CLEVELAND - On one of the very worse, sickening, tear-soaked days of
my life, the great Michael Jackson was taken from his children, myself and the
world. He had spent the last 16 years of his life under heavy public criticism
and hatred.
Then, he was gone.
Today is the 5th anniversary of that heart
wrenching day. June 25, 2009 is a day that will forever live in infamy for me
as well as MJ’s global fanbase numbering into the tens of millions. At the time
of his departure, public perception of the iconic entertainer was filled with
sheer negativity. Mostly in the U.S., he was seen as a weird, child molesting
monster obsessed with plastic surgery and wrought with a near-dormant career
that had once flew high above the entire music industry and set new standards
of excellence.
But as soon as he died, he became reborn in the minds of
fans, music critics and the general public. Tons of tributes poured out
dedicated to him and his greatest artistic achievements were put back into the
spotlight. Sure, there were still salacious stories that surfaced, more sordid
accusations of child molestations dating back more than 20 years, and of
course, more jokes from comedians and television commentators everywhere.
In spite of all this, Michael Jackson’s absence has
allowed his aura and his legend to thrive and breathe comfortably. The
extremely successful MJ Cirque de Solei shows have re-imagined his great stage
performances and historic albums and brought them to contemporary audiences. He
has a “new” album out that has received praise from critics. Even Jeep has one
of Jackson’s songs featured in a recent television commercial.
This has all become possible and “acceptable” because the
man himself is no longer around. Because of MJ’s super controversial life and
widespread belief that he molested young boys, he had become an outcast in his
own country; a sharp contrast to his early 1980’s pinnacle when he had become
something of a national obsession because of the staggering success and
popularity of his Thriller album and
groundbreaking short films that accompanied it. He was even called a “national
treasure” at the 1984 American Music Awards.
On this awful anniversary, I am happy that a lot of love
has returned for MJ. I am just furious that it took him to die for it to
happen.
1 comment:
What u described here was very heart felt. Alot of times it takes us to die first to be acknowledged for the greatness we withhold. And as much as of a shame as that is... it gives me something to think about. I would rather die now and have left my mark in this world rather than live forever and had only "existed".. R.I.P M.J
-Lil Craig
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