independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Michael Jackson RIP
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 48 of 51 « First<42434445464748495051>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #1410 posted 06/26/09 2:36am

dag

avatar

razor said:

His death is no more or less sad than any other.

Whilst I understand he was very famous and hence deserves some media coverage etc, the level of blanket reporting for an event that essentially has no serious consequnces is ridiculous. Obama getting assinated would merit this kind of reporting due to the multiple consequences of such an event for example. A famous singer dying does not.

That, and the apparant personal sadness expressed by so many, just as when Diana died, makes for a fascinating anthropological study of modern society , but one that surely can only broadly conclude that we have lost all sense of perspective and need to grasp any opportunity to express emotions that appear to be missing from our daily lives. There's some great studies on this phenomena for those interested. I'll try to dig up some links..

Please don´t bother and let us mourn in piece.
"When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1411 posted 06/26/09 2:37am

dirtyman2005

phunkymunky said:

dirtyman2005 said:

fucking hell

so fucking sad

I really believe we are all to blame for this.
Putting so much pressure on the man to perform again and please us.

he'd already done enough work to last a lifetime, yet we still weren't satisfied.



Oh please. Whilst it is obviously a very tragic event, you need to take a step back. It wasn't us running around spending money like it was going out fashion. He was the one who wanted to maintain his lavish lifestyle but was heavily in debt (apparently up to $400m) and in dire need of some money. So selling 750,000 tickets for the gigs at the O2 was an obvious way to help alleviate his financial insecurites.

I imagine there probably were a few promoters in the background influencing his decision so they could pocket a small fortune and pointing him the direction they wanted, but he hadn't performed in public for years and hadn't sung live for over a decade, so the level of demand to see him was sky-high. It made good business sense.


No, i believe its all our fault, and those people especially who constantly criticized him for not performing, and not releasing music in the last decade or so, calling him a "hasbeen" or "lazy" etc.
We are guilty of it at some point.
The cumalitive amount of pressure he must have been under must have been terrible.
All just to please everyone, the fans, etc.

You could tell from the O2 press conference he really meant it as his final curtain call, he no longer wanted to perform, and I don't blame him, I really believe he wanted to relax and enjoy his life with his children,

Wasn't 30+ years of performing, music enough for people?
Apparently No.

Yet we, the public demanded it from him, like he owed us something.

MJ didn't owe any of us anything, he'd already given us so much joy and excitement to last a fucking century.

Not forgetting, the leeches and bloodsuckers screwing him over 24/7, everyone wanting to "make a bit of money" from him.

I'm glad that he least found some hapiness with his own children.

But it fucking sucks, the man was only 50, and didn't deserve to go out like that.

Its a sad day, a real sad day.
RIP.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1412 posted 06/26/09 2:38am

Cinnamon234

avatar

razor said:

His death is no more or less sad than any other.

Whilst I understand he was very famous and hence deserves some media coverage etc, the level of blanket reporting for an event that essentially has no serious consequnces is ridiculous. Obama getting assinated would merit this kind of reporting due to the multiple consequences of such an event for example. A famous singer dying does not.

That, and the apparant personal sadness expressed by so many, just as when Diana died, makes for a fascinating anthropological study of modern society , but one that surely can only broadly conclude that we have lost all sense of perspective and need to grasp any opportunity to express emotions that appear to be missing from our daily lives. There's some great studies on this phenomena for those interested. I'll try to dig up some links..


Well you're entitled to your opinion, but I believe Michael does deserve all the coverage he's getting. He was a massive icon and one of the most famous people on the planet. It is big news that he passed whether you were a fan or not. He wasn't just some famous singer. Someone like Usher is a famous singer. Michael Jackson is Michael Jackson, period. He's on a different level of stardom and him and his music have touched the lives of many. He deserves all the coverage.
[Edited 6/26/09 2:39am]
"And When The Groove Is Dead And Gone, You Know That Love Survives, So We Can Rock Forever" RIP MJ heart

"Baby, that was much too fast"...Goodnight dear sweet Prince. I'll love you always heart
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1413 posted 06/26/09 2:41am

dirtyman2005

razor said:

His death is no more or less sad than any other.

