Friday, September 9, 2011

I’m a Black American; I am proud of my race…I am proud of who I am.

I’m a Black American; I am proud of my race…I am proud of who I am.



One of the items I unfortunately used to wonder about was the media’s assertion that Michael wanted to be white. Vindicatemj recently did a piece on this and it sparked a desire in me to put my two cents worth in.

When I first noticed Michael’s lightening skin color, I could think of no other explanation other than he chose to do that – although I could not imagine why – not when he was so handsome naturally. But, as is often the case, many people who change an aspect of their appearance do so because it really bothers them – even if it is something that seems insignificant, or sometimes even attractive to everyone else.

In 1991, when his ‘Black or White’ song came out I was puzzled by the rap line:
“I’m not gonna spend my life being a color”

It wasn’t one of the lines Michael sang – although he does lip synch to it with the kids in the short film as per the above picture. But was this his way of explaining why his skin was getting lighter?

Two years later, on the Oprah show, he would provide the first official explanation for what was going on – that he suffered from vitiligo. Oprah’s reaction confused me. At the time I admired her, even related to her in many ways and so set more store in what she had to say that what she deserved. She asked him about bleaching creams immediately after he stated he had vitiligo. I had no idea what vitiligo was back then.

Actually it was only after Michael died and I started my intensive ‘Michaeling’ that I first saw photos of him where his vitiligo blotches were evident. Hell, it was also the first time I saw other vitiligo victims as well and developed a sense of what this disease was all about.

A further two years on from the Oprah interview, Michael appeared with Lisa Marie Presley in an interview the couple gave to Diane Sawyer. Diane asked Michael about his changing appearance and Michael started to say how it was a result of nature. LMP interjected and said:

“And he is constantly re-modifying something, or changing it, or reconstructing it or, you know, working on some imperfection he thinks needs to be worked on. If he sees something he doesn't like he changes it. Period. He re-sculpted himself. He's an artist.”
LMP’s statement, however well intentioned, only served to add to my confusion. To me, it seemed like she was confirming the media’s claim that Michael chose to be white.

When I tried putting myself in Michael’s place I started to realize a couple of things I had not thought of previously. Michael could not fully share his distress over the vitiligo. Imagine if a black man started to complain bitterly about turning white! Instead, he did the only thing he could; proceeding with his career and humanitarian goals in his focused and driven way.

During one of my Michaeling sessions I came across this very significant photo.


 Here Michael is getting made up on the Thriller set – his most successful short film ever – and the skin underneath is lighter than that which is being applied or removed! 

 To me, most revealing of all concerns his children. Now I know there are some who are quick to label the MJ3 as ‘white’ kids but I disagree. Below is yet another example of an African American man and a white woman having a child together. Walker, the son of TV actor Taye Diggs and stage actress Idina Menzel looks quite similar to baby Prince Jackson don’t you think?

 Some like to cite the fact that Michael married and had children with white women as evidence he didn’t like black women. Further examination of Michael’s attitude towards motherhood reveals no such bias. If anything, one could argue that he preferred black women to mother his children. We know that Michael left custody of his beloved children to his mother and, failing that, Diana Ross – two black women.



Whilst Michael did have multiple women on his nanny staff, Grace Rwaramba – seen below accompanying Michael and Paris to the ‘Men in Black 2’ set – seemed to be the main nanny for his children.



Most telling of all perhaps is who Paris looks up to as per her recent tweet:


To my way of thinking, the fact that his little green eyed princess identifies with, and aspires to, these beautiful black women is proof that Michael is not a self hating racist.

His attitude would clearly have rubbed off on his daughter, who worships her Daddy, had he harbored any ill feelings towards his own race.



 

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Brett Ratner interview with Michael transcript - Updated 17 Feb 2012

I wanted to add to this posting Brett's account of how he came to meet Michael and another story I love.

LA Times reporter Patrick Goldstein writes:
"My father loves to brag to his friends that while his son is a big-shot Hollywood reporter, it was his father who actually met Michael Jackson. Until he retired a few years ago, my dad had a store called the 24 Collection on the Lincoln Road Mall in Miami Beach that specialized in fashion, jewelry, art and one-of-a-kind oddities (I still have a clock set into a Cuban cigar box with a portrait of Fidel Castro on the clock face). One day Brett Ratner, who grew up in Miami and whose mother was a regular customer at the store, called my dad and asked if he could bring his pal Michael Jackson by to look around. As he often did as a courtesy for celebrities who might be annoyed or hounded, my father closed the store that afternoon and put the staff at Jackson’s disposal.


