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Michael Jackson's Death Was Sensationalized by the Same Corporate Media That Drove Him Insane

By Chris Hedges, Truthdig. Posted July 16, 2009.


The hubbub around Michael Jackson's death was orchestrated by the same corporate forces that drove him insane.
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In celebrity culture we destroy what we worship. The commercial exploitation of Michael Jackson’s death was orchestrated by the corporate forces that rendered Jackson insane. Jackson, robbed of his childhood and surrounded by vultures that preyed on his fears and weaknesses, was so consumed by self-loathing he carved his African-American face into an ever-changing Caucasian death mask and hid his apparent pedophilia behind a Peter Pan illusion of eternal childhood. He could not disentangle his public and his private self. He became a commodity, a product, one to be sold, used and manipulated. He was infected by the moral nihilism and personal disintegration that are at the core of our corporate culture. And his fantasies of eternal youth, delusions of majesty, and desperate, disfiguring quests for physical transformation were expressions of our own yearning. He was a reflection of us in the extreme.

His memorial service—a variety show with a coffin—had an estimated 31.1 million television viewers. The ceremony, which featured performances or tributes from Stevie Wonder, Brooke Shields and other celebrities, was carried live on 19 networks, including the major broadcast and cable news outlets. It was the final episode of the long-running Michael Jackson series. And it concluded with Jackson’s daughter, Paris, being prodded to stand in front of a microphone to speak about her father. Janet Jackson, before the girl could get a few words out, told Paris to “speak up.” As the child broke down, the adults around her adjusted the microphone so we could hear the sobs. The crowd clapped. It was a haunting echo of what destroyed her father.

The stories we like best are “real life” stories—early fame, wild success and then a long, bizarre and macabre emotional train wreck. O.J Simpson offered a tamer version of the same plot. So does Britney Spears. Jackson, by the end, was heavily in debt and had weathered a $22 million out-of-court settlement payment to Jordy Chandler, as well as seven counts of child sexual abuse and two counts of administering an intoxicating agent in order to commit a felony. We fed on his physical and psychological disintegration, especially since many Americans are struggling with their own descent into overwhelming debt, loss of status and personal disintegration.

The lurid drama of Jackson’s personal life meshed perfectly with the ongoing dramas on television, in movies and in the news. News thrives on “real life” stories, especially those involving celebrities. News reports on television are mini-dramas complete with a star, a villain, a supporting cast, a good-looking host and a dramatic, if often unexpected, ending. The public greedily consumed “news” about Jackson, especially in his exile and decline, which often outdid most works of fiction. In “Fahrenheit 451,” Ray Bradbury’s novel about a future dystopia, people spend most of the day watching giant television screens that show endless scenes of police chases and criminal apprehensions. Life, Bradbury understood, once it was packaged, scripted, given a narrative and filmed, became the most compelling form of entertainment. And Jackson was a great show. He deserved a great finale.

Those who created Jackson’s public persona and turned him into a piece of property, first as a child and finally as a corpse encased in a $15,000 gold-plated casket, are the agents, publicists, marketing people, promoters, script writers, television and movie producers, advertisers, video technicians, photographers, bodyguards, recording executives, wardrobe consultants, fitness trainers, pollsters, public announcers and television news personalities who create the vast stage of celebrity for profit. They are the puppet masters. No one achieves celebrity status, no cultural illusion is swallowed as reality, without these armies of cultural enablers and intermediaries. The producers at the Staples Center in Los Angeles made sure the 18,000 attendees and the television audience (even the BBC devoted three hours to the tribute) watched a funeral that was turned into another maudlin form of uplifting popular entertainment.


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See more stories tagged with: america, imperialism, michael jackson, indulgence

Chris Hedges, a Pulitzer prize-winning reporter, is a Senior Fellow at the Nation Institute. He writes a regular column for TruthDig every Monday. His latest book is Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle.

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Author is partly correct about Michael Jackson
Posted by: Jay Randal on Jul 16, 2009 12:23 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Superstars like Michael Jackson are created, exploited and then trashed. His life became fantasy because the press and his fans drove him into insanity. Nobody seems to care that he was abused by his father, forced to perform and lived lonely secluded existence.

