The Michigan Daily - WtI/dz , e. - Thursday, December 7, 1995 - 7 Jackson makes 'History' in live concert broadcast By Eugene Bowen Daily Arts Writer Without question, no black artist has had as much of a love-hate relationship with the public than pop star Michael Jackson. During his long career-now traveling into its third decade - Jack- son has angered residents of his home- town of Gary, Ind. for his refusal to come back to his roots and support a city which supported him and the other members of the Jackson 5. He's con- tinually pissed off the African-Ameri- can community with his nose jobs, at- tempting to look more "Western Euro- pean." His most recent "makeover" has us all wondering, is he "Black or White?" Ever since his "Jew me, sue me" line in "They Don't Care About Us," Jack- son hasn't been held in high esteem by members of that community, either. The only musician who could ever be seen as Jackson's musical equivalent - the artist formerly known as Prince - hates him. And it's a sure bet that Elvis isn't too fond of him at this mo- ment, either. But, even more so than being de- spised, Michael has been the focus of unlimited gossip, accusations and far- fetched rumors. He's been ridiculed just because. Remember the talk about his oxygen chamber? His supposed ro- mantic trysts with Brooke Shields, Liz Taylor and his monkey, Bubbles? Or what about the rumors that Jackson takes estrogen pills to keep his voice high? And the laughs we had about him and those damn elephant man bones? Oh, and what about the time his Jheri Curl hairdo caught on fire during Pepsi commercials?. There have been enough adjectives attached to Jackson's name to make anyone go mad. But for some strange reason this allegedly homosexual, psy- chotic, anti-Semitic, pedophiliac of a singer continues to produce chart-top- ping hit after hit, raking in millions (or is that "billions" now?) and performing at sold-out concerts where men and women cry, faint, have heart attacks or otherwise lose their minds. For a man whose defining characteristics are his new racial category (of which he's the only member) and continues to wear a black sport coat/pants/shoes suit and white socks, commanding so much worldly wealth, power and admiration says something. Let's admit it, Michael Jackson is still an amazingly popular singer. And, even if he's offended you in some way, you still have a bit of grudging respect for his musical prowess. If someone started playing one of his old-school jams like "The Way You Make Me Feel," "Thriller" or "Wanna Be Startin' MICHAEL JACKSON Sunday, Dec. 10 at9p.m. H1 tp What: A once-in-a-lifetime chance to see the moonwalking wonder perform a live, televised concert. Somethin"' you know that you'd be up right now jammin'. But while the Michael of years gone by received a fair amount of criticism, it the Michael of today - the Jackson of "Dangerous" and "HIStory" - who has garnered the most ire. Why? Simply put, Jackson has changed. I'mnot talking about the physi- cal changes; that's been talked about enough. I'm talking about the fact that in the past, Michael has always struck his fans as being this small, frail, sensi- tive, feminine, asexual tyke whose most masculine song ever was probably "Bad." (Yet, hearing a soprano voice singing "I'm bad!" while two "gangs" dance around and do pirouettes doesn't exactly strike images of sweaty, mus- cular hunks.) Michael was also so car- ing about his fans, singing songs like "Man In the Mirror" and "Heal the World," asking everyone to love and respect one another. Lately, Michael Jackson seems to have acquired a much more self-cen- tered edge. Did'you see the television advertisement concocted for his latest "HiStory" album? In the promo, Jack- son is hailed as the best thing to happen to the world since god. Everywhere he goes he's followed around, not by secu- rity guards, but by military troupes. We see teary, screaming fans hoping to just touch the hem ofhisgarments. And, in the end, wesee him standbefore astatue of... himself. (Orshould that read "Himself?") This is the same statue we see - like the eighth wonder of the world - on the cover of his two-CD album. Now, we basically have what seems to be a more self-serving Michael Jackson proclaiming to the world, "Ya'll know I'm the man. But, I thought I'd remind you just one more time. Yup, I'm the man." Whatever happened to the sweet M.J. who let children visit his personal zoo and carnival, who spearheaded the creation of "We Are the World" to raise millions for impoverished African na- tions, who visited teenaged AIDS victim Ryan White before he died? He's turned more cocky, more uppity. Jackson's just not as lovable anymore. He also seems angry. (I guess that would make him one of your typical