The Daily - Reckoning With the Real Michael Jackson
Episode Date: March 8, 2019For decades, despite a swirl of allegations around him, Michael Jackson earned the world’s admiration, bewilderment and pity. A New York Times culture critic reflects on the moment the spell broke f...or him. Guest: Wesley Morris, a critic at large for The Times and a host of the podcast “Still Processing.” For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.This episode contains descriptions of abuse.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily Look.
Today, for decades, despite a swirl of allegations around him,
Michael Jackson earned the world's admiration, bewilderment, and pity.
Times culture critic Wesley Morris on the moment that ended for him.
It's Friday, March 8th.
Wesley, this is the second time in two weeks that we've had you on to talk about culture.
I know. Aren't you sick of me already?
Not at all.
Okay.
What do we need to talk about this week?
It's probably leaving Neverland, this Michael Jackson documentary.
Not a trailer or even a single clip of this new documentary has been released ahead of its debut today, but that has not slowed the buzz behind it.
I became aware of this movie as it was making its way toward Sundance in January.
It's probably right now the most talked about film at Sundance.
One of the hottest tickets at Sundance is also one of the most controversial.
I also knew, on the other hand, that there were these camps of people
who were going to try to stop the movie from being screened.
Hmm, why?
Well, because it's about Michael Jackson.
It's about some terrible things that Michael Jackson is being accused of having done.
This morning, police in Utah are preparing for possible protests at the Sundance Film Festival.
And there is a strong camp of Michael Jackson fans and supporters that do not want lies in their eyes spread about him.
Heightened police presence in Park City this morning.
Following reports of death threats against the director of the doc.
The film about the beloved icon, so contentious, police are on high alert and bracing for protests.
The Jackson estate has denounced the documentary as defamatory.
And before the movie even got there, before anyone had even seen it,
there was this sense that it was going to be controversial
because it was going to force us to reassess our relationship with Michael Jackson.
And what about you?
How are you approaching the idea of this movie?
With Dread, I mean, I knew I was going to watch it,
but I also knew that I was bringing with me some dread.
I loved Michael Jackson as a kid,
and it wasn't just so much that I loved the music, although there was that. I loved looking at
Michael Jackson. I loved how fascinating his physical appearance was. And I can't go back to
being a 7, 8, 9, 10-year-old. Can you try just for a minute? I mean, I can go back to telling you
stories about that. Yeah, just place me a little bit in the life of the young Wesley Morris.
Well, you know, I grew up poor in Philadelphia and we didn't have a lot of money, but we had
a lot of money for Michael Jackson. We bought we bought Thriller. I think we had two copies
of Thriller because one got warped and I was lucky. And that's not OK. That will know. I mean,
I can remember sitting, you know, it was a, the album would fold out.
And it's Michael Jackson lying down
in what could only be called, like,
a Sears photo studio portrait pose.
He's wearing a white suit with a black shirt.
And he's got a tiger on his knee.
Like a tiger cub on his knee.
And his hair's really curly,
and his nose is straighter than any Black person's nose
I had ever seen.
He's got these big, bright eyes.
And I just was so drawn to how perfect-looking this person was.
How present was this attachment to Michael Jackson
at this tender age?
Well, I assumed that everybody felt this way about Michael Jackson.
I assumed that everybody had bought a copy of Thriller.
And, you know, I'd go to people's houses and be like, wait, where's Thriller?
I mean, nobody wants this Kenny Rogers record.
Where's Thriller?
My dad took me somewhere.
And before we got to the house once, he's like, Wesley, no.
my dad took me somewhere.
And before we got to the house once,
he's like,
Wesley,
no,
you are not going near the albums this time. And you're not asking about Michael Jackson.
And I just remember thinking that he was the most important person in the world.
So there's looking at Michael Jackson and then there's experiencing Michael Jackson.
And that experience I had with the album cover,
the album would have been out for about a year.
It's 1983, and I'm watching this Motown 25 special,
which is a gathering of all of Motown's greatest artists.