Without any real proof Michael was convicted by the press as a pedophile. People laughed and joked about his looks and ridiculed everything he did. Nobody really gave him what he craved: love.

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I want to say one thing more about Michael.
Posted by: Jay Randal on Jul 16, 2009 12:38 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People have assumed he was Gay, Bisexual or into little boys, but what if in reality he was NOT sexual at all?! What if in reality he had been neutered before puberty? Jackson Five was top of the charts and Michael due to lose his voice going through puberty. Instead of voice change he broke off from his brothers into superstardom. He never was able to father children because of being neutered. He never really was able to grow-up because he was neutered. He never felt at ease dating women because he was neutered.

Michael left a clue of what was done to him: His interest in greatest castrato opera singer
Farinelli of Italy, who was a superstar of his era. His family allowed him to be castrated for fame and fortune. Before his death he lived in seclusion and considered a freak.

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RE: air yeezy shoes
Posted by: andrushka on Jul 16, 2009 2:52 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To the webmaster: why is this post here and elsewhere on Alternet? I didn't know that Alternet was catering to commercials.

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Here we go again ... let's blame the media!
Posted by: harryf200 on Jul 16, 2009 2:26 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sure, the media drive up the character assassinations, but guess why?

Because we want to read bad stuff about people. They print what we want to read. Bad new sells better than good. Simple as that. If we didn't want to hear lurid or spiteful stories about celebrities they'd talk about something else because they don't care what they say just as long as it makes them money.

As for "the media made me mad" stuff ... give it a rest! There is no evidence to prove that the incidences of mental breakdown amongst celebrities is more than it is for the general public at large, although it appears people with Bipolar disorder are a little more likely to be in creative professions than people who are not. (And the reason for that would be because manic states release stores of energy and boost confidence levels to such a level that innate creativity is released.) People who have mental breakdowns or behave in bizarre ways are already prone to these things because of their genetic make up. Sure, environment influences, but so too does working in a stressful non-celebrity environment, like being in a bank at the moment or fighting on the front line in Afghanistan.

Stress find the weak links in us and will often push through those cracks to make a chasm. If we don't break with one thing we are still likely to break with another. It happens in all walks of life, not just those of celebrities like Jackson. And the "build them up, knock them down" also happens in life outside of tinsel town, as most executives in large organisations will tell you! The high fliers, the guys shooting up to the stars are often the first to get tripped up and pushed down! That's why the wise adage "Be nice to people on your way up because you never know who you will pass on your way down..." is often quoted in business.

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pedophile nation
Posted by: anise on Jul 16, 2009 3:15 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now don"t go forgetting this countries birth in one time having sex with children is the norm and was called slavery. Thomas Jefferson did it literally one of its founding fathers,

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» RE: pedophile nation Posted by: Ellie1
» RE: pedophile nation Posted by: bloominblacksheep
Great Article. Check this out !!
Posted by: godsbreath64 on Jul 16, 2009 4:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This says it all.

http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5153353n&tag=
contentMain;contentBody

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» RE: Great Article. Check this out !! Posted by: bloominblacksheep
» RE: Great Article. Check this out !! Posted by: bloominblacksheep
agree and disagree
Posted by: Drclaw on Jul 16, 2009 5:48 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
agree: the extreme solipsism and lack of grounding in our culture produces many of the effects Hedges lists. It's quite sad. I think "reality" TV is hideous in how it evokes the worst from people-participants and watchers alike. It boggles the mind how popular this is.

disagree: Hedges attributes a degree of intentionality to this-a giant plot by the masters of the universe to manipulate us. I don't think its that clean-WE have created this-it is not so much an act of intentionality, but an unconscious decent into vulgar triviality. Evil isn't genius, its banal, stupid and frequently unaware. I'm not smart enough to explain why this happened-there might not be a why at all..some things just are.

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"A Variety Show with a Coffin"
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jul 16, 2009 6:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That one sentence says it all. Hat's off to you Chris Hedges! You have brilliantly boiled it down to the essentials.

