Blogs and Stories

Pat OBrien

The Ultimate Thriller

Michael Jackson Jeff Widerner / AP Photo Forget all the scandals and the weirdness, Pat O’Brien says. In the end, what we will remember about the Michael Jackson he knew is the music.

In his brilliant book about Fred Astaire, Joseph Epstein borrowed from the German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer to describe the difference between talent and genius. “Talent,” Epstein wrote, “is like a marksman who hits a target that the rest cannot reach; genius, one who hits a target they cannot even sight.”

By that definition, Michael Jackson was, indeed, a genius. Yes, through all the demons and Wacko Jacko behavior and all the horrible allegations and public displays of craziness, it was the genius of his music that we end up mourning today. There is enough material on Michael Jackson to make it possible to actually narrate something about him without saying one nice thing, but that’s not going to be the case with this man. The King of Pop lived and died in controversy but will be long remembered as an icon who transcended anything we threw at him. In his death, nothing will stick. Bank it.

Sinatra made us want to love. Elvis made us want to swoon. The Beatles made us want to sing. Michael’s music made us want to dance.

Few have hit the musical bull's-eye he targeted. Sinatra did it. Elvis did it. The Beatles did it. And that’s about it. It’s a pretty good club. It wasn’t so much about the sheer numbers of records sold, which was astounding. It wasn’t so much about the hysteria from day one, when he came on the scene as a young boy. It wasn’t even the moonwalk. It was that he made you want to, well, dance. Sinatra made us want to love. Elvis made us want to swoon. The Beatles made us want to sing. Michael’s music made us want to dance. And unless you haven’t studied this aspect of our glorious history, we are not a dancing country. We’re lovers and fighters and singers. Michael taught us to dance.

I was talking to one of the aforementioned Beatles shortly after George Harrison died and we were reminding ourselves that when somebody who is such a big part of our lives dies, he takes a little of all of us with him. We remember the milestones, we remember the clothes, the performances, the good and the bad and the ugly.

Many of Michael Jackson’s milestones are not worth remembering, or more to the point, are somehow worth forgetting. He’ll never be forgiven for at least the perception he was a pedophile or for the way he paraded his kids around in masks or the way his physical appearance morphed into something that made us squeamish. Those events and demons, if you will, will always be part of his memory, but when it came down to it in the immediate coverage of his death it was about his genius. It was about the music.

Even this country’s greatest self-appointed cynic, MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann, was able to forget about the “issues” tonight. There he sat, with his coat off and without a teleprompter for a change, morphing himself into Walter Cronkite covering the death of John F. Kennedy. There was a sense of urgency we rarely see in this cable and viral world. Olbermann, it should be remembered, was the Pied Piper of Michael Jackson critics, humiliating and degrading the King of Pop night after night in the form of puppets, gleaming with great “journalistic” joy, it seemed, in Jackson’s downfall.

But listen to him now. Listen and watch all of them, all of us, now all hail the King of Pop.

Back to Top
June 25, 2009 | 11:37pm
Comments ()
Braneman

Well done, Mr. O'Brien. A thoughtful piece.
Not an apotheosis, but nonetheless a valediction
that at least precludes mourning.

|
|
Reply
7:48 pm, Jun 26, 2009
terry332

Mike Huckabee said it best "He was a human, He never got to be a child" That's all he wanted to be, he was NEVER a child molester. May he rest in peace.

|
|
Reply
8:35 pm, Jun 28, 2009
anima45

You hit the nail on the head. The sheer beauty of Michael's music is that he practically dared you not to get up and dance. From "Rock With You" to "Dangerous", any sentient being couldn't help but groove to his music. I was looking forward to his comeback because there will never be another like him. Ever. How lucky am I to have had the Beatles and Michael in my lifetime.

|
|
Reply
5:18 am, Jun 29, 2009
UncleKudzu

this article is way beneath the dignity of this site. if there were ever any question that Pat O'Brien is a silly flake, this article banishes all doubt, yet here it is.

get real, Beast!

|
|
Reply
12:02 am, Jul 1, 2009
Leave a Comment
Leave a comment

Thank you.
As a first time user, your comment has been submitted for review. It can take anywhere from a few hours to a day or two for your comment to be reviewed, depending on the time of week and the volume of comments we receive.

View Comments
Leave a comment

Please log in to leave comments.

The Ultimate Thriller

by Pat O'Brien

Info
RSS
Pat OBrien
Emails
|
print
Single Page
|
text
-
+
Facebook
 | 
Twitter
 | 
Digg
 |