“Michael walked around every inch of the store, feeling things, smelling things,” my father remembers. “He’d ask questions about what this was or that was, where it was from, how we found it. I made sure the staff didn’t intrude on him, although one person did ask for an autograph, which made them an ex-employee right away. But Michael was just off in his own world, curious about everything he saw.”

I think my dad got his hopes up when he saw that Jackson was also accompanied by an aide who had a zippered envelope full of cash. But the King of Pop never bought anything. After spending an hour in the store, he just thanked everyone for letting him look around and left."

I called Ratner this morning to ask him how he became such fast friends with Jackson. It turns out that they met in 1998 when Ratner was finishing his first “Rush Hour” picture. One day, Chris Tucker was doing a scene and broke into a wild, Michael Jackson-style dance. The sequence was so funny that when Ratner had test screenings of the film, it got one of the biggest laughs in the picture. But because it was an obvious Jackson impression, Ratner knew he had to clear it with the pop star before he could put it in the movie.



That presented a problem, since Jackson was so reclusive that even Ratner, one of the great celebrity schmoozers of our time, couldn’t get to him. He even called Jackson’s Neverland ranch but never got anywhere. Then he got lucky. “My editor was talking to the projectionist who ran the final screening and it turned out that he was Michael’s personal projectionist,” Ratner told me today. “So I gave him the print and asked him to play the beginning of the second reel for Michael, which had Chris’ dance in it.”
Two days later Ratner picked up the phone and heard the soft, feathery voice of Michael Jackson. So what did Michael say? 
“Michael said he’d watched the whole movie and loved it, especially the scene Chris did with his dance. He said, ‘You have my permission to use whatever you want.’ ” That was great, but Ratner needed something in writing. When he asked Jackson to sign something on a piece of paper, Jackson simply invited him up to the ranch. “So I drove up there and walked in, with all his giraffes and other animals, all out there to greet me.” Ratner recalls. “I ended up staying at the ranch and we just became great friends. We both had this huge, almost childlike fascination with movies and music and all kinds of entertainment.”
Over the years, Ratner and Jackson spent an enormous amount of time together. They would film each other, with Jackson asking Ratner about how he became a film director and Ratner asking Jackson about how he became an entertainer. “I have hours of footage of us, sitting around in our pajamas, with me asking him about what kind of music he loved as a kid, what kind of books he had on the wall as a kid. When you were with him, you really felt like God was within him. He was an amazing, superhuman kind of person, but he always treated you as an equal. He would be your friend and he never asked for anything in return.”

One of their favorite activities was to have dance-offs in the game room at Jackson’s house. Jackson would put on a record, usually a song by his sister, Janet, and unleash some awesome dance moves. Then Ratner or Chris Tucker, who would sometimes come along, would play Michael’s records and dance along to them. I asked Ratner if that felt a little like a mere mortal playing one-on-one with LeBron James. “Hey, I wasn’t self-conscious. I’m a pretty good dancer. It was just fun to do it together.”
When they weren’t dancing, Ratner and Jackson would watch movies together. He says they must’ve watched the original version of “Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory” 50 times over the years. 


“I know that people looked at Michael and thought he was strange, but to me, he was fascinating,” Ratner says. “He was the most inspirational person in my life. His one dream was to cure all the sick children in the world. And when I’d say, ‘Isn’t that impossible?’ Michael would just start to cry. He was very emotional about things that moved him. I guess you’d have to say he was a pure innocent in a world that wasn’t so innocent anymore.”

ORIGINAL POST

Recently I came across a transcript of the interview Michael gave to Brett Ratner. Earlier I had tried to find one and couldn't so this is a bonus.

I’ve decided to include it here because I know some of my readers would appreciate the transcript.


Also, it’s a good excuse to share some more of my favorite photos!

There will be no analysis afterwards. This is just a chat between two friends and makes a welcome change from interviews with slanted and biased commentary. 

Speaking of which, I do want to assure my readers that I will conclude the Living with Michael Jackson series shortly.

I took what was only meant to be a short break from it, but its now several months later!

Anyway, please enjoy this transcript in the meantime.

Interview with Michael Jackson, February, 2004 by Brett Ratner

 
 Brett wrote: It ain’t easy being a genius: You do pay the price, not unlike Mozart, who will be remembered far longer than Napoleon. Michael Jackson understands this irony. No one I have ever met in my life has had such passion and love for entertainment. His work, brilliance, and vision will be remembered far longer than any of those who now think of him harshly.