We have to give the man his due: Michael Jackson was - beyond a shadow of a doubt - a great artist whose recorded legacy will endure for decades, maybe even a century or more. But an examination of his life is riddled with questions of all that might have been; all that should have been. It is more than likely that this was a severely mentally ill human being who never sought the treatment he so desperately needed; surrounded by fawning sycophants who enabled his sickness by constantly reassuring him that he could do no wrong. As John Lennon once said in the same context about Elvis Presley, another victim of the excesses of fame: "It's always the courtiers that kill the king".

The sad, inescapable truth is that for reasons we will probably never be able to fully understand, his talent and his career were ultimately wasted. Like Charlie Parker, Montgomery Clift, Judy Garland and Lenny Bruce before him, his brilliance as an artist would be overshadowed by severe, psychological torment. Therein lies the real, unspeakable tragedy of Michael Jackson.

Fun with Dick and Liz

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY

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» RE: "A Variety Show with a Coffin" Posted by: bloominblacksheep
SAd
Posted by: aazippo2 on Jul 16, 2009 6:28 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pretty sad aint it. Sad indeed!

RT
Ultimate Anonymity

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» RE: Do not click link. identity theft. Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale
So, more of "MJ's a victim"?
Posted by: Parcival01 on Jul 16, 2009 6:48 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I don't completely disagree with the article--despite there being too much "they," "we," and "you" in it--some of us--you--have a tendency to make MJ into a victim of his ostensibly intolerable circumstances.

What's obvious is that he made more money than he knew what do do with, he felt that the law was beneath him, and that he did more drugs than an emergency room.

For cryin' out loud, he was 50 years old! As I've said before to many, he spent more last year than most of us will in our adult, professional lives!

And while I too have reminded those who accuse him of pedophilia that he wasn't convicted, that doesn't mean he was innocent. Like OJ, he was in the right place to be able to beat those charges, despite the fact that, given the information I have, I'd have convicted him in a heartbeat.

And the funeral. I don't remember such a spectacle since the JFK funeral for which there was more of an excuse.

Yeah, yeah, we live in a society in which the morbid media revel in bad stories and eccentric personalities. (Most of the media personalities could use some serious help. Have you listened to Limbaugh or Glenn Beck lately? Do we make up excuses for their psychotic babbling?)

Face it: MJ was an adult, so responsible for his shortcomings--whether he admitted it or not. He obviously believed he could buy ANYTHING--and had the money to do so, though was so bad at managing it that he may have made Madoff blush. He had his fantasy land, complete with a security staff to make the president wonder about it. And he had his thugs, and his boys. Don't make up excuses for him, or for those who spent a day watching his "fans" drip over the fact that he died essentially of over-indulgence.

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» Actually, no, I'm NOT God. Posted by: Parcival01
» You could've fooled me... Posted by: bloominblacksheep
The illusion...
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Jul 16, 2009 7:26 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Hedges you are correct, we have allowed the corporate oligarchy to own "our culture" and degenerate into a celebrity worship, consumer driven nihilism! Part of that means that we must know every facet of the lives of "our stars", and must emulate everything they do, whether we can afford to or not!

Michael Jackson was a child star in a boy band that gave up his childhood to entertain us all. As a grown man, he tried to recreate that childhood in a ranch called "Neverland", does that make him a bad person - no! Since MJ's death Jordan Chandler has since recanted, but the media won't continue to print that ad nauseum! What they will focus on is the mans "sexuality" and made up perversions because it sells! Really what does that say about our culture! It couldn't be that Jordans' father was trying to make a quick buck, because in America no one has ever tried to pimp out their children! As for the second allegation - he was found not guilty, but why let that pesky reality enter into the picture! Again what does that say about our society!

The corporate oligarchy has devised the most simple of ways to divert the public attention from the reality of their own isolated existence - reality tv, infotainment that poses as "news", easy credit, slimy subversion regarding "religious, social, and class" issues and "patriotism" defined as don't ask questions! And guess what - these tactics have worked - just look at our economy and our lives lived in isolation!

Michael Jackson can be used in the extreme as the symbol of where we as a society have all gone - even as the corporate oligarchy is continuing to rob us blind! But if we can really look, at the contributions that MJ made to the music industry, to the humanitarian work he did! Does the media talk about after he was burned in that famous Pepsi commercial the money he received he donated to Cedar Sinai Burn Unit for burn victims, or the money donated to the United Negro College Fund that allowed quite a few people to graduate from college, or that the money from "We Are the World" record/video went to the famine stricken in Africa (before there ever was a Live Aid)? No, none of this is talked about because that would make him human, and a man!

