Michael Jackson at his very best

June 25, 2009, 9:15 pm · 15 comments


You have to give Michael Jackson credit. When he was at his best, no one was better. No one. Here he is doing “Billie Jean” live. No back up dancers. Just Michael in the spotlight showing why he was the biggest star in the world.

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{ 15 comments… read them below or add one }

whataloadacrap08 June 25, 2009, 10:30 pm at 10:30 pm

MJ was the King of Cool in the early 80’s, a handsome and talented young man with his finger on the pulse of what was hip. Everyone wanted to be able to move like he did on the dance floor, myself included. Finally there was somebody on the stage who would banish the wrinkly old drug addled hippy bands! MJ was new, fresh, hip, and totally cool.

The one glove stuff, the hyperbaric chamber, trying to buy the Elephant Mans skeleton, the increasingly bizzare costumes that he wore all the time, and of course the SURGERIES. It all finally came to a head in the early 90’s when he was living in his own amusment park, talking like he was Shirley Temple, dressing like a faggoty army man, and accused of buggering young boys in his bedroom.

Man, what was going on with the dude?

He should’ve been committed to a psych ward, but by then he was too rich and powerful to mess with. He bought the friggin’ Beatles for crying out loud! He created his own private hell, and today it finally consumed him. The creeps who enabled his descent into madness, like his money leeching family headed by that a$$hole of a father, his surgeons raking in the shekels while gobbling up his face piece by piece, and the assorted hangers-on should all be held up to public scorn.

In the end though, it’s MJ himself who’s really to blame. I want to be sympathetic, but it’s damned hard to find any sympathy for him and the family of freaks who made a full time job of kissing his a$$ and pilfering his cash.

RIP Whacko Jacko.

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David Duff June 26, 2009, 5:17 am at 5:17 am

Well, I watched your video – right the way through – the first time I have ever seen or heard him perform. Alas, clown make-up and costume, old-style mime techniques modernised, inaudible lyric, tedious song, plodding rhythm – oh well, I suppose it’s a generation thing. For me popular music ended with Sinatra and all the wonderful song-writers and musicians who supplied him with material that will last for ever.

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elvis June 26, 2009, 7:25 am at 7:25 am

There are many people more talented than Michael Jackson. There is something besides pop culture! Pop culture does little for art, thinking, virtue, knowledge,love,discipline .. you name it the list goes on and on!

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Carolyn Faun August 20, 2009, 5:55 pm at 5:55 pm

We miss you, MJJ.

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Carolyn Faun August 20, 2009, 5:57 pm at 5:57 pm

Uh, Elvis, name one person more talented than MJ? Okay, I’ll wait? It certainly wasn’t your wide waisted behind.

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k1000 August 20, 2009, 6:59 pm at 6:59 pm

Samuel Barber (Agnus Dei) Adagio for strings.
You want real culture, pull this one up and humor me. If you can listen to Adagio For Strings and critique it in your mind as a comparison to your MJ idol, and not understand, then you are a completely lost soul! There is more passion and real human emotion in this one masterpiece than any Motown lover can ever comprehend! Just one example. I can name many.

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Carolyn Faun August 20, 2009, 6:06 pm at 6:06 pm

White folks with money can be eccentric all day long. But let a black person try it and they are called crazy. Look at Phil Spector’s crazy behind chasing folks around his house with guns and then shooting them in the mouth and folks called this man a genius. What a load of crap is that? Look at Robert Blake’s crazy behind. Taking his wife out to dinner and then blowing her to peices. I don’t give a care how many surgeries MJ had or what he did with his money, he never hurt anyone. No one asked those buggers to come to his house they came on their own and begged to sleep in the bed with MJ. Then they turned around and went to a psychiatrist and told her MJ molested them. I am with Al Sharpton, Mike wasn’t crazy it was crazy the stuff he had to go through.

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Editor August 20, 2009, 6:28 pm at 6:28 pm

Ahhhh, the race card has been played. I don’t recall anyone here defending Phil Spector or Robert Blake. I would imagine that most people thought Spector was, much like Jackson, a once great talent who pissed away his genius and ended up nuttier than the proverbial fruitcake. I would also imagine that most people would think Blake was a lifelong social misfit who was talented enough that Hollywood was willing to overlook it for a while. Eventually, all three were consumed by their own demons.

But remember, Carolyn, you are the one who brought up Blake and Spector and race. We didn’t do it and neither did anyone else on this website.

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Treehog August 20, 2009, 6:44 pm at 6:44 pm

What about the amusement park, outrageous costumes, jackolantern face surgeries, chimpanzee toting, little boy statues everywhere, forced lady-boy voice would you say is not crazy?
Besides, I don’t think most people even thought of Michael Jackson as black. By all outward appearances he was clearly a noseless white woman.

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k1000 August 20, 2009, 6:42 pm at 6:42 pm

Well said editor!

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elvis August 20, 2009, 7:04 pm at 7:04 pm

Carolyn Faun…try Beethoven,Bach,Mozart,Debussy,Ravel, Schoenberg,Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly………….. Just a few to start, but i could go through a long list if you want.
BTW… I don’t have a fat behind… and also the recordings Elvis made with Sun records will always be more important than the overproduced albums of MJ.
Also… MJ hurt many boys and was a bad example for millions besides being horribly marketed and overproduced!

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Pittsburgh Z August 21, 2009, 7:26 am at 7:26 am

I don’t remember ANYONE calling Phil Spector a genius.

I don’t think anyone has been able to understand what Jackson has been singing since the Off the Wall album.

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Editor August 21, 2009, 8:24 am at 8:24 am

I just did a Google search for “Phil Spector” and “genius” and got 81,800 references. This is truly the epitome of a guy who wavered back and forth on each side of the line between genius and madness.

His Wall of Sound was a huge influence on 60s rock. He produced and co-wrote “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’” for the The Righteous Brothers and BMI calls it the song with the most U.S. air play in the 20th century. He produced 25 Top 10 hits between 1960 and 1965. He produced “Get Back,” “The Long & Winding Road,” and “Let It Be” for the Beatles.

Definitely a genius. And most definitely insane.

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elvis August 21, 2009, 8:31 am at 8:31 am

Genius is an overused word. Phil Spector was good and innovative at what he did, Einstein was a genius!

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Pittsburgh Z August 21, 2009, 12:02 pm at 12:02 pm

Seriously….some of the Beatles stuff is sooooooo overblown, like Hey Jude.

Give me Aerosmith before they got sober….Or Skynyrd

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