Who killed Cock Robin ?
The sense of loss when a public icon dies is real. We identify these figures with important moments of our lives. I in no way mean to mock that, but the very potency of the psychological attachment raises some disturbing questions. First, the way the mourning and recapitulation of life and career takes over the news cycle implies a judgment on the part of those selecting the news; projecting the death of a pop star front center on the stage of unfolding history suggests something not entirely right with our collective mental health.
(This is an edit). I did not write "only" a pop star. The label was not disimissive, but descriptive. Given the events in Iran, which news of this death overwhelmed... I think it is fair to suggest a sense of disproportion in the reporting... )
Equally significant: what happens to the object of this public idolatry when the charismatic force is rooted in impossible fantasies, fantasies the stars feel compelled to vicariously live out, a kind of sacrifice, so the fans can have the juice and still go about their normal lives? It would take a remarkably grounded individual to resist the temptation to make those fantasies real: the one about never-ending childish innocence, for instance. MJ must have been especially vulnerable, never having had the opportunity to experience the normal stages of disappointment/loss/impotence of will/and then adjustment that turns us into mature adults.
The self-destructive character of so many ‘stars’ is not simply an individual failure: it’s a cooperative relationship, for the fans, a dance of fantasized life, a dance of death for their celebrated star.
If only he had felt called upon in the "love" he so much needed from his fans, to write a song about growing up... about growing old... How much of that feeling of loss is guilt at knowing we were watching and encouraging a man on a journey that no one could survive?