Michael and I have shared many a day, week, and month together. Our relationship is based on our love of films. We have watched many films together, and our personal favorite that we enjoy most is Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory! A few months before the latest drama, he and I were on a little vacation. In the past he has often put a video camera to my face and asked me questions. This is what Michael does with his friends: He becomes a scientist and dissects them through questions in order to learn. Many times he has asked me how my childhood dreams became a reality, about why I wanted to become a director. So I decided it was time to hear from him about his childhood dreams.

After my interview, I went out and bought all the records he mentioned and listened to them, understanding a little more about Michael. What you are about to read is a very private and personal conversation between two friends.



BRETT RATNER: Do you have a mentor or someone who inspired you?

MICHAEL JACKSON: Yeah, I do: Berry Gordy, Diana Ross, Thomas Edison, Walt Disney, James Brown, Jackie Wilson.


BR: And what did you learn from them?


MJ: I learned a lot from them—about how to be a visionary, how to be creative, how to be persistent, how to be determined, how to have a will of iron and to never give up no matter what. You know?

BR: What was your first job in the music industry, and how did you get it?

MJ: First job, probably … Gee, I don’t remember back that far. I was around 6 years old. Maybe it was Mr. Lucky’s. I think it was a club—yeah, Mr. Lucky’s. We performed there.

BR: And how’d you get the job?

MJ: I don’t know; my father would know. I was too little.

BR: What was your first break and the first great thing that ever happened to you?

MJ: The real big break was when Motown signed us. We auditioned in Detroit, and Berry Gordy invited all our favorite stars that we saw as kids to this little town in Indiana: Diana Ross, Smokey Robinson & the Miracles, the Temptations, and Stevie Wonder—everybody was there. And it was next to this indoor pool at this huge mansion, marble everywhere. We performed, and they just went crazy. They loved it. And [Gordy] says, “Boys, you’re signed.”


BR: Really?

MJ: Yeah.

BR: And you remember that day?

MJ: Oh, I remember it.

BR: What elements of your job make you want to go to work every day?

MJ: I want to work every day—just the idea of creating worlds. It’s like taking a canvas, an empty canvas, you know, a clean slate. They give you paint, and we just color and paint and create worlds. I just love that idea. And having people see it and be awe-inspired whenever they see it.



BR: What qualities of yours helped you get where you are today?

MJ: Faith and determination. And practice.

BR: Right. Practice makes perfect. What would you have done differently in your career if you knew then what you know now?

MJ: What would I have done differently? Let me see … Practice more.

BR: Practice more?

MJ: I practiced a lot.

BR: You practiced a hell of a lot! [Jackson laughs] But you would have practiced more? [Jackson nods] What’s your greatest lesson learned?



MJ: Not to trust everybody. Not to trust everybody in the industry. There’re a lot of sharks. And record companies steal. They cheat. You have to audit them. And it’s time for artists to take a stand against them, because they totally take advantage of [artists]. Totally. They forget that it’s the artists who make the company, not the company who makes the artists. Without the talent, the company would be nothing but just hardware. And it takes a real good talent that the public wants to see.

BR: What are some of your favorite albums?

MJ: My favorite albums would be Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite, Claude Debussy’s greatest hits, which is, you know, “Claire de Lune” and “Arabesque” and The Afternoon of a Faun. I love Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On, James Brown’s Live at the Apollo, The Sound of Music [soundtrack]. I love Rodgers and Hammerstein. I love the great show-tune writers very much, and I love Holland-Dozier-Holland from Motown—they were geniuses. So many great writers. So many great ones.

BR: Any other great albums, like contemporary albums?

MJ: Great albums … It’s hard because albums today have one or two great songs and the rest stink.

BR: Or older style—-it could be like Marvin Gaye or Sly.

MJ: Sly & the Family Stone—I like everything they do. Stevie Wonder is a genius.



BR: Which album?

MJ: Every one. Talking Book. I love when he did “Living for the City.” I forget the name of it [the album]. Fantastic. I think that was ‘Songs in the Key of Life’ —fantastic. Hearing this music made me say to myself, “I can do this, and I think I can do this on an international level.”

BR: Really?

MJ: Really, and then when the Bee Gees came out in the ’70s, that did it for me. I cried. I cried listening to their music. I knew every note, every instrument.



BR: [sings] “This broken heart …”

MJ: [sings] “How can you mend …”

BR: [sings] “This broken heart …”

MJ: And [sings] “How can you stop the rain from falling down?” I love that. [sings with Ratner] “How can you stop the sun from shining? What makes the world go ‘round.” I love that stuff. And when they did ‘Saturday Night Fever’ that did it for me. I said, “I gotta do this. I know I can do this.” And we hit with Thriller. And I just started writing songs. I wrote “Billie Jean.” I wrote “Beat It,” “Startin’ Somethin’.” Just writing, writing. It was fun.