Whilst I understand he was very famous and hence deserves some media coverage etc, the level of blanket reporting for an event that essentially has no serious consequnces is ridiculous. Obama getting assinated would merit this kind of reporting due to the multiple consequences of such an event for example. A famous singer dying does not.

That, and the apparant personal sadness expressed by so many, just as when Diana died, makes for a fascinating anthropological study of modern society , but one that surely can only broadly conclude that we have lost all sense of perspective and need to grasp any opportunity to express emotions that appear to be missing from our daily lives. There's some great studies on this phenomena for those interested. I'll try to dig up some links..


The fact that his music created a positive influence in so many people's lives is more than enough justification for the sadness of his death.

You don't realise how much positivity he generated around the world.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1414 posted 06/26/09 2:41am

remko

avatar

dag said:

remko said:



In that case: he died.
people do you know.

Let's just hope he has found peace at last.
No need to put the pressure up on a dead person.

I am not sure if this is still a response to my sentence "what have you done to us?" It is just something you can say over here, when someone does. All it means is "why? what are we going to do here without you?"


Could be some cultural difference indeed.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1415 posted 06/26/09 2:41am

LondonStyle

avatar

razor said:

His death is no more or less sad than any other.

Whilst I understand he was very famous and hence deserves some media coverage etc, the level of blanket reporting for an event that essentially has no serious consequnces is ridiculous. Obama getting assinated would merit this kind of reporting due to the multiple consequences of such an event for example. A famous singer dying does not.

That, and the apparant personal sadness expressed by so many, just as when Diana died, makes for a fascinating anthropological study of modern society , but one that surely can only broadly conclude that we have lost all sense of perspective and need to grasp any opportunity to express emotions that appear to be missing from our daily lives. There's some great studies on this phenomena for those interested. I'll try to dig up some links..



Razor sorry but your thread is bullshit,...if music be the food of love ...play on ....Michael Jackson was music ...so he was both food and love...a gift from god like an apple on a tree or a bee that makes honey....

one man that made a major change in many millions of peoples life...

love god...R.I.P. Michael Jackson...

sad
Da, Da, Da....Emancipation....Free..don't think I ain't..! London 21 Nights...Clap your hands...you know the rest..
James Brown & Michael Jackson RIP, your music still lives with us!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1416 posted 06/26/09 2:53am

HatrinaHaterwi
tz

avatar

bboy87 said:



I didn't cry when my mother passed away. I didn't cry when my father passed away. When Michael Jackson passed away, I cried like a baby until after I finished watching this video. hug
I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1417 posted 06/26/09 2:54am

GirlBrother

avatar

The BBC just reported that he's currently top of the iTunes (UK) chart.

I hope Prince and Madonna take this as a wake-up call to take their foot off the pedal, let themselves get older and rid their lives of "yes men".
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1418 posted 06/26/09 3:00am

TD3

avatar

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1419 posted 06/26/09 3:07am

razor

LondonStyle said:

razor said:

His death is no more or less sad than any other.

Whilst I understand he was very famous and hence deserves some media coverage etc, the level of blanket reporting for an event that essentially has no serious consequnces is ridiculous. Obama getting assinated would merit this kind of reporting due to the multiple consequences of such an event for example. A famous singer dying does not.

That, and the apparant personal sadness expressed by so many, just as when Diana died, makes for a fascinating anthropological study of modern society , but one that surely can only broadly conclude that we have lost all sense of perspective and need to grasp any opportunity to express emotions that appear to be missing from our daily lives. There's some great studies on this phenomena for those interested. I'll try to dig up some links..