And at some point,
the Jacksons come out and they're all together.
All the grown brothers.
They're performing.
They do
their most famous songs.
I know he better
be good to you.
Motown is basically paying tribute to itself.
I'll be there.
Come on, everybody sing.
Don't you know, girl.
I'll be there.
And then at some point,
they thank everybody,
they leave the stage,
and Michael Jackson stays behind.
Oh, you're beautiful.
Those were magic moments with all my brothers, including Jermaine.
He tells the audience.
I like those songs a lot.
I like the old hits.
But especially, I like the new songs.
Fasten your seatbelts.
Basically, here comes the next 50 years.
It was just a new sound.
It pulled in rock.
It pulled in African rhythms.
And he is leaping onto his toes.
He is swinging his leg up in kind of what I can only call
like a chicken flap.
And at some point,
after you see all this other dancing
that you've never really seen
done in quite this way before,
he starts
gliding
backwards.
And now we know
that this backward
glide is called
the moonwalk.
I was in my mother's bedroom watching this,
and I can remember just sitting there in just absolute awe.
You could feel it as you watched it.
This man was changing everything.
In terms of historical American events,
you know, on the one hand, you have the moon landing,
and then you have the moonwalk.
And I would argue there's probably no other artist
who is as important to where popular music currently is
than Michael Jackson.
You can hear him actually sampled in other people's music.
You can hear other artists who've built entire careers.
Artists you probably wouldn't even have
if there was no Michael Jackson.
Justin Timberlake.
The Weeknd.
Britney Spears.
Bruno Mars.
I mean, there's just like a foundational elemental aspect
to the way he changed what music sounded like
and how we responded to it.
Like, the dancing that we do is in some ways, many ways,
Michael Jackson dancing.
We both know we can't go without it
She told me you'll never be alone.
So I'm thinking about all of this as I am dragging myself through the winter weather to go watch this
movie. That's a lot to carry with you into a screening, a movie theater, your childhood,
all of American culture. That's not nothing.
No, it's not nothing. But it's weird, though, because I carry it with me all the time. The reason that it was so heavy, and I think the reason that a lot of people are experiencing this heaviness and this dread about this movie is like, I'm carrying around baggage I didn't even know I had. And then all of a sudden, it feels like baggage. You know,
it feels like this thing you've been lugging around with you all these years, this love of
Michael Jackson, and now like this rocket ship to bliss. That is not an easy thing to be willing to
let go of. Well, talk me through this. You have to sit down and watch this movie. Yeah. Where did
you watch it? The first time I watched it, I watched it in an office. It was basically a conference room at HBO. They showed me the movie. I was alone in a nice little corner conference room with a TV and,
you know, it was me and my notepad and all my baggage. And it was funny because I watched it
by myself and I realized once I was there and the door was closed and this thing was starting that,
like, I didn't want to be there anymore. I just, I looked around and I'm like, I don't want to do this. I don't want to do it.
But you know, I'm a professional. Like what does it look like if I open the door and ask if we can
stop and we stop, but the ride had already left the bay. So I stayed and, um, I watched the whole
thing all four hours. And what's the first thing that you notice about the film? Oh my
God, it's so quiet.
It's really quiet.
I think when I was with him,
he was happy.
Hey, Michael, you don't understand.
Yeah, you don't understand.
He was at the
peak of
his creativity.
He was at the peak of his success. I mean, he was at the peak of his success.
It's a lot of string music.
But what you really are aware of is just
that you're going to hear two people
and the people in their lives
talk about their relationship to Michael Jackson.
He was already larger than life.
And then he likes you.
And who are these two people?
One of them is Wade Robson.
Wade won a dancing competition this week on Thursday night at Interpillage.
Wade Robson met Michael Jackson as a Michael Jackson impersonator.
I started to like Michael, and I started copying the moves, and that's how I started dancing.
I would say the best one I have ever seen in my life.
Talking about like a six-year-old kid.