BR: Any posters up in your room when you were a kid?

MJ: Yeah. Brooke Shields, everywhere. My sisters would get jealous and tear them off the wall.



BR: What are the great shows that you’ve seen, concerts?



MJ: James Brown. Jackie Wilson. The real entertainers, the real ones, make you get goose bumps.

BR: It was James Brown? Where’d you see him?



MJ: We used to have to go onstage after him because he would come on and then we would come on amateur hour. So I’d be in the wings studying every step, every move—

BR: —On TV?

MJ: No, at the Apollo [Theater].

BR: Amateur Hour at the Apollo. And you saw him perform?

MJ: Yeah, and Jackie Wilson. All of them—the Delphonics, the Temptations.

BR: But do you remember one show? You saw the Temptations, too?

MJ: Yeah. 



BR: But was there a show when you said like, “Oh, my God”?

MJ: James Brown, Jackie Wilson.

BR: At the Apollo?

MJ: Yeah, they made me cry. I’ve never seen nothing like that. That kind of emotion, that kind of fever, feeling—it was like another higher, spiritual plane they were on. They were, like, in a trance, and they had the audience in the palms of their hands. I just loved how they could control them like that, that kind of power. When they’d sing they’d have tears running down their faces. They’d get so into it.

BR: What are some of your favorite songs?



MJ: Favorite songs of all time? I love Burt Bacharach very much. Any Motown. The Beatles, like “Eleanor Rigby,” “Yesterday.” Any of the Supremes’. All that stuff is great. I think the ’60s had some of the best melodies of all time between Peter, Paul, and Mary, and you know, all those people. The Mamas and the Papas were wonderful. And the Drifters go a little further back, but I love that song “On Broadway”—it’s genius. The simple ones are the best, I think. I love “Alfie”—so beautiful. There are so many. Like movies, there are so many great movies.

BR: So list a few things that could be helpful to someone breaking into the music business.

MJ: Believe in yourself. Study the greats and become greater. And be a scientist. Dissect. Dissect.

BR: You said something else before: Don’t give up.



MJ: No matter what. I don’t care if the whole world is against you or teasing you or saying you’re not gonna make it. Believe in yourself. No matter what. Some of the greatest men who have made their mark on this world were treated like that—you know, “You’re not gonna do it, you’re not gonna get anywhere.” They laughed at the Wright brothers. They laughed at Thomas Edison. They laughed at Walt Disney. They made jokes about Henry Ford. They said he was ignorant. Disney dropped out of school. That’s how far they went. These men shaped and changed our culture, our customs, the way we live, the way we do things.

And I think God plants those seeds through people on the earth. And I think you’re one, I’m one to bring some bliss and escapism, some joy, some magic. Because without entertainment, what would the world be like? You know? What would it really be like? It would be a totally different world for me. I love entertainment. And my favorite of all is film. The power and magic of movies. It’s the greatest, it’s the most expressive of all the art forms. I think it touches the soul. Music and movies are the most expressive. It’s almost like religion: You get so involved, so caught up. You go in the theater a different person than you come out. It affects you that way. That’s powerful. I think that’s strong. I love that.



(The above video is of Michael visiting Brett on the set of "Red Dragon")

BR: When you can make an audience feel.

MJ: Yeah, yeah.


BR: They relate to it.

MJ: Yeah, they live it. They’re a part of it. They forget they’re sitting in a seat.

BR: The experience of watching a movie affects their life.

MJ: Their whole life. It could change your life.

BR: Yes, I remember seeing Star Wars in the theater when I was 7 years old. It’s a different experience for Paris or Prince [Jackson’s children] seeing it today on DVD, 27 years later. I saw it when it first came out, with all the shock and awe of the time. No one had ever seen anything like it. There were lines for blocks, and I didn’t even get in the first time. I had to go back the next day to try again. The memory of being so desperate, at 7 years old, to see that movie makes it an even more unforgettable experience. The first time you see something like that, it permanently affects your life. It’s like listening to a song or seeing an artist perform for the first time. Getting to see James Brown, and that moment of tears coming out of your eyes, is different than listening to it on the radio 20 years later.


 MJ: I can’t tell you how incredible it was. I just love the great entertainers, the great performers, the great showmen, the great storytellers. Just watching them, you’re just mesmerized. You’re caught up in it. I love it. One spotlight, baby.

BR: Frank Sinatra.