There is a song he made that I believe everyone should pay attention to, and the lyrics are:

Gotta make a change
For once in my life
It's gonna feel real good
Gonna make a difference
Gonna make it right

As I turned up the collar on
A favorite winter coat
This wind is blowin' my mind
I see the kids in the street
With not enough to eat
Who am I to be blind
Pretending not to see their needs

A summer's disregard
A broken bottle top
And a one man's soul
They follow each other
On the wind ya' know
'Cause they got nowhere to go
That's why I want you to know

I'm starting with the man in the mirror
I'm asking him to change his ways
And no message could have been any clearer
If you wanna make the world a better place
Take a look at yourself and then make a change, yey

("Man in the Mirror" lyrics) Maybe everyone should start there! RIP Michael....

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When the MSM monster
Posted by: weathered on Jul 16, 2009 7:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
gets indicted fined and jailed for their choreography of mis and disinformation, we'll no longer be having this discussion.

Integrity is the most profitable cash cow there is. Dignity our best investment.

As usual Chris Hedges takes the high road and puts a stake in the ground, pls. don't let-up!

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Manufactured celebrity
Posted by: Romantic Violence on Jul 16, 2009 8:02 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
'The hubbub around Michael Jackson's death was orchestrated by the same corporate forces that drove him insane'. Manufactured celebrity is not strictly confined to entertainers..look at your President..his PR is not too much different from the celebrity procession that is flashed daily on MSM. Erich Fromm defined the obsession with manufactured reality that we see..he called it INSANITY..

1789

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Don't like it? Don't buy it!
Posted by: BlueTigress on Jul 16, 2009 9:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Do not buy the gossip mags or tabloids.

Do not watch reality TV shows or the gossip shows.

If it wasn't making money, we would not see it.

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Another arrogant editorial leaves out important facts, substitutes sound bites for substance.
Posted by: Northern Illinois grad. on Jul 16, 2009 9:49 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Once again Alternet publishes an arrogant, insulting editorial full of sounds bites, buzz words, and thoughtless conclusions.

This piece neglects to include many important facts of Michael Jackson's life in order to sensationalize the reality. The author is guilty of exactly the same actions he flippantly accuses the media, entertainment and corporate worlds.

Like most of our lives, Michael Jackson's life builds on various events and his reaction to them. He was prevented from experiencing a normal childhood and adolescence so he recreated them during adulthood. He made a lot of money which attracted those who wanted to take some of it away from him, hence the molestation extortion. Against his own best interest, he took bad advice from then-wife Lisa Marie Presley and paid off the extortionist, setting himself up for later accusations. He learned from that experience and suffered and was exonerated after defending himself in a trial.

Why didn't the author here mention that Mr. Jackson was not guilty on all counts? Likely that including the facts would have ruined his rant.

About Mr. Jackson's health the same thing applies: one thing leads to another. While filming a Pespi commercial nearly 25 years ago his hair, face and scalp caught on fire necesitating many surgeries and prescriptions for painkillers. A few years prior to this incident, Mr. Jackson began to suffer the effects of two genetic immune system diseases: lupus and virtiligo. Virtiligo often begins on the hands resulting in blotches and pigment loss. Jackson started wearing the famous jeweled glove to cover up.

As a result of the Pepsi fire and immune system diseases, Mr. Jackson found himself dealing with physical deformity (pigment loss all over his body), multiple surgeries, and in constant pain. Most virtiligo victims often reach the point of going through depigmentation treatments, leaving the skin a ghostly white.

Disturbingly, the author neglects to mention Mr. Jackson's heath facts so he can wrongly make a sensational racist statement.

The Pepsi fire also resulted in Mr. Jackson's addiction to painkillers, a logical conclusion.
The fire also added to Mr. Jackson's need for and then continued desire for plastic surgery.

As an artist dealing with a tragic accident and physical deformity, Mr. Jackson has said that he considered his face to be an art object and proceeded accordingly. I wonder if this shares a similarity to those who have tatoos put all over their entire bodies?

If you simply follow the events of Mr. Jackson's life, it is easy to see how one thing built upon another.