Razor sorry but your thread is bullshit,...if music be the food of love ...play on ....Michael Jackson was music ...so he was both food and love...a gift from god like an apple on a tree or a bee that makes honey....

one man that made a major change in many millions of peoples life...

love god...R.I.P. Michael Jackson...

sad



No need to apologise. But I stand by my original comments. Just like Diana the reponse will be both bizarre and fascinating, but mainly troubling.
"He that will not reason is a bigot; he that cannot reason is a fool; and he that dares not reason is a slave." - William Drummond
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1420 posted 06/26/09 3:09am

seeingvoices12

avatar

dirtyman2005 said:

phunkymunky said:



Oh please. Whilst it is obviously a very tragic event, you need to take a step back. It wasn't us running around spending money like it was going out fashion. He was the one who wanted to maintain his lavish lifestyle but was heavily in debt (apparently up to $400m) and in dire need of some money. So selling 750,000 tickets for the gigs at the O2 was an obvious way to help alleviate his financial insecurites.

I imagine there probably were a few promoters in the background influencing his decision so they could pocket a small fortune and pointing him the direction they wanted, but he hadn't performed in public for years and hadn't sung live for over a decade, so the level of demand to see him was sky-high. It made good business sense.


No, i believe its all our fault, and those people especially who constantly criticized him for not performing, and not releasing music in the last decade or so, calling him a "hasbeen" or "lazy" etc.
We are guilty of it at some point.
The cumalitive amount of pressure he must have been under must have been terrible.
All just to please everyone, the fans, etc.

You could tell from the O2 press conference he really meant it as his final curtain call, he no longer wanted to perform, and I don't blame him, I really believe he wanted to relax and enjoy his life with his children,

Wasn't 30+ years of performing, music enough for people?
Apparently No.

Yet we, the public demanded it from him, like he owed us something.

MJ didn't owe any of us anything, he'd already given us so much joy and excitement to last a fucking century.

Not forgetting, the leeches and bloodsuckers screwing him over 24/7, everyone wanting to "make a bit of money" from him.

I'm glad that he least found some hapiness with his own children.

But it fucking sucks, the man was only 50, and didn't deserve to go out like that.

Its a sad day, a real sad day.
RIP.


I think what happened to mike was due to exhaustion from rehearsals, taking sleeping pills, and I agree with what you said, People didn’t want Mj to grow up, they wanted him this singing machine that never stops, and they forget that he was a human being.

Mj is at peace now, something he didn’t get when he was alive sad ..RIP
MICHAEL JACKSON
R.I.P
مايكل جاكسون للأبد
1958
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1421 posted 06/26/09 3:15am

CalhounSq

avatar

Anxiety said:

Harlem tonight:


DAMN... I've seen the headline all night @ work but this pic really hits home for me. Grew up on J5, was a huge fan into the 80's. Despite the recent years, I hope he'll be remembered most for the massive talent he was. I feel for those kids & his family, his mother must be beside herself. Some seriously cold & unbelievable shit, which is trippy since I've considered him "fragile" for years now yet it's still shocking. Crazy day...

rose
heart prince I never met you, but I LOVE you & I will forever!! Thank you for being YOU - my little Princey, the best to EVER do it prince heart
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1422 posted 06/26/09 3:18am

Arnotts

Even though I will never get over this, in a way I can't help but feel happy for him. I think Michael Jackson is the type of person that would never have been truly happy no matter what happened to him in life, some people are just prone to depression and a feeling of loneliness that never goes away no matter how many people surround them. I really do believe he would of survived if he really wanted to, but it must of felt nicer on the other side and he decided to stay with it.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1423 posted 06/26/09 3:23am

AnckSuNamun

avatar

cry I found out at work. I thought it was a joke at first when this girl said someone sent her a text about it. I was in tears on the way home while they were playing his songs. sad rose I'm still in shock.
rose looking for you in the woods tonight rose Switch FC SW-2874-2863-4789 (Rum&Coke)
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1424 posted 06/26/09 3:41am

LondonStyle

avatar

razor said:

LondonStyle said:




Razor sorry but your thread is bullshit,...if music be the food of love ...play on ....Michael Jackson was music ...so he was both food and love...a gift from god like an apple on a tree or a bee that makes honey....

one man that made a major change in many millions of peoples life...

love god...R.I.P. Michael Jackson...

sad



No need to apologise. But I stand by my original comments. Just like Diana the reponse will be both bizarre and fascinating, but mainly troubling.


