By Mark Goldblatt on 7.9.09 @ 6:07AM
The King of Pop? Or the Lord of the Flies?
After a week of rolling my eyes at the grotesque verbal
pieta constructed around Michael Jackson's death -- with
the media casting itself as Virgin Mary, cradling the fallen King
of Pop down to the earth -- and then, despite myself, watching
the entire glitz and glam, toe-tapping memorial service on
Tuesday, capped by the tearful, heart-rending outburst by his
daughter, I experienced a sudden what-if moment. What if
Jackson in fact never laid a hand on any of those kids during his
infamous "sleepovers"? What if the millions he forked over in
1994 to make child sexual abuse charges go away wasn't
hush-money but grief-money, paid not because he thought he'd lose
in court but be cause he felt he couldn't endure a public trial?
What if the seven counts of child sexual abuse he confronted in
2003, based on the allegations of one young boy, were merely an
attempt by the boy's family to extort more money out of Jackson?
(Jackson was, after all, acquitted in court that time.) What if
he had, as one mental health expert blithely asserted, regressed
to the childhood he never knew…and so the sleepovers were, at
least in Jackson's mind, just sleepovers?
But then, before the pangs of doubt could coalesce into genuine
sympathy, I remembered that horrific moment in 2002 when Jackson
dangled his infant son over the railing of a fourth floor hotel
balcony in Berlin. I remembered the sight of the baby's legs
kicking spastically in the air, and I remembered, most of all,
the maniacal Lord of the Flies expression on Jackson's
face as he taunted the crowd with the potential murder of his own
child.
Jackson might not have been a sociopath. (Sociopaths, as a rule,
are cagier than Jackson ever was.) He might even have had a core
of decency and good intentions. But he also had an ugly streak
that cut deep through his emotional landscape -- as much as we
might be inclined to overlook it given the shock of his death.
The irony, of course, is that for a time Jackson possessed as
much physical beauty and grace as anyone who ever inhabited the
planet. If you want to glimpse the full scale of Jackson's
self-destruction, or perhaps self-mutilation is the right term,
go to YouTube and pull up the video for
"Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough." The song comes from Jackson's
1979 album, his first as an adult, Off the Wall.
Aesthetic judgment tends to be subjective, so I'll just ask the
question: Has any movie star or fashion model ever looked more
handsome? Has any trained dancer ever been as light on his feet?
Fred Astaire, whose opinion should count, once called Jackson
"the greatest dancer of the century." If you pull up an earlier
video of a 16-year-old Jackson performing "Dancing Machine" with
this brothers on the old Merv Griffin Show, you'll see what
Astaire was talking about. Jackson, at his best, seemed to strike
a devil's bargain with the laws of gravity and motion. He seemed
to float through the air without leaving the ground.
The devil's bargain Jackson struck with adulthood produced less
thrilling results. In noting his Peter Pan complex -- which is
undeniable -- commentators have often overlooked the
all-consuming vanity that accompanied it. Peter Pan, remember,
won't grow up because he wants the innocent pleasures of
childhood to continue forever. Jackson craved those pleasures
too; his Neverland Ranch, replete with amusement park rides and
live exotic animals, was a testament to the collision of
childhood desires and monstrous wealth. But there was nothing
innocent in his decision to hire women to produce his children…
"his," it now seems, only in the sense that he contracted for
them. The names of the two male children are themselves monuments
to Jackson's self-indulgence and egocentrism: "Prince Michael
Jackson" and "Prince Michael Jackson II."
Jackson's sons are princes, you see, because he himself
is the King of Pop.
Even in Jackson's least self-centered moment, when he dedicated
his singing and songwriting talents to the cause of African
relief -- I'm talking about his involvement with the USA for
Africa charity in 1985 -- even then, his immaturity shone through
the chorus he wrote for that year's mega-hit: "We are the world,
we are the children / We are the ones who make a brighter day so
let's start giving / There's a choice we're making, we're saving
our own lives / It's true we'll make a brighter day, just you and
me."
Except we cannot all be children. The entire world
cannot consist of children -- though, of course, children
habitually fantasize about a world in which there are no
grown-ups making rules that children have to follow. Adults, on
the other hand, know in advance the outcome of such a world…you'd
have the older kids dangling the babies off balconies.
You'd have Lord of the Flies.
Indeed, it is the very lack of adult supervision -- the lack,
specifically, of the rule of law -- that has kept the sub-Saharan
Africa in a perpetual Lord of the Flies state since
roughly the end of European Colonialism. That's the reason
millions of African children were desperate for relief back in
the 1980s, the reason they're desperate for relief now, the
reason they'll be desperate for relief for the foreseeable
future. Shoveling money at Third World poverty -- the childish
solution -- won't cure the problem; on the contrary, hard
experience demonstrates it will only strengthen the dysfunctional
regimes that immiserate their people.
To remember Michael Jackson as a humanitarian, therefore, is
nonsense. To remember him as an adult is painful; it was a role
he never grew into, a dance step he never mastered. What remains
is to remember him as a child -- an actual child, singing and
dancing and glowing with talent -- before that first fateful
moment, circa 1979, when he stepped in front of a mirror, came
face to face with an approximation of human perfection, and
decided, vainly and in vain, he could make it better.