Wow.
I want to be a star and keep everybody happy while I'm doing it.
He was good early.
And the other is James Safechuck.
Michael?
Who began as a child actor.
He was cast in a Michael Jackson commercial.
Mr. Jackson? And that's Michael Jackson commercial. Mr. Jackson?
And that's how they met.
Looking for me?
I was prepared for this movie to begin with the allegations, right?
I was prepared for them to just be like,
here's what Michael Jackson did.
But that's not really how it goes.
We went into the closet and we're looking at his stuff
and he told me I can pick out a jacket.
I could have that. It would be told me I can pick out a jacket. I could have that,
would be mine. I picked the thriller jacket. How it goes is each person who speaks, speaks as though they're in the present moment that they're speaking about. And I took it home.
I wore it to the grocery store. It felt great. Out of all the kids in the world, he chose me to be his friend.
And he's holding my hand. I was really struck by how, even though you know what's coming,
and this is sort of a comfort in a way for, I don't know, I would imagine for lots of people
who are dreading watching this movie, they're talking about as children how much they loved Michael Jackson. The days
were filled
with playing tag,
watching movies. He taught me
how to do the moonwalk. They got to do
the thing that I sat on my living room floor
dreaming about.
I came on at the end of the
song Bad. I had a
bad outfit on that was
just like his.
It seemed as a kid so fun being one of the kids in Michael Jackson's orbit.
And so I would dance.
We, like, side-moon walked and did a few moves together.
I got to relive that for a little tiny bit.
And then they start talking about the turn the relationship takes into a sexual relationship.
I was seven, seven years old when this began.
And what do they describe? And I recognize that these are really traumatic memories that they're talking about.
Well, I mean, all kinds of things that are graphic in nature,
masturbation, oral sex, lots of kissing.
And you also learn how Michael Jackson
was kind of fostering these relationships
and keeping the boys close to him.
You know, he started talking about how much he loves me.
What this is, is us. How we show our love for each other, that other people are ignorant and they apart. That we'd never be able to see each other again. And that he and I would go to jail for the rest of our lives.
You start to think that your parents are bad.
And that Michael is good.
So you're seeing the mechanisms by which he is creating proximity and loyalty to these boys.
There's a kind of choreography at work here.
You also learn that Michael told them not to go to school, that he would be the person
who would teach the kids things.
The psychological gamesmanship that he deployed in these relationships is also shocking.
You know, I liked jewelry and I liked it as a kid,
and I think that...
And eventually, you get to this point
where James Safechuck is telling this story
about Michael Jackson taking him shopping for rings.
And...
Rings?
Yeah, like wedding rings.
Like, we're gonna to get married rings.
And the ring is nice.
It has a row of diamonds with a gold band.
You know, there's always a moment whenever I'm watching or listening or reading anything,
you're waiting for this moment for something in you to change.
And for me, it was the story about these rings.
We would go buy them at jewelry stores.
Basically, Michael Jackson and James Safechuck go to a jewelry store.
The assumption is that Michael's going to buy James a ring and Michael's going to have his own
ring and they're going to exchange rings and vows.
Adult and child. Yes, adult and
child. And
at some point during this
purchase, the
salesperson, I don't know, probably
seems a little bit skeptical.
And Michael Jackson says
that the purchase is,
oh, it's for a woman.
It's for a woman.
And we would pretend like they were for somebody else and like for a female.
But he would pretend like my small hand fit whatever female we were buying it for.
Yeah.
You know in this moment that Michael Jackson knows the difference between right and wrong.
Because he lies.
My hands are shaking just holding them.
Now James, by the way, in this moment in the movie is holding the ring.
He's got an adult hand now because he's a grown man.
And the ring won't fit over his finger because it's a child's ring. We had this mock wedding ceremony.
We did this in his bedroom.
And we, like, filled out some vows.
It's like we're bonded forever.
It felt good.
I don't know, man. I really,
really, really
was not prepared for that.
