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Sense of proportion out of the window

By Roger Clarke on Jun 30, 09 11:10 AM

Don't get me wrong, I'm not knocking Michael Jackson. In terms of popular music he was an important player but to see the media frenzy and mass hysteria surrounding his death you would be forgiven for believing he was the second coming.

We had some young girl in tears saying this was the day the music died with the irony of quoting from a song about the death of Buddy Holly lost on her and another girl outside the hospital where his body had arrived a couple of hours earlier saying she and all the people around her would know exactly where they were the moment he died.

Not a difficult feat considering they only had to remember back to lunchtime when they had all made the trek out to the hospital. We have then had the celebrity fest of tributes and people who have never owned a Michael Jackson track in their life buying them like sweeties. His music is no better or worse because he is dead and if they were not inclined to buy Jackson when he was at the peak of his stardom then buying now smacks at best of musical voyeurism or at worst of being a human sheep. .

But half the world is swept up in epidemic of mob grief complete with makeshift shrines with conspiracy theories coming on the hour about poisoning, overdoses, even suicide and murder but strangely no mention of court cases involving minors, bought off parents and behaviour that stretched the boundaries of eccentric into another dimension. Faults are not so much forgiven as forgotten, excised from the mob psyche.

We have seen it all before though, Jade Goody was transformed from thicko racist in the eyes of the popular press to saint by the simple act of dying and who can forget the outpourings over Princess Diana when reason was suspended?.

Perhaps a psychologist can explain why people manage to get wrapped up in grief for someone they never met, never knew and probably never thought about except in passing until they died. It is not something I can explain.

I would have put money on Jackson not managing all of his 50 date run at the O2 arena but that hardly matters now as he has risen into legend and the promoters are even set to make money out of that with an offer to the O2 concert goers of your money back or you can have a commemorative ticket instead.

The commemorative tickets, which were to be give free to concert goers, are presumably already printed so would either be pulped, or with 800,000 of them, sold for very modest sums as mementoes - unless of course you can get hundreds of thousands of griefed-up punters to shell out £75 upwards each for them to commemorate a concert that never happened presumably in the hope they can find even more griefed-up saddoes on eBay.

2 Comments

Anonymous said:

My favourite celeb comment was from Celine Dion who said, after hearing news of MJ's death, that she was "overwhelmed with grief". Really?
The whole media circus around MJs death - and the need to make a special moment out of it from news channels to radio shows - got me wondering whether every celeb will get similar treatment on their death or if such treatment is saved for only certain individuals
Shortly after his death I was watching Gran Torino with Clint Eastwood.
Over more than 50 years the Hollywood legend has contributed as much to cinema as MJ did to music.
While I hope he continues to make movies for many years to come, he is no spring chicken and when the inevitable happens will BBC1 replace all programming with a re-run of his films as R1 did over the weekend with its constant looping of MJ records?
I kind of guess not because he doesn't appeal to the wailing mob who want to wrap themselves up in this strange need for public grief over someone they have never met or spoken to.

Roger Clarke Author Profile Pagesaid:

It seems death is often a pretty good career move. To hear people waffle on you would be forgiven for believing there would be no popular music at all, no pop videos and even no black artists on TV had it not been for Michael Jackson.
The part played by Qunincy Jones and John Landis in the success of Thriller is no more than a footnote and while it could be argued that Jackson was not even the most influential artist to come out of Motown anyone suggesting that at the moment would be rounded up by the mob and burned at the stake as a heretic.
For some reason people seem to be drawn into the cult of celebrity almost as if it is a drug, you can only assume their own existance is so empty and meaningless they they have to fill it with the lives of people they have heard about, seen on TV or have been told are famous in papers and magazines. These are people they do no know, have never met and with lives created in their collective mind from newspaper and magazine storie, people who then become characters in some sort of reality soap opera.
When one of the celebsoap stars, like Jackson, dies then then outpouring of grief from the opera audience is nothing short of Wagnerian.
The next chapter, I suspect, will be the memorial service for 20,000 in a basketball stadium on Tuesday so have your vigil candles ready.

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