The only fascinating and troubling think is the fact that you have no soul ... so why are you on a prince.org ...so how can you feel the music ? unless you only like prince's old records which just sing about sex ?

Love God

R.I.P MJ
Da, Da, Da....Emancipation....Free..don't think I ain't..! London 21 Nights...Clap your hands...you know the rest..
James Brown & Michael Jackson RIP, your music still lives with us!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1425 posted 06/26/09 3:44am

Copycat

He was treated like a sideshow freak throughout his adult life, and now the rat bastards in the press are throwing around accolades and practically erecting pedestals in his honor. confused
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1426 posted 06/26/09 3:47am

phunkymunky

avatar

dirtyman2005 said:

phunkymunky said:



Oh please. Whilst it is obviously a very tragic event, you need to take a step back. It wasn't us running around spending money like it was going out fashion. He was the one who wanted to maintain his lavish lifestyle but was heavily in debt (apparently up to $400m) and in dire need of some money. So selling 750,000 tickets for the gigs at the O2 was an obvious way to help alleviate his financial insecurites.

I imagine there probably were a few promoters in the background influencing his decision so they could pocket a small fortune and pointing him the direction they wanted, but he hadn't performed in public for years and hadn't sung live for over a decade, so the level of demand to see him was sky-high. It made good business sense.


No, i believe its all our fault, and those people especially who constantly criticized him for not performing, and not releasing music in the last decade or so, calling him a "hasbeen" or "lazy" etc.
We are guilty of it at some point.
The cumalitive amount of pressure he must have been under must have been terrible.
All just to please everyone, the fans, etc.

You could tell from the O2 press conference he really meant it as his final curtain call, he no longer wanted to perform, and I don't blame him, I really believe he wanted to relax and enjoy his life with his children,

Wasn't 30+ years of performing, music enough for people?
Apparently No.

Yet we, the public demanded it from him, like he owed us something.

MJ didn't owe any of us anything, he'd already given us so much joy and excitement to last a fucking century.

Not forgetting, the leeches and bloodsuckers screwing him over 24/7, everyone wanting to "make a bit of money" from him.

I'm glad that he least found some hapiness with his own children.

But it fucking sucks, the man was only 50, and didn't deserve to go out like that.

Its a sad day, a real sad day.
RIP.


I don't think he owed us anything. He needed money, pure and simple, and there was clearly enough demand to see him perform 50 times, so it made perfect sense.

In the music industry at the moment, revenue streams from record sales have fallen off in a big way, and all the money is in touring/live performances and merchandising. Whether or not he was up to performing the full 50 dates (highly unlikely), is a separate issue.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1427 posted 06/26/09 3:48am

JOYJOY

avatar

May he rest in Peace,
my condolences go out to his kids and extended family.... sad rose
One minute they want peace……

Then do everything to make it go away. rolleyes
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1428 posted 06/26/09 3:48am

HatrinaHaterwi
tz

avatar

Copycat said:

He was treated like a sideshow freak throughout his adult life, and now the rat bastards in the press are throwing around accolades and practically erecting pedestals in his honor. confused



That'll be just for today, the real sideshow will begin as soon as the shock of his passing has worn off. disbelief
I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1429 posted 06/26/09 3:50am

razor

LondonStyle said:

razor said:




No need to apologise. But I stand by my original comments. Just like Diana the reponse will be both bizarre and fascinating, but mainly troubling.


The only fascinating and troubling think is the fact that you have no soul ... so why are you on a prince.org ...so how can you feel the music ? unless you only like prince's old records which just sing about sex ?

Love God

R.I.P MJ


The murder of the two Soham schoolgirls Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman was greeted with a major display of public grief.


The country stopped for a semi-official minute's silence; flowers, notes and other tributes piled up in the Soham graveyard and a site near where the girls' bodies were found; thousands have emailed their condolences to specially established websites.


In their emails, many said how much they had been affected by the girls' deaths, how they themselves had experienced a deep sense of loss. Why did so many people, who had never met nor heard of the girls before, seem so deeply affected? And why, only a week after the two girls' funerals, have these displays of grief died away?


