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L. Brent Bozell
15 Feb 2012
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Celebrities At The End

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The surrealism of celebrity pop culture erupts when a major celebrity dies. The sudden, mysterious death of Michael Jackson caused a near-total eclipse of the real news. The cable-news channels blurred into 24-7 wailing walls for the so-called "King of Pop." Television ratings surged with a big ka-ching.

So much for the "news" business. On Friday, for example, just 24 hours after the death news broke, anchors like NBC's Brian Williams fit the "news" of Congress, the recession and Iran into a neat thimble of snippets so they could devote most of the newscast to continued mourning of the man with the glittery glove.

But what, exactly, is it that Michael Jackson brought to America that was so essential? An alien arriving from space would find him celebrated for dressing in shiny socks and dancing the "moonwalk." His music broke sales records and sets dance floors hopping, and his videos made people say, "I want my MTV." But all this happened a long time ago, when MTV was a music channel.

That is not how Michael Jackson dominated the pop-culture news scene for the past 15 years or so. What about Michael Jackson, the man? Was he, in the end, a good man? It seemed no one asked. Everyone wanted to celebrate the mystique of Jackson, but no one was comfortable focusing on the real Michael Jackson — a wretched degenerate if ever there was one.

On NBC, reporter Janet Shamlian stayed vague about the "eccentricities" of Jackson: "In 1993, facing allegations of sexual abuse from a 13-year-old boy, he settled out of court. Soon after, he married Elvis's daughter Lisa Marie Presley in a union that would last less than two years. In 2005, criminal charges of sexually abusing a teenage boy, and more bizarre behavior. He would show up in court in pajama bottoms. In the end, the jury said he was innocent."

The coverage was an ocean wide — and an inch deep.

Some hinted at a much darker celebrity inside the bubble. They reported Lisa Marie Presley wrote a letter. "I wanted to save him from the inevitable, which is what has just happened," Presley wrote. "I became very ill and emotionally / spiritually exhausted in my quest to save him from certain self-destructive behavior and from the awful vampires and leeches he would always manage to magnetize around him." This man was disturbed, addicted — and perhaps to some, he was evil, not just eccentric.

Whatever he was, he never seemed to grow up completely. Presley said Jackson feared he would die of an overdose, but he never seemed to take full responsibility for himself.

Farrah Fawcett died of cancer earlier in the same day. News of her death was swamped by his. To many boys of the 1970s, Farrah Fawcett was the "it" girl, the ultimate hottie. Her star burst with the debut of "Charlie's Angels" in 1976, and her poster in a red swimsuit and all her feathered blond hair and perfect teeth was a massive seller. Despite several very serious (and even critically acclaimed) dramatic turns, she never won a major award for acting.

Many feel she saved her best for last. In a documentary called "Farrah's Story," Fawcett took her embarrassing diagnosis of terminal anal cancer and made it a cause. The sweetheart with the perfect smile insisted on filming the horror of her illness even as she vomited through treatments. The lady with the world's most famous head of hair insisted her shaved head be displayed. All pride and vanity was put aside. What was left was the stark wreckage of a disease-riddled body. In the end, Farrah Fawcett never looked lovelier.

In the special, played on NBC, Farrah displays a disarming optimism based on faith in God: "There's no room for despair," she exclaimed. "The devil makes you sick, God can heal you. I believe in Him, His power and His infinite wisdom. I know I must do my work also, but I cannot do it without his help. But I must never forget how blessed I have been. He has given me gifts and happiness beyond any of my simple expectations."

In numerous scenes, she is seen wearing a rosary; she clutches it in rough moments. Going into treatment, you could hear her whisper her Our Fathers.

Farrah Fawcett did everything humanly possible to save her life, while a deadly disease systematically destroyed her body. Staring death in the face, she used her one remaining asset — her celebrity — to help others, even if it meant humiliating herself on national television.

In the end, all of Michael Jackson's manifold blessings were squandered while he systematically destroyed himself.

L. Brent Bozell III is the president of the Media Research Center. To find out more about Brent Bozell III, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

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Sir;...This article does not much surprise me...It does surprise me that America is going to waste another moment of life on the death of Jackson... I never saw much in him, and what ever disease he had created in him a grotesque characature of a man.... But it does not surprise me that you should attack him, even in death where all should know peace...While you bend every effort to defend the wealth of those who do nothing for it, Mr. Jackson actually did something for his money...Isn't that cause enough for contempt??? Doesn't the sweat spent to buy wealth make it Filthy Lucre???When wealth is actually created is when it is most vulnerable... To take home a penny, the poor must give one to the government, and give at least one to the employer...Why not keep it this way??? Isn't the working man a brute, and is not every poor man made rich also brutish in his wealth??? How many popsicles could Elvis afford as a child??? And given unlimited funds, what do the wildest dreams of averice afford but what youth denied???Wealth is not the same disease to those born always with it... To those who once know want as babes, no amount of wealth can cure them...Poverty, and the working class smell will hang on them until they die, and then, they will not be so much morned as abused by the wealthy they hoped to join in our pantheon of greats....You might consider the words of a Zurich Choir Master named Felix Hemmerlin who wrote in the first half of the fifteenth century a book entitled De Nobilitate in which he said this: Beside the man of gentle birth he [the man of the common herd] looks not like a human being, but like some hideous, half terrifying, half comic hobgoblin... He is a human being with back twisted and humped, shapeless as a mountain, with foul and grimmacing visage, the stupid random stare of the donkey, brow covered with furrows, beard unkempt, hair a grayish matted thatch, eyes blear under brows like bristles, and he has a huge wen... His unshapely, course, mangy, shaggy body is upheld by wambling legs, and his foul and scanty clothing leaves his discolored and inhuman breast exposed to sight.... ...If this portrait seems a little over done, it may be; but then go to church and see those who have given their lives to their labors, and their money to their churches... We may be better off, but it is with such contempt that we are all viewed by the tolerant gentle people of America, as having no reason, nor right... Thanks...Sweeney... And I have the above reference by way of Ludwig Marcuse...
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Wed Jul 1, 2009 5:57 AM
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