web analytics

Tag: Michael Jackson

  • 2009 BET Awards Play By Play

    jamiefoxxMoney Mike usually live blogs the BET Awards, but with the passing of Michael Jackson, he’s not in the mood to try and be fun. Thus, I’m taking the reigns for him this year. Being on the West Coast, I can’t blog it live, but I’ll give you my own play by play.

    The show opens with footage from a previous BET Awards where Michael Jackson and James Brown were on stage together.

    – New Edition opens the show with their Jackson 5 tribute. They even busted out the Stop The Love You Save! dance. I’ll give them an A for effort. My friend asked me which one was Bobby Brown, and I immediately said, “The fat one.” Bobby’s definitely eating good these days.

    – Jamie Foxx is hosting and he came out in the red leather jacket and the 3 inches too short slacks. He tried to do some MJ dancing, but he must not have had time to practice. He did much better with his broham Braxton on “The Jamie Foxx Show”.

    – Tyra Banks walked down the stage in some heels that made her look like she could post up Shaq. After giving out the “Best Male Hip-Hop Artist” award to Lil’ Wayne, she had to get on her knees just to give him a hug.

    – You know, people are ready to give Usher the torch as the next closest thing to MJ, but I think you may have to look at my boy Ne-Yo. His vocals are far more similar to MJ’s. If only he didn’t look more like a young Samuel L. Jackson.

    – Sorry y’all, brother has a head that was made for hats. I heard that Barry Bonds looked at Ne-Yo and said, “Damn, he has a big ass head.”

    – (He tore up Lady In My Life.)

    – They showed Joseph Jackson in the crowd and all I could think of was, “Joe stop beatin’ the kids.” Damn that Jackson’s American Family movie.

    – I’m going to guess that Kanye West’s girl was a big headed baby. She also has a head that was made for hats. If she and Ne-Yo had a baby, they’d test that kid for HGH out of the womb.

    – Jamie Foxx is singing Blame It and all of a sudden and for no reason whatsoever, Snoop Dogg joined him. I don’t think anyone Snoop hangs out with blames it on the alcohol. They blame it on something else. Also, I wonder if T-Pain knows that you can’t kick in judo. I guess he couldn’t find anything to rhyme with karate.

    – Does anyone really care about what Tiny and Toya are doing these days? I mean, it sucks that y’all got kicked out of Destiny’s Child, but you probably deserved it. Be happy that Beyonce’s daddy just kicked you out of the group. If Joe Jackson was your manager, he would’ve told you to get a switch off the tree and take it like a man.

    – In Soulja Boy Tell ‘Em’s song, he sings, “I gotta question, why they hatin’ on me?” Well, I gotta answer for you bruh. You’re terrible.

    – Here’s a quote from T-Pain: “He pretty much said everybody I was gonna say.” That dude can mangle some English.

    – Ne-Yo won for “Best Male R&B Artist”. If you haven’t heard Year Of The Gentleman, go get that record. It was my favorite record of 2008.

    245404723_c43d075972– Beyonce’s on the stage singing Ave Maria. I’m trying to decide if she’s supplanted Trish Stratus as the number one girl on my list. I think the only thing that stops her from being number one is that I know in 10 years, that junk in her trunk might become junk in a caboose.

    – Ok, I made a mistake. Tiny and Toya aren’t former Destiny’s Child members. I must’ve had something in my eye when I mistook them the first time. They’re former hook-ups of TI and Lil’ Wayne. Yep, these days that’s all it takes to get your own reality show. If Florida Evans was still alive, she’d say, “Damn, damn, damn!”

    – Jamie introduced a skit for a fake movie with he and Martin Lawrence starring as Shenehneh and Wanda as bank robbers. What does it say about me that I would see that on the first day it came out?

    – When artists say that they didn’t prepare a speech because they didn’t expect to win, I just want to go oops upside their head. How long can it take to put together five names that you want to remember? Or is it just cool to act humble, yet unprepared?

    – Ok, I’m not gonna lie. It still hasn’t hit me that MJ is gone. This just seems like every other kind of BET Awards show where people give MJ props.

    – For some reason, Keith Sweat is on the stage. Keith looks really exceptionally good for being 100 years old.

    – It must be New Jack Swing night as Guy just stepped on the stage. My man Aaron Hall can still bring it.

    – Now it’s BBD’s turn. They’re performing Poison. That used to be my go to song when I was 14 until my dad told me that it probably wasn’t a good idea to sing the lyric, “Me and the crew used to do her,” out loud.

    – I do follow their advice until this day though. Never trust a big butt and a smile.