The reaction to the Soham murders cannot be explained by the deaths themselves. Rather, it follows a pattern of public mourning that has been established over the past decade. It seems that our contemporary culture is increasingly finding meaning and significance in individual moments of suffering. The media, politicians and the public are mobilising around rare tragedies in a way that stands in marked contrast to the past.


Think back to the Hungerford massacre in 1987, when 14 people on the street of this Berkshire town were shot dead by a lone gunman in a random act of violence (1). This event shocked the nation, but it did not spark the masses of flowers, teddy-bears and condolence books that make up the rituals of public grieving we tend to see today. The death of 96 Liverpool fans in a crush at the Hillsborough football stadium in Sheffield in 1989 caused people to come together and mourn on the streets of Liverpool, but this was a localised reaction that was defined as much by anger at the crowd-control methods used by the police as it was by grief and horror.


The murder of Liverpool toddler Jamie Bulger in 1993, by two 10-year old boys, precipitated a more widespread reaction. The story dominated the national media and became the background to moral fables and renewed fears about child safety. The horrific murder of 16 schoolchildren at a school in Dunblane, Scotland, by a gunman provoked a highly emotional response - from the public but especially from politicians and the media. Politicians of all parties visited Dunblane, and details of the families' grief filled the newspapers.


It was following the death of Princess Diana in a car accident in 1997 that new rituals of public mourning began to be established, with several thousands of people queuing to sign the condolence books at Buckingham Palace and leaving bouquets of flowers and mementos, and the UK press filling its pages with Diana-bilia for weeks on end. By the time of the murder of TV presenter Jill Dando in 1999, and the murder of schoolgirl Sarah Payne in 2000, these public responses had become routine. The candles, the flowers, the phrases used to describe grief are recycled and spread ever more widely - across the internet, and the national press.


Such moments of public response to private tragedies have been greeted as showing the British people at their best. After the death of Diana, Tony Blair said that the response to the funeral had made him proud to be British. After Dunblane, Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks said that the events had shown Britain as 'not a nation of individuals living disconnected lives in pursuit of self-interest, but a people united by a sense of fellow feeling' (2).


At a time when society is bound by few common experiences or ideals, these moments of tragedy are reinterpreted as moral parables that can unite people. We can all agree that the murder of Holly and Jessica was an evil act. In our capacity to feel sorrow at this waste of human life, we are apparently reaffirming our bonds with others, and showing that we are not just out for ourselves.


There are some decent, and timeless, human instincts bound up with public expressions of grief. As the poet John Donne put it back in 1624: 'any mans death diminishes me/because I am involved in mankind/And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls/It tolls for thee.' (3) It is a mark of our humanity that we can feel empathy with others, and sorrow at loss of life.


But the public grief rituals that we saw around Soham, Dunblane and Diana twist this spontaneous empathy into something rather less genuine. Cases of private tragedy are preyed upon by national institutions, in an attempt to affirm our connections with each other, and to prove our decency.

It is one thing to express regret at someone's death; it is another to read a huge spiritual significance into their dying from an act of senseless violence. At the funeral of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman, the vicar said a remarkable thing: 'In their short lives, Holly and Jessica achieved about the same as most 10-year-olds - perhaps just a little more - but in their deaths they have certainly achieved more than any of us will manage in our lifetime.' (4)


In being senselessly murdered, these girls achieved more than any of us will manage in our lifetime. Like Diana and Sarah Payne, Holly and Jessica are in the process of being canonised. But while story of the saints is that they died for their Christian beliefs, and so in some sense made a choice to die, Holly and Jessica were the victims of a random attack.


The Soham girls' deaths are seen as spiritual, not because of the reasons they died, but because of the effect on the world of the living.


As with the reaction to Sarah Payne's murder, the focus is not on the lives of Holly and Jessica, but on the emotional response that their deaths stimulated in people. 'I hope the Payne family can take a little comfort in the fact that their beautiful daughters death was not in vain, her smiling face will forever be in my mind', said one person contributing to an online 'guestbook' in the memory of Sarah Payne (5). Other contributors claimed that the deaths had changed their lives, and remained imprinted forever on their hearts. 'They are candles in the darkness.... their wee lives have touched the world', a woman from Australia wrote in the messages of condolence section of the 'Remembering Dunblane' website (6).