MJ: Yeah. Those guys are cool. And Sammy Davis. I just love it, the whole thing. It’s magic, it’s real magic






"As long as its NOT a journalist!"

A few months ago I did a post (it appears below) that included this quote from Michael:

“My friends, with 2 children of my own, I know what it means to have to balance the demand of family and career -- let's not even talk about finding a date for myself, even though... Even though Rabbi Shmuley keeps telling me he's going to find me the perfect woman, my response is: As long as it's not a journalist!”

Michael Jackson, Heal the Kids, Carnegie Hall Address

February 14th, 2001


By chance, I recently came across a video showing snippets from that speech. 




The fan that put the video together assembled coverage from three programs: Entertainment Tonight, Access Hollywood and eXtra. 

Interestingly, out of the three reports, only one - Access Hollywood (00:02:16) – included the best line:

“As long as it’s NOT a journalist!”

Media protecting their own from ridicule?

 Friday, March 11, 2011


So we are supposed to care about the media? Who lie and deceive us?

One of the things I’ve struggled with since Michael’s death is remaining positive in light of the dawning evidence that I had been somewhat brainwashed by the media. I’m a MJ fan, have been since 1991 and yet some of their crap did permeate my perception of Michael. Not all of it, but more than I would have thought possible. 

As a result, now that I know better I am incredibly cynical about the veracity of any news report I see or read. It infuriated me recently when all the various media outlets seemed to be insisting that I fear for the safety of several US journalists covering the unrest in Egypt. Most notably to me were Katie Couric and Anderson Cooper. Firstly, they knew what they were getting themselves into; after all that is why they were there – to cover the newsworthy event.


After the election of President Obama in September 2008, I began watching a lot of CNN to learn more about the charismatic new US leader – and in particular I watched Anderson Cooper 360. I picked his show because he had become known to me as doing exceptionally good work covering Hurricane Katrina. The impression I got was that he was one of the few remaining authentic newsmen; an honorable journalist committed to using his reporting skills to make a positive change in the world.


I distinctly remember they covered the ‘This Is It’ announcement in March 2009. They implied that Michael was a rambling, incoherent mess. Now, they are not members of the tabloid media so I assumed (incorrectly) that it must be true. I felt bad for Michael; I did not want to see him humiliated so I fast-forwarded the rest of the segment featuring the O2 Press Conference. 

Imagine my surprise when a year later, I came across a transcript of his O2 announcement. It was so brief, how could anyone possibly label it as rambling?


2009-03-06jacksonaction.com "I love you so much. Thank you all. (Fans begin chanting ‘This Is It’ and Michael responds to this by chanting along with them) This is it. I just want to say these…these will be my final show performances in London. This is it, this is it and when I say “this is it” it really means this is it because erm…I’ll be, I’ll be performing the songs my fans want to hear. This is it, I mean, this is, this is the final curtain call okay? And, erm…I’ll see you in July and (Fans chat “We love you Michael!”) I love you. I really do. You have to know that, I love you so much, really, from the bottom of my heart. This is it and see you in July!”


To characterize it like that, when it could be so easily verified…it shows you how audacious the media has become. And it also shows how stupid they think we are! I suppose they’re right because I didn’t question them…not enough.

With Katie Couric, I have been a fan of hers for years. I would even tape ‘NBC Today’ everyday (it is on at 4am in Australia) because I loved her and Matt Lauer. I still watched it even after she left for CBS – until Congressman…the former Congressman (hee hee!)…Peter King appeared on it. One day, I came across a YouTube video of Katie on ‘The Late Show with David Letterman’ discussing Michael Jackson. 


Now, my situation is a bit different, I do not have the internet at home (ironic isn’t it? I cancel my home internet and then a week later I start a blog!) So after I finish work I use www.keepvid.com at my office to save any videos. I don’t watch them at work – instead I use a USB device to transfer files between my home and the office. Anyway, the point is: when I got the Katie Couric ‘Late Show’ appearance home it wouldn’t open.  I didn’t give it another thought other than perhaps I was better off if the story Katie told was mean spirited. 


So I wasn’t inclined to feel instantaneous concern for either Anderson Cooper or Katie Couric. Even that angered me, because I would have prior to Michael’s death. It is the loss of trust I have in the media, my increasing levels of scepticism that I struggle with daily. I’ve found that most of us are Michael Jackson fans not because of his undeniable and unquestionable talent, but because of his heart. He was a genuinely good person. He was an angel on earth, here to make the world a better place.

I want to be like him not like them…I want to see the world through his eyes not theirs.