    – Was that Ciara singing Heal The World? The dude did a pretty good job.

    – Beyonce is up for “Best Female R&B Artist” against the likes of Jennifer Hudson, Keyshia Coles, Jazmine Sullivan, and Keri Hilson. When she wins, she better not say that she didn’t have anything prepared. She should’ve started writing her speech the second the nominations were announced.

    – I wonder if when Jay-Z starts with, “This is death of Autotune, a moment of silence,” T-Pain and everyone he’s currently working with just start shedding tears.

    – Day26 introduced Don Cornelius and Q got through the intro without saying, “This is real talk,” or popping all the veins in his neck.

    – Don just said that Joe Jackson was one of his heroes. There are about 5,000 jokes to be written on that line alone and I’m not touching it.

    – Holy (choose your favorite curse word here)! Tevin Campbell is on stage for the O’Jays tribute. That dude needs a comeback record like yesterday.

    – Tyrese is also out singing in the tribute and he didn’t randomly insert the words, “LA Lakers” into the lyrics. Nice job Tyrese.

    – Tiny is accepting an award for TI. This is the only reason I’m thankful that this show isn’t in HD. She’s not a handsome woman.

    – Janet Jackson is a brave woman for being on this show tonight.

    – Now it’s time for the MJ tribute. I’m all for Jamie singing I’ll Be There, but couldn’t they have brought out Mariah for this one?

    I hope I was able to play it off well enough. As tough as it was to watch all these tribute performances, it was still fun to see everyone big up Mike.

    I’m not sure there’d be a BET if not for Michael Jackson. Peace!

    Photo of Jamie Foxx by Rafael Amado Deras and shared via creative commons

    Photo of Beyonce by Osei and shared via creative commons

  • Michael Jackson 1958-2009: One Last Word

    MJ Poster

    I don’t know where to start.

    I almost feel as though I have to say something. Those that know me, whether from this site or elsewhere in the music journalism community, whether friends or co-workers are family, all are well aware that I was, am and always will be a Michael Jackson fanboy to the nth degree. What probably started as a bit of toddler-age narcissism (“My name is Michael too!!”) had blossomed into full-on hero worship by the time “Thriller” hit when I was 6 and 7, and though there have been several times over the years-particularly in more recent times- when I’ve had to take deep gulps before I professed my fan-dom, I’ve never wavered or felt embarrassed by it, and those that know me in person are all too aware of that.

    Since my friend George broke the news to me via a phone call that Jackson had been admitted to a hospital in cardiac arrest, I’ve had this very eerie sense of calm. For quite some time, this is a shoe I’d been waiting to hear drop, as insensitive as this may sound. Hell, I didn’t think he would make it out of the child molestation trial alive. So in a very weird part of my mind, I’ve been preparing for this for four years, at least.

    I’ve purposely avoided most of the news coverage, limiting my intake to the internet. Lord only knows, if I flipped on the TV to look at some of the coverage, I’d probably be furious. Some of the comments I’ve read on the internet, from both friends and strangers, has me steamed as it is. One thing our internet-crazy culture has brought to the forefront is a complete lack of common decency. Particularly in chat rooms and message boards, now that people can say what they want and hide behind a screenname, the rules of respect have been thrown completely out the window. Now, I’m not looking at Michael from behind rose-colored glasses. I’m well aware that he was no saint. But do people realize how much joy this man brought to people? Never mind that, do people realize that this is someone’s son? That he leaves behind three kids, two ex-wives (including an absolutely devastated Lisa Marie Presley. Have you read that blog post? Heartbreaking.), five brothers and three sisters who have to turn on their computer or switch on the TV to hear the unmitigated bile that is being thrown across the airwaves? How would you feel if Michael Jackson were your son, father, uncle, sibling or ex-husband? If my belief that people only remember the golden rule when convenient for them didn’t exist prior to this whole ordeal, it sure exists now.

    Then again, without sounding like an apologist, I must admit that I have a great deal of sympathy for the man. While he had the adulation of billions of fans and blew through more money than I’ll ever make in my life hundreds of times over, it was very obvious that the man lived a profoundly unhappy life, and I’m not quite sure how much of that we can actually blame on him. After all, we are all children of our surroundings. As someone who was abused as a child (although my experience is love taps compared to even the charitable versions of what Michael went through at the hands of Joe), I can tell you with assurance that it never leaves you. That alone will scar someone for life. Never mind the concept of being designated as the breadwinner for your family by the time you’re 12 years old. Those of us who have “normal” lives kind of take them for granted. While Michael may have gone on to receive wealth, fame and fortune beyond his wildest dreams, he paid a dear, dear price. As many obstacles as I’ve dealt with in life, there’s no way I’d have traded mine for his at all. No way.