Instead, the author chose to build a self-aggrandizing case against all that is wrong with the world.

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» Lupus? Posted by: johnwinthrop
» RE: Lupus? Posted by: Northern Illinois grad.
» Pursuit Posted by: johnwinthrop
Enough with MJ, already
Posted by: willymack on Jul 16, 2009 9:55 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He was superbly talented.
He was an emotional cripple.
He was weird and bizarre.
He's DEAD, now.
Enough, already.

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Marketing madness, then marketing its "cure"
Posted by: Jaffe on Jul 16, 2009 10:11 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The corporations that fatten Americans with seductively shitty food are often the same corporations that market diet remedies and exercise gear to make these same fat humans thin.

The corporations involved in video mania games for kids are often the same corporations that are invested in "cures" for the various versions of attention deficit disorder.

The same government-corporations that razed Iraq are now profiting from "rebuilding" it.

It's called Capitalism, global style.

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WOW ! When an article points out the role of the corporate media against MJ, so few comments.
Posted by: Benn_Miller on Jul 16, 2009 11:38 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If this article were not to describe the role of the corporate media, then we'd be seeing hundreds of comments on MJ. Talk about lack of patience and thinking in this country !

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the society
Posted by: pacto on Jul 16, 2009 12:49 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the USA is indeed a sick one ,but all of the mentally tweaked are busy ..shopping and buying the CDs and DVDs and making the ...famous collection hoping they too..one day will be famous. sad sad sad

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The MSM and celebrities
Posted by: bettyn on Jul 16, 2009 12:57 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Michael Jackson madness is just another example of how the MSM inundates us 24/7/365 with sordid stories about celebrities while the news (about how the corporatocracy is robbing us blind and stealing our freedoms) goes underreported at best.

Using someone's tragic and needless death as a diversion is really sick stuff IMHO. Even in his passing, this poor man was treated as a media spectacle and diversion. (Small wonder that people like Jackson, Presley, and Howard Hughes end up isolated, weird, drugged, and finally dead, virtually by their own hands. They can't handle it anymore in the end. Sometimes fame ain't all it's cracked up to be, is it? )

Our MSM has become a nonstop farce and a sideshow. No one mentioned Iran, the Republicans' continuing parade of sex scandals and hypocrisy, our broken healthcare system, and our decrepit and worsening economy for almost two weeks during this mostly tawdry grief-fest. Turning the death of a talented but troubled entertainer into a circus served the corporate crowd's purposes well, didn't it?

Maybe Mr. Jackson and those who truly cared about him will finally have some peace now...even if it is the peace of the grave.

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Okay, sure, everyone's correct, but ...
Posted by: on Jul 16, 2009 4:04 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... I still maintain that his corpse should have been quickly trucked to the nearest taxidermist.

But to add "castrado" (is that the correct spelling?) to the already long list, is a bit of an, um, reach (no pun intended).

m. swof.

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» Counter Tenor Posted by: Parcival01
» RE: Counter Tenor Posted by: Longdream
The corporate media had nothing to do with
Posted by: Longdream on Jul 16, 2009 8:58 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the House of Representatives wasting time diddling around with how to permanently honor Michael Jackson.

What a travesty! Feh!

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Weird behaviour
Posted by: disfasia on Jul 16, 2009 11:50 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is a strange irony that American culture boasts this openness to difference and embrace of all people in the striving towards an all inclusive democracy. But what I have witnessed and read since the death of Michael Jackson is the continued use of the word "weird" and petty psychoanalysis of his alleged "unhappiness" with his life. What do you really know? In the end, unless you knew Mr. Jackson, you know absolutely nothing more than what our media gives us. Remember Judith Miller and how her "golden words" drove a fraudulent war on terror? Our media is one of the most free, sure. But free in a wreckless and grotesque way--free to lie, to destroy people's lives and reputations. This is what I see being parroted here: a man who was found innocent on all counts by people who, in both cases, made it clear they wanted money from Jackson, by a woman who after Jackson's acquital changed her name from "Janet Arvizo" to "Janet Jackson", by a man who it turns out was beaten by his father, coerced into making false allegations about Jackson.