angry white males. Hee hee.) While his angriest songs from the past were prob- ably best represented by cuts like "Billie Jean" (whose video had him so mad at this girl for saying that kid is his that he made sidewalks light up), in many of his more current songs, Michael ex- presses a type of personal rage at people's treatment of him overthe years that we've never heard before. And we're not comfortable with. So we don't like him anymore. Yet Michael Jackson is no dummy. You don't make it in the music business for three days, let alone 30 years, by being a dummy. He's a politically shrewd person. Jackson has taken ad- vantage of the songs he wrote in disk two of "HIStory" to both push some political messages and hinting at some personal grudges. Consider the follow- ing songs: "Scream" (duet with baby sister Janet): Here we have a highly irate Mike/Jan duo screaming at us to "stop pressuring me." But, in case you don't get it, he also warns you to "stop fuckin' with me." "They Don't Care About Us": This is the song which made Jackson infamous for his "Jew me" line. It's an interesting fact that the father who first accused Jackson of child sexual abuse is Jewish. Attack of the person or the denomina- tion? Hmm. "This Time Around": Mike ain't takin' nothin'. Acting like your classic psychotic suffering from paranoia, Mike says unknown enemies are waiting and scheming togethim. Notorious B.I.G.'s guest appearance heightens the con- spiracy theory. Earth Song: A return to the times of "Heal the World." I bet Mother Earth thinks Michael's not all that bad. "Money": If you dig beneath the fa- cade of Michael attacking the greedy in general, you can quickly see that this song is another well-planned smack in the faces of the parents who promised to "forgive" Michael's alleged child abuse in exchange for some money, dough, green, dividends. "You Are Not Alone": A love song which reminds us that Michael still knows how to make the ladies shudder. You can act like you don't like him, but if he were to say one word to you, you know you'd probably faint. "Childhood": Many are familiarwith, and sympathetic to, the allegations that Michael's dad, Joe, was abusive and that Michael is very much like a child today because he never truly had a childhood. Michael exploits this, hint- ing at unspoken hardships he had to overcome and cautioning, "Before you judge me, try hard to love me. Look within your heart; then ask have you seen my childhood"? "Tabloid Junkie": Afterdecades with- out responding to attacks on his charac- ter (minus interviews with Oprah and Diane Sawyer), Michael takes his own pot-shot at the media and those who digest whatever it says about him say- ing, "Just because you read it in a maga- zine and see it on a T.V. screen don't make it factual." Despite his questionable appearance, Michael Jackson is still "the man." "Little Susie": After a seemingly end- less opening of music that only Pope John Paul II and Mother Theresa could jam to, we get a slow song focusing on a little girl who was constantly abused and eventually killed. This heartbreak- ing song - complete with what seems to be some sincere M.J. singing-talks about those who saw the signs of her abuse but kept quiet. All he can say, in an almost cracking, tear-inducing voice to those holding little Susie's body is "Lift her with care, with blood in her hair." After listening to this song, no one would dare say Michael's a cold- blooded child abuser; he loves and cares about all children as if they were his own. See? Told you he's no dummy. Jack- son has a shrewd way of carving his music to the tune of public specula- tion about him. Anticipating attacks, he almost seems to welcome them. and, in some musical way, defends, himself from them. Why else would the first single released after his sur- prise skin-color change be "Black or White?" Why would, amidst growing., speculation and stand-up comics jokes about his marriage to Mrs. Lisa Marie Presley-Jackson, would he come out with the lovely tribute to her, "You Are Not Alone?" Nevertheless, people will continue to despise Michael Jackson, even as he prepares to perform a one-time, live concert on HBO this Sunday at 8 p.m. But, the reality is that the concert will. be a success, and the ones who claim to despise him the most will be the first to turn on the tube to see and hear him. After all, for better or for worse, for richer or for poorer, he's still Michael. Jackson. And he's still the man. Hallmark tels story of an incredible Journey' The Washington Post A+Hallmark Hall of Fame story has a certain imprimatur guaranteeing quality: superior production values; beautiful, even sometimes breathtak- ing cinematography; evocative, often lush music. It's almost always a family-oriented