In Soham, as with Dunblane, the site of the tragedy has become a place of pilgrimage that can evoke deep emotional responses in its visitors. One person said that visiting Dunblane had been 'the most moving experience of my life'. Another even claimed that 'Dunblane has become one of the most expressive words of the 20th century' (7).


As public mourning becomes ritualised, a grotesque kind of competition is begun, where everybody tries to prove the greater depth of their feeling - and therefore the greater depth of their humanity. 'Words cannot express our sadness', read one note on the Cambridge County Council's Jessica and Holly condolence website, signed 'All staff at Costessey Medical Practice' (8). 'We are shocked, horrified and saddened by what has happened….You are constantly on our minds', said another. 'Never before have two beautiful little girls touched my life before. I feel have no words to express how I just feel', said Jane from Yorkshire.


Public figures quickly got in on the act. Australian prime minister John Howard sent a spray of roses on behalf of the Australian people. Prince Charles sent two handwritten letters to the girls' parents, saying how he had 'agonised' over their loss: 'Anyone who has children can understand something of what you are going through and of the heart-wrenching despair that you must be experiencing.' (In a self-effacing touch, Charles added that he felt his contribution to be 'hopelessly inadequate'.) (9) Footballer-cum-gangster act Vinnie Jones sent the parents a letter, saying how he felt 'totally distraught about these very sad losses' (10).


It is this need to prove emotion to others, and to feel part of something, that explains the importance of ritual. The minutes' silences, the offerings, notes, and candles - all of these are public ways of demonstrating our emotions. It is not enough to feel upset, or to cry when you hear the news - you have to show other people how upset you are, and to join in with others who are feeling the same.


After the murder of Holly and Jessica, we saw the profusion of these kinds of gestures. One football team played without their number 7 shirt, as this was the number on the two girls' Manchester United shirts when they disappeared. United's star player David Beckham dedicated his first goal of the season to the girls. Vicky Whatley from Bristol built a shrine outside her city church: 'As a mum, thinking about what happened to these two girls is terrifying. I felt I had to make some sort of tribute.' (11)


To paraphrase psychologist Oliver James' response to the Diana grief-fest: there is no doubt about the sincerity of such gestures, but there is a question as to their authenticity. How authentic is this kind of collective grief, when it disintegrates so quickly? Contrast the national grief-fest surrounding Diana's death at the time to the fact that, on the recent fifth anniversary, it went practically unobserved. Despite the apparent intensity of the reaction at the time, there was no real, lasting bond between the figure of Diana and the public that mourned her passing.


These transient moments, in which a nation seems to unite in grief, tend to break up rapidly into sniping, as different groups issue competing claims in the emotion stakes. We saw this in Diana's brother's tirade against the press and the Royal Family at her funeral; in the fights between different groups after the attack on the World Trade Centre (WTC); and in the Vicar of Soham's attacks on 'ghoul tourists'. As the anniversary of the attack on the WTC approaches, one journalist reported how New York society had become organised into a 'psychological hierarchy of suffering' - those who had suffered most being placed at the top (12).


And far from being genuine spontaneous outbursts, these displays of public grieving are often orchestrated and policed. Not showing the appropriate kind of emotion is not an option. By refusing to take part, you are shown up as an outcast from the community of mourners - an unfeeling selfish individual among the compassionate many.

Throughout the Soham tragedy, the media urged people to participate in the hunt for the girls and to empathise with the parents' feelings. 'We urge all 10million Sun readers to stand in silent memory too as a mark of respect for the girls', said the Sun on the day of the minute's silence (13). David Beckham was shown as a role model, with his head bowed - under the headline 'United in grief'. After the girls' bodies had been found, Cambridgeshire police and county council both set up websites for the public to send their messages of condolence. Papers enthusiastically reported the tributes that were flowing in, prompting others to send more.