Clearly, people are not reading the facts and chose fiction over truth. This is the kind of behavior that pushed Michael Jackson into a necessary reclusion. Necessary because this kind of society is purely unhealthy. It is the kind of hatred that drove Mr. Jackson into his own isolation, far away from our madness.

What I observe is that those who persecute another person with absolutely no reason to do so, well this is not only strange, it is terribly cruel.

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I'm Tired Of Hearing How Bad Michael Had It
Posted by: jooljetkmae on Jul 17, 2009 1:59 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The guy led a life of extreme privilege and he was an absolute glutton when it came to personal consumption of just about everything, except food, obviously.

Anybody who earns over a $1 billion from touring and record sales for a career should not die a debtor.

The man simply didn't listen to any of his financial advisers and went about spending as if he had an endless supply of money at his disposal.

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MJ Pepsi Commercial......
Posted by: MargaretA on Jul 17, 2009 2:01 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fans are scouring the internet for the Michael Jackson Pepsi Commercial Hair on Fire footage. The phrase, Michael Jackson Pepsi Commercial Hair on Fire refers to an incident in which Jackson was shooting a Pepsi commercial and his hair caught fire due to standing too near to a pyrotechnic device – though he was treated quickly and underwent plastic surgery, and the burns were nowhere near as serious as other pyrotechnic accidents (such as when Metallica's James Hetfield walked into a 10 foot tall pillar of flame), the burns supposedly started his dependency on painkillers. He still got a huge cash advance from Pepsi, but people still want to see the Michael Jackson Pepsi Commercial Hair on Fire footage.

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» ...AND to make him a "victim." Posted by: Parcival01
the other MJ
Posted by: tokerdesigner on Jul 17, 2009 12:16 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Except for the arguable fact that Michael Jackson grew into the "Number One" position vacated by retiring athlete Michael Jordan, the expression "MJ" would appear to link him in some way to cannabis. So I googled a bit trying to find out if there had been any relationship. The only thing I found before giving up somewhere in "21 through 30's" was when some guys offered him a sip of "cannabis beer" and he tried it, but there was no suggestion of a prolonged interest.

Also I've never seen any scuttlebutt that he offered a toke of "that other MJ" to anyone under 18, though you would think if he had, the right wing talk show assholes would have been all over it, a crime equal to pederasty etc.

Possibly his much-criticized advisors warned him very urgently not to have anything whatever to do with the controversial herb? So it is worth asking what effect it had, all these years, being referred to as "MJ" when there are millions of unstable airheads out there reading scandal zines looking for a hidden meaning in such nomenclature.

The only quote I was able to find, which nailed it as far as I'm concerned, was from one Tommy Chong who said, "It would have been better for Michael Jackson if he had been the King of Pot instead of the King of Pop."

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Syd
Posted by: sparlow on Jul 17, 2009 7:49 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This very article of yours does what you criticize others for doing.
No need to go into all the tragic details as you did above.
Let him go in peace and some dignity.

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MJs Death Sensationalized
Posted by: realitygirl on Jul 17, 2009 8:10 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To Jay Randall: You are correct. Michael wanted love to survive just like all other human beings. Unfortunately, his father is blamed for what so many parents do to their children to make them achieve, compete, and survive in this hateful life to become successful people. Lots of child stars make it to the top and fall because they cannot adjust to the schedule of life after their time in showbiz is over. For those who are able to achieve superstardom as was the case with Michael, then he, like many others become the "it" to make a cheap buck. The media that continues to exploit and accuse people falsely as they have done Michael Jackson should go to jail just like the "medicine men" will eventually do for feeding Michael the blood of pills. Laws are not yet rigid for the news media. I think that if the outlets were not dominated by "certain forces of priviledge" then they too would become citizens of a new "Alcatraz". Rest in Peace MJ (RIP) forever and ever. I too hurt for him and never met him. However, I met him through the medium of his wonderful songs. These were songs that could reach the hearts of the young and old. Michael was the vehicle from which his words rang to the ears of so many people all over the world. He captured our hearts through his songs for so many years. He gave to everyone his desires and wants and messages about life.(RIP)

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Some rambling thoughts about a misunderstood man ...
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jul 17, 2009 10:03 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From the article:
"And in the end, that is all the Jackson coverage was really about, another tawdry and tasteless spectacle to divert a dying culture from the howling wolf at the gate."

