Thursday, June 25, 2009

Michael Jackson Dies - Media Caught Off Guard

In news that has shocked the world, Michael Jackson has died. The self-described “King of Pop” was pronounced dead today at UCLA Medical Center at 12:26 p.m. Pacific Time, reportedly of cardiac arrest. The exact cause is not known yet, and the television news media has preempted all other programming, although there is nothing new to report.

When the news of Michael Jackson’s death came out, I was working on a story of disgraced South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, who admitted in a news conference yesterday that he had an extra-marital affair with a woman from Argentina. He disappeared for four days last week, and his wife said she had no idea where he was. His staff fabricated the story that he was hiking on the Appalachian Trail. The media went into a frenzy with the story. The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times both led off their news this morning with the story of Gov. Sanford. Then Michael Jackson died.

A collective shock has come over the nation and throughout the world. No matter how bad the press got over the course of his career, and how odd his behavior became, Jackson’s career spanned over four decades, yet he died at the young age of 50. He may not have been bigger than Elvis. He may not have been bigger than the Beatles. But he was around longer. As a celebrity, in this day and age, there’s no one bigger. As the news media reflects on Jackson’s long, historic, and eccentric career, all other news stories are now put on hold. The economy, global warming, nuclear proliferation, the health-care crisis, Gov. Mark Sanford – all on hold. The world mourns the death of Michael Jackson.

It’s been hours since the news of Jackson’s death, and the news media is still scrambling for something new to say. A news conference was delayed, and reporters were left to talk about the history of Jackson’s musical career. The iconic nature of Michael Jackson and the suddenness and untimeliness of his death made the whole thing seem surreal. The story was on the air, but the news media was caught by surprise. Farrah Fawcett died today, but it had been expected after her long illness – Ed McMahon died earlier this week, but he’s from a different era and he was also ill. The fans, too, were caught off guard. They gathered at the wrong star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, putting flowers on the star of English-born Los Angeles radio personality Michael Jackson, who is semi-retired at the age of 73. The musical icon known as Michael Jackson; his star is covered by a red carpet, put down for the premier of Sasha Baron Cohen’s movie “Bruno.”

All other news is on hold for now, even though there’s nothing new to report. If the massive coverage by the news media is any indication, the child-prodigy-turned-adult-superstar is bigger in death than he even was in life.

7 comments:

  1. I thought this was a well written blog. Kudos. I am not a fan of the "late" Michael Jackson but it does hurt my heart to see what became of him over the years.

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  2. Why do people die? How do people die? How does some one die so young?

    Any comments?

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  3. I too grew up with Michael Jackson. We're about the same age, so it makes me think about my own mortality. He had a strange and eventful career that had many highlights. Unfortunately, they were overshadowed by his odd behavior and sordid details leading to his legal battles. He was only 50. Heath Ledger died last year at a younger age, as did Nicole Smith's son before that, and non-celebrities also die at young ages all the time. We all will die one day. Why do some people die so young? There's no answer to that one. Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, Jimmie Hendrix, and Kurt Cobaine all died at the age of 27. Those were attributable to drugs. Maybe the same thing happened with Michael Jackson. The news is bound to come up with something new in the coming days. He was just planning a 50-city comeback tour, and he was working on rehabilitating his image. No matter what odd things he did, though, he had millions of fans around the world. They deserve to know how he died. History will remember him for the impact he made on the music world, and I think it will be kind to him, and his transgressions into the odd behavior he exibited through much of his career will be forgotten. There will be an end to the comedy routines on late night TV making fun of the changing of his appearance through plastic surgery, and the off color jokes relating to his legal troubles with young boys, which details were never proven, and his fans are sure were not true. But no matter what you felt about him personally, it was a shock that someone who seemed to be still a kid himself, died so young.

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  4. Well said, Sherry. Good story, Paul Solomon.

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  5. Broadcast TV is going to be annoying for the next 2 weeks. I'm glad I don't watch it.

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  6. I will miss his creativity. Everybody is talking bad about how he lived his life, but he was a victim of fame. Being in the eye of the world and having every little burp interrogated will mess with your emotions and mind. Where is the compassion? In a world where people do things that are so (IMO) morally wrong, but yet everybody says it's ok to do so, why is everyone throwing stones at Michael? Not to say that the things he was accused of (but never found guilty of) are something to be proud of, but his genius and creativity in the music industry is more important than him having cosmetic surgery.

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  7. Pay your final respects to a great star who will be deeply missed!!!

    www.michael-jackson-memorial.com

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