It is a sad day when the murder of schoolgirls is required for us to express our humanity and feel part of a community. It is equally disturbing how the grief roadshow preys upon the emotional responses of the bereaved.


Holly and Jessica's parents were constantly being asked how they felt, and how they were coping - and even the most mundane of their actions were held up to the cameras. A journalist for Sky News reported talking to one of the mothers on her first shopping trip after the bodies had been found. Papers speculated whether the parents or the town of Soham would ever recover from the loss. The girls' school friends were pictured holding up their personal tributes to the girls, their private notes and personal momentos.


For weeks, Soham was taken over by the international media. In the face of this publicity, it must be difficult to respond in a genuine or heartfelt way. Villagers who had a microphone shoved under their noses were more likely to have given the response they felt was expected than to have articulated what they were really going through. When millions of people want to know how you feel, you probably no longer know yourself.


The frenzy around Soham is dying down now, but it is only a matter of time before it re-emerges around another case. In the meantime, we should try to find more noble ways of expressing our common humanity - and leave the bereaved to grieve in peace.
"He that will not reason is a bigot; he that cannot reason is a fool; and he that dares not reason is a slave." - William Drummond
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1430 posted 06/26/09 3:51am

Cinnamon234

avatar

Copycat said:

He was treated like a sideshow freak throughout his adult life, and now the rat bastards in the press are throwing around accolades and practically erecting pedestals in his honor. confused


This is true, but it was expected. I fully expected that these same bastards who constatnly bad talked him when he was alive, would turn around now and try to act like they thought highly of him. Such a joke. I agree with Hatrina, wait until more details start emerging about his death. They'll show their real colors once again.
"And When The Groove Is Dead And Gone, You Know That Love Survives, So We Can Rock Forever" RIP MJ heart

"Baby, that was much too fast"...Goodnight dear sweet Prince. I'll love you always heart
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1431 posted 06/26/09 3:52am

missfee

avatar

Timmy84 said:


I always loved this picture of him smile smile
I will forever love and miss you...my sweet Prince.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1432 posted 06/26/09 3:55am

NMuzakNSoul

Michael, all you ever wanted to do in life was make people smile a little brighten their day and entertain them. What a talent. You had a mission and you carried it out You had such an impact on so many lives, including my own. Everytime I was down, everytime I felt sad your music brightened me and my day. One time when I remmeber when was in the hospital for surgery your music was so soothing. I've been a fan of your music since I was two years old.

The void is already felt now that you left the Earth but everytime people will hear your voice or play your music I know your spirit is watching. I know you're up there dancing with James Brown and Jackie Wilson. Michael, keep on dancing.

Nick
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1433 posted 06/26/09 3:56am

razor

People indulge in "recreational grief", epitomised by the mourning at the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, to feel better about themselves, says a controversial report published today.

The nation is in an emotional crisis with people revelling in the "hollow expressions of public caring" at the anniversaries of murdered children and dead celebrities, a study by Civitas, a right-wing think tank, suggests.

The report described the national mourning that surrounded the death of the Princess as "ostentatious caring" and said that such behaviour has also been apparent in the public shows of sympathy for the television presenter Jill Dando, the late wife of Sir Paul McCartney, Linda, and the Soham murder victims Jessica Chapman and Holly Wells.

Wearing coloured charity ribbons, holding silences for the dead in high-profile murders and joining anti-war marches are criticised in the analysis of 21st century Britain. The report is likely to offend the millions of people who have taken part in tributes and turned out to mourn such high-profile figures as Diana, who died in 1997.

The report said that such actions amounted to "grief lite", which was "undertaken as an enjoyable event, much like going to a football match or the last night of the Proms".

But such displays of grief were phoney exercises in piling up "damp teddies and rotting flowers", said the 80-page pamphlet, entitled Conspicuous Compassion: Why Sometimes it Really is Cruel to be Kind.

Patrick West, the report's author, argued that such "hollow expressions of public caring" had been triggered by the decline of institutions which once gave meaning to people's lives, such as the family, church and neighbourhood.