    But I’m not gonna turn this into a media- or public-bashing exercise, and I’m also not going to turn myself into a Michael Jackson apologist. Instead, I’m gonna remember the man who revolutionized the pop music industry. Whatever you think of his personal life, and even if his music doesn’t fall into your comfort zone, there’s no denying that the man was one of the greatest entertainers the world has ever seen. I remember working in a music/electronics store in the late Nineties and the earlier part of this decade. We would put Michael’s videos on the big screen TVs and a crowd would form to watch videos that were already fifteen years old at that point and probably had been watched by everyone in that room hundreds of times before. Grown-ass people, staring at an image they’d seen tons of times over the years, still slack-jawed by the talent and the spectacle. The sad thing about Michael’s pre-eminence as an overall entertainer is that it gives short shrift to his talents as a singer. I can make you a list of songs that prove that MJ was a master vocal interpreter, one of the last great soul singers. Listen to him take on songs like Smokey Robinson’s “Who’s Lovin’ You” or Bill Withers’ “Ain’t No Sunshine”. Listen to songs like “Beat It” (can YOU sing that hard and with that much conviction? I don’t think so). Hell, listen to 2001’s “Butterflies”, a fairly ordinary exercise in modern soul that develops wings due to Michael’s masterful vocal performance. Not many folks without a nose can sing like that, y’all.

    If you’re even vaguely familiar with the pop music landscape these days, you’re aware that Michael’s fingerprints are still all over the radio. Hell, less than 18 months ago, not only was “Thriller” back on the charts in its’ 25th anniversary edition, but Fall Out Boy’s “Beat It” was all over the radio, as were Kanye West’s “Good Life” (which sampled “P.Y.T.”) and Rihanna’s “Don’t Stop the Music” (which sampled “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’”). Indirectly, all you have to do is listen to just about any male vocalist trafficking in R&B or pop, from Jesse McCartney to Chris Brown, Justin Timberlake and Ne-Yo to be aware that Jackson’s legacy will live very far into the future.

    You’ve also got to appreciate the fact that we will never see a superstar of his magnitude ever again. Those of you that were around in 1983 and 1984 know what I mean. No one else will be able to span generations and ethnicities the way Michael did during that period. No matter who or where you were, if you were cool, you dug MJ. No one has been able to capture popular culture like that since-no, not even Madonna. Hell, I’m sure Madonna will tell you herself that Michael Jackson was a huge influence on her career.

    But enough about Michael’s accomplishments. You can read about that shit on CNN. What makes me smile and saddens me at the same time is how much I can tie Michael in to so many milestones in my life. I can remember the day one of my aunts bought “Thriller” and I busted my tail running up the steps at my house to see the album. “Off the Wall” was the first album I bought with my own money. I remember my aunts and uncles keeping me up past my bedtime to watch him on “Motown 25”, which was the first thing we recorded with our new VCR. I could go on and on…risking punishment to see him on the Grammy Awards in 1988, getting “The Girl is Mine” on 45 as a Christmas gift in 1982, proudly wearing a “Thriller” tee-shirt around New York City after his acquittal. That picture you see up top? Had that poster on my wall. What makes me smile even more is his music. One of my favorite recent MJ-related memories came during a yearly event in New York City called “MJ vs. Prince”. For an entire night, a club of superfans grooves to non-stop Jackson/Prince music. From the second I got on that dance floor until I left it hours later, sore and having perspired through every inch of clothing I had on, I forgot about not only MJ’s circus-freakshow of a life, but my own problems. The sheer joy of the music-whether “Off the Wall” or “Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)” or “Can You Feel It”-was all I cared about at that time.

    In an ideal world, that would be his legacy, and all that peripheral shit wouldn’t matter. Does the good the man put into the world (both via his music and his charitable offerings) outweigh the bad? (and I’ll be the first to admit that Michael himself was responsible for a decent-sized portion of his public image). Ultimately, I’ll leave the answer to that question in the hands of a higher power (whose hands Michael hopefully is in now), and keep on dancin’ to the music while I’m down here. My childhood may now be officially gone, but I have to thank Michael for contributing to some of the best moments of it. Rest in peace, my friend.

  • Better On The Other Side (Tribute To MJ)

    In what I imagine to be the first of many tribute songs, Diddy tweeted out a link to the download of a song he put together with The Game, Chris Brown, Boyz II Men, Mario Winans, and Polow Da Don celebrating the life of Michael Jackson.

    It’s crazy for them to put something together so quickly.