Months passed, I became more adept at using the new system I’d implemented for YouTube videos so I re-tried and finally got to see the Katie Couric MJ discussion for myself a few days ago. Here it is:


I was so relieved that she wasn’t nasty about him! The video also served to inspire me to group the following items together, with Michael, as he always should, getting the last word. 


“My friends, with 2 children of my own, I know what it means to have to balance the demand of family and career -- let's not even talk about finding a date for myself, even though... Even though Rabbi Shmuley keeps telling me he's going to find me the perfect woman, my response is: As long as it's not a journalist!”

Michael Jackson, Heal the Kids, Carnegie Hall Address

February 14th, 2001

When I think of these ladies...

I love the TV game show Jeopardy and watch it everyday. It’s on twice a day here in Australia but the episodes are old; from 2009 & 2010.

The carry over champion was a lady named Liz, and there seemed something familiar to me about her. By the time she became a 3 day winner I was starting to think might be Seven Bowie of mj-777.com (because she sounded an awful lot like her) – that is, until she failed to answer this question:

 
A CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK TV HOST & LEGAL ANALYST LISA BLOOM IS PICTURED HERE WITH THIS LAWYER – HER MOM


NO ONE GUESSED IT. JUST GOES TO SHOW INTELLIGENT PEOPLE DON’T PAY ANY ATTENTION WHATSOEVER TO GLORIA ALLRED!

I never thought I would happily be putting a photo of this woman in my blog, especially as Michael is not even in the photo with her (that's the only way Bashir got his mug in my blog). But this really made me smile. All too often, us fans can get overwhelmed by those who have hurt Michael and give them far greater importance than what they deserve. Perhaps we forget that if not for the tie (however brief) to Michael Jackson, they are of little consequence.

Gloria Allred caused Michael trouble, first when she initially represented the Chandler family and later when she went on TV suggesting Michael's children should be taken away from him. It was the latter that prompted this rare outburst from Michael - when asked how he would respond to her, first he asks:

“Who’s that?”

 As I said, intelligent people don’t pay any attention to Gloria Allred!

Like most people, Michael did not know who she was. I certainly had never heard of her before. But he does answer the question – he says:

"Ah….tell her to go to hell!"


(I wish this wasn't a TMZ video...I'll try to replace it )

Even though it is the incredible kindness and inherent goodness of Michael that is the main reason I (and many, many others) are so devoted to him, I adore these rare flashes of anger/annoyance. They are so rare (I can only think of two or three other instances), and considering all that he went through that is surprising.
So I'll add the Jeopardy answer to the above video and that is what I'll conjure up whenever I hear or see the name Gloria Allredwrong.

For Ms Diane Deadmind, I use her own words. In this appearance on The View, (at the 00:04:00) she recounts how during the trial when Michael notices her, he growls at her and makes a gesture like slit your throat. In that case, not only do I love that he let her know exactly how he felt about her, I have to laugh when you see her surprise. If she was the Michael Jackson expert she claimed to be, she would know that she must be really bad to illicit this response from Michael.




This is the man that could forgive the British teenagers who bashed and killed the 3 year old toddler. He was able to forgive his father, even the accusers who made those horrible false allegations, he was able to excuse them, saying that their parents made them do it.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Forgiving Joseph - not for Joe's sake - but for Michael...

For some time now I’ve been planning to do a piece on Joe Jackson. Not to go into his relationship with Michael – that has been very well documented. Too well actually, if truth be told. I’m sure you are all as equally fed up as I am with the media imposing their skewed perception of what type of man Michael Jackson is. That they attack him on every front imaginable is infuriating in the extreme. But what concerns me most is when I see some members of the MJ fan base unwittingly succumbing to their tactics.

I am in awe of the MJ fan-mily, I truly am. Just look at this Facebook album I’ve created to highlight all the wonderful things they do. Some other standout moments has been the Uncovering of Michael’s name at the Gardner St school, the postponement of the Discovery program concerning a mock autopsy, the clean up of obnoxious YouTube videos as well as countless other instances of fans paying tribute to Michael from every corner of the Earth.

I believe another thing we can do for Michael is to not allow the media to use his family against him with us. Prior to Michael’s death I knew very little about Joe Jackson. I still don’t know very much to be honest because the media focus only on the abuse elements of the father son relationship. As fans of Michael’s it is natural that we would be repelled by anything or anyone that caused him harm and so it is perfectly understandable that we have anger towards Joe for the hurt he caused his son. Even though I knew Michael had forgiven him, I still had some resentment in my heart. 


