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Tuesday, December 8, 2009

43 Things We'll Miss About Michael Jackson

With his sudden passing at the age of fifty, we memorialize those things that made Michael Jackson an American original.

1. When he died, it came as a shock, revealing that in our hearts part of us was still rooting for him, unwilling to believe that he was actually a frail 50-year-old man, that the innocent mastery of the voice that sang "I Want You Back" was still undiminished beneath the painful painted cheekbones. And that’s how good he was — after all that, despite everything that is small within us, we still believed. — John H. Richardson

2. Parasols. He was sun sensible — you have to give him that. — Chris Jones

3. For Off The Wall, and the way he blended space exploration with black tie.

4. In a time when reality stars bare all and celebrity sex tapes are common, Jackson was uncommonly opaque, both literally and figuratively. His private world will forever remain shadowed in conjecture.

5. Not a big MJ guy — never was — but after listening to the nostalgia orgies of the past twenty four hours, I’m reminded that art can matter. That the stuff of great artists — their songs, their paintings, their books — becomes a part of our lives, and that whether you’re talking about the first time you saw the "Thriller" video or the first time you tried to moonwalk, you’re not really talking about Michael Jackson. You’re talking about yourself. The art is just a marker, allowing each of us to find our way back to some earlier, happier, more carefree version of ourselves. — Richard Dorment

6. "Billie Jean" is the best pop song ever written. For sure. I don't even want to discuss it. — Stephen Marche

7.The crotch grab.

8. "I'll Be There." Because he was twelve and sounded like twelve-hundred.

9. Without him, we'd have nothing to compare the Justin Timberlakes of the world to.

10. I'll miss telling Michael Jackson diddle jokes. My favorite: What did the woman on the beach say to Michael Jackson? Excuse me, you're in my son. — Chris Jones

11. The video premiere as social event. "Thriller." "Bad." "Scream." Remember when they first ran? Of course you do.

Continue Reading 43 Things We'll Miss About Michael Jackson



More from Esquire.com:

More Michael Jackson Memories and Photos!

The Essential Albums: Does M.J. Make the List?


The New Role Models: Which Famous Men Succeeded Jackson

50 Songs Everyone Should Be Listening To

Farrah Fawcett: An Appreciation (with Haunting Photos)
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From the Community…

Comments 1-3 of 3
  • casy's Avatar
    Posted by casy Fri Jun 26, 2009 2:44pm PDT

    HE WELL BE MISSED....BUT NOT FORGOTTEN....WE SHALL KEEP HIM IN OUR MEMORIES AND HEARTS....AND WE WELL ALWAYS HAVE HIS MUSIC.....R.I.P. MICHAEL.....

    Report Abuse
  • oohay's Avatar
    Posted by oohay Thu Jul 2, 2009 5:38am PDT

    If he was the pervert he appeared to be then good riddance

    Report Abuse
  • siri's Avatar
    Posted by siri Mon Jul 6, 2009 12:48pm PDT

    It isn't necessary nor helpful to insult M.J. and his fans out of "ones" own frustrations. Those who were not fans of his music and upset this story is being "overplayed" should quite simply - ignore it. Change the channel or skip the newspaper articles. For those who believe so strongly in the system, you need to be reminded (the man) was tried for child molestation and acquitted.

    I'm not a die-hard fan but I've been watching Michael since I can remember. Michael was 3 years older than me so I sort of "grew" up watching him grow as well. And how he'd always reinvent himself and his songs having special meaning and messages making him the legend he is today. I believe that's why Michael was so loved by fans and so "overplayed" in the media (for those of you who've taken the time out) to say only nasty inappropriate things. It's alright not to like certain types of music or musical artists. I don't but yet I don't go out of my way to insult them (just because.) If I have no proof as to what I'm talking about I can't; no matter how strange Michael appeared, judge him on having done anything he was accused of. If a court of law acquitted him, and parents of "said" abused children, took a pay-off and ran...

    Being a parent myself I can't in my right mind imagine anyone doing this - but it's been done, being done, and will continue to happen so long as there are "good" yes, strange even, perhaps bizarre, individuals who mean no harm but simply are far better off than others, with perhaps no sense of deceitful parents out there. Michael's parents were a far cry from being loving - a father that insulted/beat him and a mother who had absolute no power.

    Michael J. interpreted being "a loving parent" differently - and because he "looked" differently and acted differently did not make him "guilty."

    I'm going to miss the artist I grew up staring and watching since I could remember. Someone whose music and moves will forever live on. Stop comparing him to others, stop being so quick to judge when there's no proof other than he was different/strange to many. Different and strange is how I define those "parents" who said he'd abused their kids yet did nothing to protect others from going through the same. Accepting millions compensated for their children's physical and mental well being.

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