Yes – but Chris, didn't you forget something else in your final paragraph?

Money. The Michael Jackson "Death-a-paloosa Funeral Album" of the Staple's Center Bombastacon spectacle of a memorial will be coming out on CD shortly, "just nine-teeeen, ninety-FIVE, boys and girls!" And what about all of Michael's albums, the sales of some having fallen off in recent years? New life breathed into the record library. Michael being remembered for the talent that he was and the music that he made, in contrast to the "Wacko-Jacko" cruelty that was the media's favorite MJ story before his death, will guarantee billions in fresh album sales. Cha-ching!

(Some wry cynic, upon hearing of Elvis Presley's death, allegedly commented, "Great career move." Thank God no one broached that subject during the 24/7 coverage of Michael's death – at least, directly.)
. . .

Why in hell is it that an artist's value increases ONLY AFTER his or her death? And why is it that in the creative world, the parasites always outlive the hosts (and usually live better as well?)
. . .

Rest In Peace, dear Michael, we hardly knew ye, tho' we witnessed the production that was your life: epic in accomplishment; tragic in a childhood that was snatched away or never was; and exploited, by parasites who have no talent, other than to feed off the lives of gentle souls.

Rest In Peace, Michael – finally.

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olliesmom12
Posted by: olliesmom12 on Jul 18, 2009 7:03 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Excellent article. Thanks, Chris.

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So True
Posted by: yolanda on Jul 18, 2009 7:33 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perfect article and so true, it is frightening. I cannot understand that Alternet readers do not distinguish between MJ 's life and talent and the system he was part of.

Mist

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MICHAEL JACKSON – Poetry for the King
Posted by: hen81 on Jul 18, 2009 1:32 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
MICHAEL JACKSON – Poetry for the King is a collection of fifteen poems dedicated to the life, talent, struggles and passing of superstar Michael Jackson. Poems in this collection are Curtain Call, The News, Young Michael, Arguments, Fame Squared, I Never Kept Track, Not So Strange, Reasons and Flesh and Blood, No Bones, On the Run, The Goodbye, Stranger at Home, Justice for Some and Screeching Wall of Hate. All poems are original compositions by ESSENCE bestselling author D T Pollard.

Curtain Call

A man that was never a child
A child that was never a man
A legend that was still alive
A height that only he had reached
A fall that went so low
A love and hate that only he could know
A desire to be the best again
A rocket sitting on its new launching pad
A voice came from above
"Rest you have done enough"
"Let your past continue to glow"
"It is now time for you to go"
Michael Jackson went home

D T Pollard

Amazon

Scribd.com


D T Pollard

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chiachac
Posted by: itouch backup on Jul 21, 2009 8:34 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Blu Ray Burner|||MTS Converter For Mac can easily convert MTS files to other popular video/audio formats.

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Well.....
Posted by: SageRave on Jul 27, 2009 3:22 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are people around who were sincerely sorry he died and wanted to spend their day at his virtual, public funeral.

I guess you probably think that sentiment has no value, either.

If you weren't a fan, fine. If you hate corporate America, fine, but there were some honest emotions amid all of the fanfare that obviously worked the last nerve of every Jackson hater on the planet.

Did you say the same things about Elvis?

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sentence
Posted by: hahaho on Jul 30, 2009 7:44 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That one sentence says it all. Hat's off to you Chris Hedges! You have brilliantly boiled it down to the essentials.links of london
tiffany

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Michael's albums
Posted by: hahaho on Jul 30, 2009 7:45 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Money. The Michael Jackson "Death-a-paloosa Funeral Album" of the Staple's Center Bombastacon spectacle of a memorial will be coming out on CD shortly, "just nine-teeeen, ninety-FIVE, boys and girls!" And what about all of Michael's albums, the sales of some having fallen off in recent years? New life breathed into the record library. Michael being remembered for the talent that he was and the music that he made, in contrast to the "Wacko-Jacko" cruelty that was the media's favorite MJ story before his death, will guarantee billions in fresh album sales. Cha-ching! links of london
tiffany

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cheap juicy jewelry
Posted by: uggzhcl on Aug 5, 2009 11:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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