That is until I picked up the commemorative edition of “Right On!” magazine and read this statement from Joe Jackson:

“In one of the darkest moments of our lives we find it hard to find the words appropriate to this sudden tragedy we all had to encounter. Our beloved son, brother and father of three children has gone so unexpectedly, in such a tragic way and much too soon. It leaves us, his family, speechless and devastated to a point where communication with the outside world seems almost impossible at times. We miss Michael endlessly; our pain can not be described in words. But Michael would not want us to give up now. So we want to thank all of his faithful supporters and loyal fans worldwide, you – who Michael loved so much. Please do not despair because Michael will continue to live on in each and every one of you. Continue to spread his message, because that is what he would want you to do. Carry on, so his legacy will live forever.”
I remember being surprised by the intelligence and sensitivity of those words. These are not characteristics you’d associate with the stereotype of the domineering, aggressive father. Some people might think that Joe Jackson did not write those words himself, that he had someone on his staff do it and indeed that may well be the case. But I would like to believe that those words came from Joe. What can I say, I am the supreme optimist!

In ‘Living with Michael Jackson’ – Part 3 – Michael says about his father:

And I totally forgive him for all of it, you know, you have to…”
 And later…
“So when people say the abused abuse, that’s not true…that’s not true at all!”

This last line is the most significant of all if you think about it. Those in the media intent on portraying Michael as a child molester are as equally keen to re-hash the Joe Jackson abuse storyline. Think about Oprah Winfrey’s interview with Katherine Jackson and the MJ3. Oprah is seen only asking Joe Jackson about the one topic – you guessed it – the abuse.




I don’t believe for a single second they do so out of sympathy for Michael Jackson. Instead it is much more likely they do it so they can tie the abuse Michael suffered at his father’s hands into the false allegations.

Almost 2 years on and I’m more convinced than ever that Michael gets more of his admirable qualities from his father than what I had previously thought. Emotional, thoughtful and considerate - these same qualities I had initially attributed to his mother Katherine, and that certainly might be true but I now think its possible they also come from Joe.

Michael said as much himself in the 2005 Geraldo Riviera interview:

"At this season in your life, at this stage, I think you tend to appreciate who your parents are more and what they've done for you.  You almost start to retract everything and where you are in your life and all of the wonderful things they instilled in you.  You start to see them come forth and take fruition in your life and I'm starting to see a lot of things that my father influenced me on, my mother.  So, it's been amazing."
"I'm very much like my father in a lot of ways.  He's very strong, he's a warrior.  He's always taught us to be courageous and to be confident and to believe in our ideals and no matter what, no star is too far to reach, and you never give up and our mother taught us that as well.  No matter what."

This more recent statement from Joe Jackson demonstrates that Joe understood what made Michael so special.
A MESSAGE TO FANS FROM JOE JACKSON: I have heard about the protests planned for tomorrow (at the Los Angeles Courthouse, Monday, February 8) and I appreciate the fans feeling that they are Michael’s voice now that he is unable to fight for himself. I also want to stand behind the statement made online by a fan that you are a reflection of Michael and you must represent him as he would represent himself – peacefully, respectfully, gracefully, and above all else with love. There is no room for hatred and violence.
While we may not be as quick to forgive as Michael was, we must still conduct ourselves with the grace and dignity he deserves. Please remember this in your protest.
Michael WILL get justice, just as we knew he would in his trial. Please remember that your actions will also sway public opinion and that justice can come sooner rather than later depending on the face the fans show the world. The world can see hurt, pain, and outrage, but not the anger. All we want is justice, nothing more, nothing less. This man should be treated as anyone else would in this situation. Showing your support and love for him in such a big way will not go unnoticed. We all appreciate your unwavering support.
In writing, we get the message unadulterated by the media’s agenda. Reading Joe’s words from his statements and the transcript of Michael’s speech he delivered at Oxford in 2002 I now have a totally different perspective on Joe Jackson. The Oxford speech is so beautiful that I must feature part of it here: 

(The full transcript is available at vindicatemj – click here)
  “A lot of kids today are hurt puppies who have weaned themselves off the need for love. They couldn’t care less about their parents. Left to their own devices, they cherish their independence. They have moved on and have left their parents behind. Then there are the far worse cases of children who harbour animosity and resentment toward their parents, so that any overture that their parents might undertake would be thrown forcefully back in their face.

Tonight, I don’t want any of us to make this mistake. That’s why I’m calling upon all the world’s children – beginning with all of us here tonight – to forgive our parents, if we felt neglected. Forgive them and teach them how to love again.

