grind his bones to make their bread and then move on. In a hundred years or so, his music will be all but forgotten.
FastEddie, Your take seems pretty much right to this observer.
Sioux Rose
FAST EDDIE: The elephant analogy makes sense.
I shed a tear seeing how Farrah and Michael seem to have left on the same cosmic express train. They are 12 years apart, and the 12-year cycle is related to Jupiter, the planet, I kid you not, of excursions.
When Mother Theresa died close to Princess Diana, I thought those two were on the same cosmic shuttle, too. What Princess Di tried to do to stop the proliferation of land mines reminded me of the efforts of Mother Theresa in bringing the plight of the poorest into comfortable living rooms everywhere.
Talent is a form of grace, as is beauty; and some amazing beings whatever their imperfections have left us to move onto other spheres, manifest or otherwise. May their talents continue to grow wherever they ARE.
>>>Sioux Rose wrote: Talent is a form of grace, as is beauty...
That's how I feel...it's almost as if Michael Jackson's talent was nature's gift...I wonder if his life can make more sense if viewed from an Eastern viewpoint, based on karma, past lives and so on...Sometimes tragedies cannot be explained by a 'conventional' approach, I think.
I found his "Earth Song" and the video as an expression of his deep humanity...
Sioux Rose
ALCYON: I think Michael remained a child and liked to play with them. I know some VIRGO persons ARE sexual, but I think Michael was asexual (also a Virgo), and therefore what conventional people take for taboo behavior may be more a matter of their own projections than anything the fellow was remotely guilty of. If someone has millions of dollars, never had a childhood and thus dedicates money to creating "Neverland" as his home domain, would he populate such a zone with dead soul suited stockbrokers? Jesus said, "Be ye as children to enter the kingdom," and the quote means, to retain our innocence. In Egyptian mythology after death the deceased individual's heart is balanced on a scale against a feather! The implication is the heart must be light, free of baggage, and the heaviest baggage is guilt, added to anger, and the debts we believe others owe to us. This is another reason why all the Masters instruct their followers on the importance of forgiveness and letting go. Karma DOES keep score, and I don't think anyone in this forum can answer for what Michael Jackson did or didn't do. My favorite music to exercise to years ago was the albumn "Thriller." I owe a lot of lost calories and a shapely figure in part to Michael. Thanks, Michael! I know you are AN innocent who never left childhood behind.
When I said karma, I meant karma from a past life or past lives...The immense talent could also be a result of some deep longing from a past life...I wasn't referring to what MJ may or may not have done in this life :)
I agree about people's projections...In some societies (perhaps many societies?) children do sleep together with their parents at least until they are 10 years old - partly because the house is not big enough, and partly because it's the most natural thing for a family to sleep together (and mom and dad need to sneak out for some 'alone time' for themselves). Of course, these were not MJ's kids - but I remember seeing his interview once where he says it's the most loving thing - to share one's bed with a kid...or something like that. But this is America - and there are plenty more lawyers than perhaps the whole world needs, looking for 'work', and celebrities are prime target - so MJ should have known better...Oh well...
I read an intriguing book a few years ago about Reincarnation (Return of the Revolutionaries by Walter Simkiw), which gives theories about certain famous people's possible past life incarnations (such as Halle Berry being the reincarnation of Dorothy Dandridge). There is a certain list of criteria that the author uses to make the determination (such as similar facial architecture, personalities, interests, talents, and especially a kind of poetic synchronicity or symmetry between the two lives). Anyhow, the author speculated that he believed Michael Jackson might have been the reincarnation of one of Sally Hemings offspring with Thomas Jefferson. One of her sons was supposedly a talented entertainer.
From a spiritual standpoint, I think the question we might get asked upon arrival to the spiritual realm is if we have helped more people than we harmed. Even if Michael Jackson molested the kids he was accused of, that number could not have numbered higher than the tens of millions of people around the world who were affected by his music and humanitarianism. I believe we all get a life review, where we see the impact we had on others (both good and bad) and then we judge ourselves. The question the soul of MJ must answer for himself is, did he accomplish what he set out to accomplish in this lifetime? I think the answer to that would be a phenomenal YES! And then some. He transformed our culture. I doubt that President Obama could have gotten elected president in 2008 if someone like Michael Jackson (along with Michael Jordan and Bill Cosby) hadn't come along first to change the popular culture (after all, MTV didn't show videos by black artists until MJ changed the game. Music videos were lame until "Billie Jean", "Beat It" and "Thriller"). Rest in peace, MJ!
sansego, so true - especially your second paragraph.
'Thriller Freak' was born a black male and died a white female. What a weirdo.
I just hope this doesn't turn into a huge media extravaganza like Reagan's funeral. Of course it won't affect me if it does. I haven't watched TV since I was in high school.
Sorry Jennifer, I have to agree with RMouse on this one. I have no respect for child molesters.
Michael Jackson was accused of being a child molester but in all cases, he was found not guilty unless I missed one where he was. Unless it can actually be proven even once that Michael Jackson molested a child, you are making an incorrect assumption that Michael Jackson is a a child molester.
You seem to have a lot of faith in our system of justice, RoboCop99.
Do you agree with the outcome of every court decision? Are there no innocent people in prisons and on death row? Was OJ Simpson not guilty of murdering his wife (Nichole was a classmate of mine in high school) because he was found not guilty? Who shot JFK?
Wake up! You watch too much television. And why do you call yourself RoboCop? Are you a robot and a cop? Get real!
"You seem to have a lot of faith in our system of justice, RoboCop99."
At least I don't believe in guilty until proven innocent form of justice. Is that what you want?
"Do you agree with the outcome of every court decision? Are there no innocent people in prisons and on death row? Was OJ Simpson not guilty of murdering his wife (Nichole was a classmate of mine in high school) because he was found not guilty? Who shot JFK?"
I don't make personal decisions without proof sir. If it cannot be proven beyond reasonable doubt then it's just a personal opinion that cannot be determined if it is true or false.
"Wake up! You watch too much television. And why do you call yourself RoboCop? Are you a robot and a cop? Get real!"
That was just a nickname I chose because I was a big fan of the movies and series. And why do you call yourself Moondoggy?
"And why do you call yourself Moondoggy?"
OK big fan of the "King Of Pop", if you really want to know. I am a Farmer, Rancher, and Organic Gardener. Put it together using first letters = F.R.O.G, or FROG. And I grow trees. Our ranch is a registered Tree Farm. So, put it together, and you get Tree FROG, or, my local nickname: Treefrog.
My step-daughter refers to me as Treefroggy and eventually added Moondoggy because it rhymes. So she calls me Treefroggy Moondoggy. We all have nicknames for each other. One of her's is Rosebud. Her middle name is Rose. And since she's my buddy, I call her Rose Buddy. Her first name is Apryll, so her friends often call her Ape, for short, or as her friend Brody calls her, ApeDog.
So, when I first started posting on Common Dreams I was going to use my nickname Treefrog, but I soon discovered there already was a Treefrog posting here. So, I naturally chose my nick-last-name, Moondoggy. The Moondoggy part also refers to my Astrological sun sign, which is Cancer. Cancer sounds like a disease. Another name for Cancers are Moon Children, because according to Astrological lore, Cancer is ruled by the Moon.
I guess that's probably more than you wanted to know, but you asked!