So in that moment, your vision of Michael
Jackson is what?
Is shattered? Is
altered? Ruined? It's definitely
changed and it's definitely
complicated. I remember writing down in my notebook
this is it.
This is, this is, I'm, I'm out.
I'm out.
Out of what?
I'm, I'm out of the Michael Jackson house.
Hmm.
You know, I, and it's not, it's more complicated than that, but that is definitely the moment where that makes it hard to make excuses, right?
I think for me, the plausible deniability way of living with Michael Jackson gets really, really tough.
I wonder why this moment shattered you.
Because these allegations against Michael Jackson have been floating around now for decades.
Oh, man.
I think because for a long time,
Michael Jackson controlled this story.
He had all the power.
The press has made up so much
god-awful, horrifying stories
that are completely appalling.
I know.
Completely appalling.
So, with the first set of allegations in 1993,
he winds up talking to Oprah Winfrey
in a hugely watched,
desperately anticipated television interview.
And, I mean, she does everything she can do.
Is your skin lighter because you don't like being black?
Did he ever beat you?
Do you go out? Do you date?
She asks all the questions.
Are you pleased now with the way you look?
I'm never pleased with anything. I'm a perfectionist.
It's part of who I am.
And he's got some kind of answer for it, and I think that we really, really wanted to believe him.
And what's the story he tells?
Well, the story he tells is, like, I like kids. I was lonely.
I don't think there's anything wrong with my relationship with children.
People wonder why I always have children around, because I find the thing that I never had through
them. You know, Disneyland,
amusement parks,
arcade games. I adore
all that stuff because when I was little, it was always
work, work, work from one concert
to the next. The story
he told Oprah was the story we wanted
and the thing that would let us
keep going back and listening to Dangerous, which
was the album that he had at the time.
It made it a lot easier to go back to regularly scheduled programming.
He told a story that fit into our story of him,
which is a lonely man who at his core is still a boy.
Yeah, that's the story of Michael Jackson.
There were times when I had great times with my brothers, pillow fights and things, but I was always, I used to always cry from loneliness.
You did?
Yes.
Beginning at what age?
Oh, very little. Eight, nine.
It was, this is clearly a person who is suffering and has been damaged in some way.
What do you want the world to know about you most? I asked Liz that of you. What do you want them to know?
been damaged in some way. What do you want the world to know about you most? I ask Liz that of you. What do you want them to know? To be loved. I just simply want to be loved wherever I go,
all over the world, because I love people of all races from my heart with true affection.
I think that the difference between what happens in that initial conversation with Oprah Winfrey
and what's happening in this movie is that it's a resting of control of the narrative, right?
It is these two men telling you what happened to them,
and you take their stories,
and you put them alongside Michael Jackson's,
and you sit with it.
And I'd been waiting for somebody to come along
and tell me a story
that I could sit alongside Michael Jackson's
to confirm a suspicion that I'd had all this time
and didn't want to acknowledge
that I was carrying around all this stuff all these years
and not really knowing what to do with it.
Wesley, will this film and the revelations that it contains,
will this change the legacy of Michael Jackson?
Yes. I think the people who want to hear the stories these men are telling, I think the people who watch this movie,
I think the people who've ambiently suspected that something like what's alleged in this movie
happened, those people will think about Michael Jackson in a different way.
But Michael Jackson's legacy is bigger than Michael Jackson, right?
Like, Michael Jackson is this human being who made stuff that is way bigger than he is.
And that stuff is so much a part of the culture, like, on an atomic level, right?
It can't be extracted.
We can't cancel Michael Jackson
because canceling Michael Jackson
means canceling America in some way.
Canceling some part of ourselves.
Like a huge part of not just our love of music,
but our sense of who we are as a people.
I mean, the tragic thing about Michael Jackson
is an American tragic thing.
It is a story about race.
It is a story about growing up poor
and becoming extremely rich.
It is a story about sexuality and gender
and racial transformation in your physical body.