You probably weren’t surprised to hear that I did not have an idyllic childhood. The strain and tension that exists in my relationship with my own father is well documented. My father is a tough man and he pushed my brothers and me hard, from the earliest age, to be the best performers we could be.
He had great difficulty showing affection. He never really told me he loved me. And he never really complimented me either. If I did a great show, he would tell me it was a good show. And if I did an OK show, he told me it was a lousy show.
He seemed intent, above all else, on making us a commercial success. And at that he was more than adept. My father was a managerial genius and my brothers and I owe our professional success, in no small measure, to the forceful way that he pushed us. He trained me as a showman and under his guidance I couldn’t miss a step.

But what I really wanted was a Dad. I wanted a father who showed me love. And my father never did that. He never said I love you while looking me straight in the eye; he never played a game with me. He never gave me a piggyback ride; he never threw a pillow at me, or a water balloon.
But I remember once when I was about four years old, there was a little carnival and he picked me up and put me on a pony. It was a tiny gesture, probably something he forgot five minutes later. But because of that moment I have this special place in my heart for him. Because that’s how kids are, the little things mean so much to them and for me, that one moment meant everything. I only experienced it that one time, but it made me feel really good, about him and the world.

But now I am a father myself, and one day I was thinking about my own children, Prince and Paris and how I wanted them to think of me when they grow up. To be sure, I would like them to remember how I always wanted them with me wherever I went, how I always tried to put them before everything else. But there are also challenges in their lives. Because my kids are stalked by paparazzi, they can’t always go to a park or a movie with me.
So what if they grow older and resent me, and how my choices impacted their youth? Why weren’t we given an average childhood like all the other kids, they might ask? And at that moment I pray that my children will give me the benefit of the doubt. That they will say to themselves: “Our daddy did the best he could, given the unique circumstances that he faced. He may not have been perfect, but he was a warm and decent man, who tried to give us all the love in the world.”
I hope that they will always focus on the positive things, on the sacrifices I willingly made for them, and not criticise the things they had to give up, or the errors I’ve made, and will certainly continue to make, in raising them. For we have all been someone’s child, and we know that despite the very best of plans and efforts, mistakes will always occur. That’s just being human.

And when I think about this, of how I hope that my children will not judge me unkindly, and will forgive my shortcomings, I am forced to think of my own father and despite my earlier denials, I am forced to admit that me must have loved me. He did love me, and I know that.


There were little things that showed it. When I was a kid I had a real sweet tooth – we all did. My favourite food was glazed doughnuts and my father knew that. So every few weeks I would come downstairs in the morning and there on the kitchen counter was a bag of glazed doughnuts – no note, no explanation – just the doughnuts. It was like Santa Claus.
Sometimes I would think about staying up late at night, so I could see him leave them there, but just like with Santa Claus, I didn’t want to ruin the magic for fear that he would never do it again. My father had to leave them secretly at night, so as no one might catch him with his guard down. He was scared of human emotion; he didn’t understand it or know how to deal with it. But he did know doughnuts.

And when I allow the floodgates to open up, there are other memories that come rushing back, memories of other tiny gestures, however imperfect, that showed that he did what he could. So tonight, rather than focusing on what my father didn’t do, I want to focus on all the things he did do and on his own personal challenges. I want to stop judging him.


I have started reflecting on the fact that my father grew up in the South, in a very poor family. He came of age during the Depression and his own father, who struggled to feed his children, showed little affection towards his family and raised my father and his siblings with an iron fist.
 Who could have imagined what it was like to grow up a poor black man in the South, robbed of dignity, bereft of hope, struggling to become a man in a world that saw my father as subordinate. I was the first black artist to be played on MTV and I remember how big a deal it was even then. And that was in the 80s!

My father moved to Indiana and had a large family of his own, working long hours in the steel mills, work that kills the lungs and humbles the spirit, all to support his family. Is it any wonder that he found it difficult to expose his feelings? Is it any mystery that he hardened his heart, that he raised the emotional ramparts? And most of all is it any wonder why he pushed his sons so hard to succeed as performers, so that they could be saved from what he knew to be a life of indignity and poverty?

I have begun to see that even my father’s harshness was a kind of love, an imperfect love, to be sure, but love nonetheless. He pushed me because he loved me. Because he wanted no man ever to look down at his offspring.
And now with time, rather than bitterness, I feel blessing. In the place of anger, I have found absolution. And in the place of revenge I have found reconciliation. And my initial fury has slowly given way to forgiveness."
One thing I would like every one of my fellow fans to think about before they write, blog, tweet or say anything about Joe Jackson (or any other member of his family for that matter) is – what would Michael think about it? Regardless of what was done to him I just can’t see him being pleased with any of us being rude to his father, or one of his brothers or sisters.