story with much feeling. "Journey," airing Sunday night on CBS, is such a production, Hallmark's 185th story and the initial entry for its 45th sea- son. The film is so lovely, in fact, that certain scenes might well be still lifes created by a painter or photographer. That is, if you stay with it. And viewers with short attention spans sim- ply won't. That will be their loss. Like a lot of Hallmark productions, "Journey" gets off to a slow begin- ning as it lays the groundwork for the story of a boy named Journey. The first half-hour may have less dialogue than any television movie you've seen recently. The tale is from a children's book by Patricia MacLachlan, whose Newbery Award-winning "Sarah, Plain and Tall" and its sequel, "Sky- lark," became Hallmark movies in 1991 and 1993 that starred Glenn Close. Close and Richard Welsh are executive producers of "Journey." In addition to preparing a second sequel for "Sarah," MacLachlan is writing "Baby," about a child left on a family's doorstep. "It's another family thing," she said. "I seem to write the same story over and over." Both are scheduled to become mov- ies, again with Close as executive producer. 'I trust her judgment," MacLachlan said, "and I trust the Hallmark people, who don't seem to care that I write books that don't have a lot of plot. This was difficult (to film) because it ws a very internal book." 'Journey" is a story about love lost and love found - or at least appreci- ated. It is a story about understanding and forgiving, about letting go and gqing on, about picking up the pieces and rebuilding a family. Some of that can be painful. Max Pomeranc, who starred in "Searching for Bobby Fischer" (1993), plays the boy Journey, who because I can say these words."' She considered that a compliment. MacLachlan said her story of a family's coming apart and then reform- ing had its origin in aquestion by achild who had read "Sarah, Plain and Tall," the story of a widower from the Great Plains with two children and a woman from New England who goes west to marry him. The child asked Mac Lachlan whether the concept of "family" re- quires both a mother and a father. "I think nowadays there's no one definition for 'family,"' she said. "So many kids today aren't part of what we traditionally think of as a 'family."' MacLachlan said that she is inter- ested in the importance of nurturing in a family. "When a writer writes, she takes from the things around her. I have a lot of people like this in my life who are great, nurturing people," she said. Among them are her son John, who works in Africa with primate researcher Jane Goodall and sends his mother pic- tures of the orphaned baby chimpan- zees he cares for. MacLachlan, who has no grandchildren, said she affixes the pictures to her refrigerator and greets them each morning. "I think it's this that I like best in my children-nurturing, passing it along," she said. "That's what happens in the movie." The Daily Arts staff says "Have a nice vacation ... Now get out of here! AUl of You!" U U Max Pomeranc (above, right in "Searching For Bobby Fisher") plays Journey. learn to be a better father than he was to Min. Journey also learns that things aren't always perfect. Still, they'll be "good enough," his understanding grandfather assures him. As you watch the story play out, keep in mind a coincidence: When Robards was only 6, his mother left the family, Like Journey, young Robards held out hope that his mother would return, or at least visit. He was angry, he said. He blamed himself, He turned on others who loved him. Eventually his father remarried, and Jason Robards and his brother had a loving stepmother who cared for them. MacLachlan said she was very pleased with the actors who brought her book to life, andparticularly with Tilly's portrayal ofMin, a difficult character to capture. "I think Meg Tilly brought this whole new depth to this character," she said. "She understood her. I never wanted her to be a villain. So I owe her a great deal." MacLachlan also said that young Pomeranc did a good job portraying Journey, a character his own age, 11. "I like little Max," she said. "He has those great big eyes, and he can look sadder than anyone I've ever seen." MacLachlan, who also wrote the movie's script, said a remark by young Pomeranc stuck in her mind: "He said to his mother, 'I'd like to do this script, D~oeCIe~ft WF Lp " _5 O9 aEVV OR g~V (.fs OFtL f Off A LL USED L.P s Q[[ gNEwI j~j.Annual Sale. $15FF - regular price pi &0:3 - 314111 ..N F"K'Y I OltttiA 1 S. a. n PJ' Corne Visit Ameria's Largest Dart Retailer A~n #'Billiard & Dad Pro Shop " Largest selection of Men's & Women's styles in Michigan * Lowest Prices in Town -+ A V V ZMMMAIFlvT, lim.- A nAkAhl ...w: Q A Awwwwwriww 1 I __ 2