I think that he means too much to delete or cancel.
I mean, you make one thing go away,
but you're still dealing with all this other stuff.
I just feel like he's so much bigger
than what he physically was.
And I think the stories these men are telling
need to go in the space that we culturally
have been waiting to put a story like this in
based on everything we already knew about Michael Jackson.
Well, see, it has felt to me like with these other Me Too stories,
there's been a very clear path to follow.
Somebody should get fired.
They do get fired.
Somebody should go to jail.
They do go to jail.
Oh, I see where you're going.
Somebody gets justice.
But that can't happen here. Michael Jackson is dead. They go to jail. They do go to jail. Oh, I see where you're going. Somebody gets justice. Mm-hmm.
But that can't happen here.
No. Michael Jackson is dead.
And he's been tried and acquitted.
And you can't, as you just said, cancel his influence.
So what could change?
Well, he can't change because he's dead.
The music can't change because it's already been made
and we've thoroughly absorbed it.
I think the thing that has to change is us.
We can change, but I also wonder
whether or not the thing that we should be taking away
from this entire problem with respect to Michael Jackson and Wade Robson and James Safechuck is this concept of justice.
There's no satisfying outcome for this.
This is a tragedy.
And we have to accept it as a tragedy.
And I don't think the way we accept a tragedy is by covering our ears when you hear a Michael Jackson song.
We're past that now.
I think what we have to do is figure out a way to live with a thing that we've been living with this entire time.
We have to be able to hold space
that incorporates the bad stuff with the great stuff.
It's the only way this is going to work
because this is not going to stop happening.
And it's obviously not just famous people.
It's everybody.
It's coaches, it's priests, it's politicians.
It doesn't work to just make people go away
and not deal with the sort of root problem
of this behavior.
And I think with Michael Jackson,
I think that the reason the what do we do now is
so dissatisfying is because there's nothing to do but listen and move through the world aware that
this person did this. And it can't be undone. These guys don't get their childhoods back.
There's no jail to put this man in. You know, there's no place to send him. And the work is on us.
And I think part of the reason that people want either an easy answer
or don't want to know anything is because we don't want to do the work.
It's hard work.
The work of just living with it.
The hard work of trauma.
And that's what we're talking about.
That's just called being a human being.
Wesley, thank you very much once again for coming in.
Thanks for having me.
In the latest episode of their podcast, Still Processing,
Wesley and his co-host, Jenna Wortham,
further explore their love for and discomfort with Michael Jackson.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Let's all be honest with each other.
We are here today right now because of anti-Semitic rhetoric from one member of this chamber said again and again and again.
On Thursday, House Democrats overwhelmingly passed a resolution that was originally intended to condemn anti-Semitism after controversial remarks from Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar, but was rewritten at the last minute to condemn a variety of bigotries, including anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, xenophobia, homophobia, transphobia, racism against African-Americans and Latinos and Asian-Americans, and other forms of prejudice.
The new language broadened the measure's appeal among Democrats, who feared Omar was being unfairly singled out for criticizing Israel.
But it drew unexpected opposition from House Republicans.
We came here to condemn anti-Semitism,
but this resolution, as changed up over the last hour,
now condemns just about everything.
And the reason that is so dangerous is that anti-Semitism,
hatred for the children of Israel,
is a very special kind of hatred that should never be watered down.
Twenty-three of those Republicans voted against the measure,
putting them on record as opposing legislation that denounces discrimination.
And that's why I'll vote against it. It's watered down.
It's expired.
The sentiment.
Gentlemen's time has expired.
And President Trump's former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort,
was sentenced to nearly four years in prison on Thursday
for a series of financial crimes, including bank and tax fraud.
In the moments before he was sentenced,
Manafort, wearing a green prison uniform and sitting in a wheelchair,
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compassionate. The sentence was shorter than federal guidelines called for, but Manafort
is still awaiting sentencing in a second related case, which is expected to come next week.
in a second related case, which is expected to come next week.
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