He said: "We live in a post-emotional age, one characterised by crocodile tears and manufactured emotion. Ostentatious caring allows a lonely nation to forge new social bonds. Additionally, it serves as a form of catharsis.

"We saw this at its most ghoulish after the demise of Diana. In truth, mourners were not crying for her, but for themselves."

He said that the mourners soon forgot the Princess. "These recreational grievers were now emoting about Jill Dando, Linda McCartney or the Soham girls," he said.

The report argued that the Soham murders were "unquestionably tragic" but it was "almost as distressing to see sections of the public jumping on the grief bandwagon".

Mr West said: "The unfortunate inhabitants of Soham were subjected to hoards of grief tourism," with streets being overrun on the 2002 August bank holiday as coach trips arrived to see the killer Ian Huntley's home and the college where he worked in Soham.

Mr West said that the traditional minute's silence has suffered "compassion inflation" and become meaningless. "There is seemingly a case of compassion inflation, with individuals and organisations seeking to prove how much more they care by elongating the silences," the report concluded.

The wearing of charity ribbons serves to "celebrate the culture of victimhood" and is an egotistical gesture to announce "I care", the report said. But the ribbon trend had not been accompanied by a tangible increase in charity donations, the report added, and there was now an "unspoken competition" to see who could wear their Remembrance Day poppy the earliest, "particularly among politicians".

The report said: "Going on demonstrations today is too often an exercise in attention-seeking."
"He that will not reason is a bigot; he that cannot reason is a fool; and he that dares not reason is a slave." - William Drummond
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1434 posted 06/26/09 3:58am

razor

And for a more scientific persepctive, see pages 225 and 226 of this link:

http://books.google.co.uk...t&resnum=1
"He that will not reason is a bigot; he that cannot reason is a fool; and he that dares not reason is a slave." - William Drummond
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1435 posted 06/26/09 4:05am

GirlBrother

avatar

razor said:

And for a more scientific persepctive, see pages 225 and 226 of this link:

http://books.google.co.uk...t&resnum=1


I'm sorry razor, but I wiped a tear away last night - and I don't own a single Michael Jackson album.

For a lot of thirty-somethings, it's part of our childhood dying. My earliest memory of Michael Jackson is from the Jackson 5 cartoon show in the early 1970s. It was never just about the music.

A lot of my generation have woken-up today feeling a little older - the grief is real.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1436 posted 06/26/09 4:06am

novabrkr

Fuck science and fuck you too.

This person played a big part in many people's lives, and we've spend a lot of time listening to his records, watching his videos, learning his dance steps in front of the mirror and in generally spend a lot of time simply speaking about him with each other.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1437 posted 06/26/09 4:07am

razor

LondonStyle said:

razor said:




No need to apologise. But I stand by my original comments. Just like Diana the reponse will be both bizarre and fascinating, but mainly troubling.


The only fascinating and troubling think is the fact that you have no soul ... so why are you on a prince.org ...so how can you feel the music ? unless you only like prince's old records which just sing about sex ?

Love God

R.I.P MJ


Refusing to indulge in any more grief than one would for the death of any stranger does not make one soulless. Merely normal..
"He that will not reason is a bigot; he that cannot reason is a fool; and he that dares not reason is a slave." - William Drummond
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1438 posted 06/26/09 4:12am

LondonStyle

avatar

razor said:[quote]People indulge in "recreational grief", epitomised by the mourning at the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, to feel better about themselves, says a controversial report published today.

Here lies the problem "music" is recreational so if you get pleasure from MJ's music you must also get pain from it as well !

MJ's music is very personal ...sorry Razor time to put down the books and become human again.

Love God

R.I.P. Michael Jackson sad
Da, Da, Da....Emancipation....Free..don't think I ain't..! London 21 Nights...Clap your hands...you know the rest..
James Brown & Michael Jackson RIP, your music still lives with us!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1439 posted 06/26/09 4:12am

whistle

avatar

does anyone else feel as if their youth wasn't already gone, it certainly is now?
everyone's a fruit & nut case
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 48 of 51 « First<42434445464748495051>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Michael Jackson RIP