News Changed With The Death Of Michael Jackson

I don’t know how Michael Jackson spent his time off the stage. I’ve had a variety of people in the last 16 hours tell me about his abilities in crafting a pop song, how he was tortured and his legal woes regarding his unhealthy obsession with children. We will continue to be talked to death because Jackson was bigger than life when it comes to celebrity.

He was talented though.

He changed the way videos and music converged in the early days of MTV and I watched him sometimes with wonder of how he actually “made” MTV in many ways. The revolution always starts in the arts and he was an early leader. I grew up with him from his early appearances on variety shows of the early 70s, watched the TV show and was pretty much wowed like everyone else when he went solo. I didn’t buy his albums though because it wasn’t as much my thing as The Police, The B52s and new wave music from the UK during the Thriller years. You couldn’t help but appreciate him though. Eddie Van Halen’s guitar riff in Beat It was brilliant as was the distinctive bass line in Billie Jean. I don’t know if that was as much Jackson or Quincy Jones being pretty damned gifted.

There is no doubt that Jackson went into bizarro world later in his life but in the beginning, there wasn’t anything purer than the way he did things. I’ve always heard that our greatest strength are also our greatest weaknesses. I have no doubt that this is true in Michael Jackson’s case.

On another level, I’ve seen Twitter and Facebook blow up before over some issues when it comes to dying celebrities but yesterday proved that news has indeed changes faster than any of us could have predicted. It was a trial by fire yesterday. News outlets on Twitter reported his death, retracted, we waited for the credibility of someone other than TMZ and ultimately it came while my family played CNN in the background. I think TMZ had it first and news outlets need to watch web sites like it. You may not like them (I personally think they are too busy and a bit predatory) but they have become a force to be reckoned with. We also need to give some of the cable newsers credit for making sure the story was accurate with verification. It was a bizarre dance off between new media and traditional media both working. It was frustrating to watch but I think yesterday was that moment that news ultimately shifted permanently.

I went to my nieces softball game last night and, of course, this what people were talking about. The social event was filled with the discussion of some of us sandwichers who always grew up with Jackson around us. From his music, his celebrity, his bizarre physical changes over the years and ultimately the legal troubles he had, he was always around. There was some talk about his videos, which I think everyone can admit were fantastic.

So Michael Jackson is the celebrity death for this generation that rivals Elvis’ 32 years ago. Except Elvis’ passing was not broadcast on the Internet and back in the day we only had a handful of television channels.  We have compared the value of the younger Elvis to the older spandexed-wearing Elvis and I’m sure we will do that to Michael Jackson as well.

With Farrah Fawcett’s passing and that of the King of Pop, I’m feeling all of these four decades, campers. Intangible reminders of our own mortality always rears it’s head when celebrities pass. It’s real, yet we watch from a safe distance and wonder when it will be our turn.

Categories: Pop Culture

8 Responses to News Changed With The Death Of Michael Jackson

  1. I have to confess my own bias here; I heard TMZ had announced his death, and I waited for a CNN or an ABC or NBC to make it official. Something about them gives me the creeps.

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  3. Beth says:

    A relative my age called yesterday to say “do you think it’s true about Michael Jackson? Do you think he’s dead or in a coma?” – and I said “I think TMZ is right, and I think they’re right b/c they’ll pay someone inside to get the info – sure it’s dirty, but it works” – turns out TMZ was right about MJ, and I was right about TMZ.

    Sadly, I believed he was dead when I read the reports that Al Sharpton had shown up — Al is a professional mourner… & I knew it had to be true if he was there on the scene to get his face in front of a camera.

  4. newscoma says:

    I agree. I knew when Sharpton arrived, that Jackson was dead. I also think, from the TMZ perspective, they HAD to be right on this one or it would have been toast for them.

  5. skyhawkbbgirl says:

    What a drastic change of communication we witnessed yesterday! I believe it was the first of many instances where a regular peson will have the ability to “break” a story while news media are scrambling to verify. I truly believe paramedic arrives, he is clearly dead, one text or one post to Twitter or FB, started a snowball of truth all while official folks were just finding out. This weekend I could be on the lake witness Moby Dick’s grandson surface in Kentucky Lake take a pic, post on FB and be the ONLY one who saw!

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  7. Dave Parker says:

    Indeed, the times are a changin’.

    Your point about celebrity deaths reminding us of our own mortality is true, but could it also be that we mourn, conscously or not, because a part of us, the collective us, has died?

    Great post.

  8. Joe P. says:

    crikey — Elvis cashed out 32 years ago? dang i is old. as slow as news traveled way back then, i found out the day it happened even though i was being indoctrinated by Baptists in a summer camp in the hills of North Carolina. all the old folks there were actually gathered about a newspaper box talking about the headline — i don’t think there was a TV at the place.

    fortunately, i decided to spend my days at said camp with some hippies i had encountered and we went into this small nearby town and played pool and drank beer. that was way better than church camp.