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Michael Jackson’s (1958-2009) Influence on Pakistan

Posted on June 27, 2009
Filed Under >Adil Najam, People, Society, TV, Movies & Theatre
45 Comments
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Adil Najam

Like so much of Michael Jackson’s life, Michael Jackson’s death has come as a shock to so many. Including many Pakistanis who grew up to the shadows of his soundtracks.

Do you have ‘Pakistani’ memories of Michael Jackson? Do share.

I must say I have been surprised by how many ATP readers have written to me saying that we should do a post on Michael Jackson’s death. I was not, at first, sure what the ‘Pakistan connection’ was. But one was made to reconsider as one heard of the MJ memorial set up in Karachi (photos below)and it was apparent how so many were so influenced by the personage of the ‘King of Pop.’


Indeed, there was a time when - irrespective of your economic and social class - the was to be ‘tich’ was to be like Michael Jackson. From Saab ji’s son to Saab Ji’s driver’s son, if you were ‘in’ you had to be MJ: the hair, the walk, the white socks, the tight pants, the persona at large. And no stage show from Peshawar to Karachi would ever be complete without the ‘performance’ of a Michael Jackson clone.

To me, the immediate memory of the Michael Jackson influence on Pakistan is embodied in the famous Fifty-Fifty skit above. Elsewhere on this blog, I have argued that this may be the funniest comedy skit ever in the best Pakistani comedy program ever. But the point I wish to make today is different. It is a point about Michael Jackson and the deep and varied impacts he has left all over the world in so many different ways!

I must confess, I was never a Michael Jackson fan, never owned a single track of his. But there is no one who has lived in the times I have lived in who could be unaware of or uninterested in the phenomenon that was Michael Jackson. I think he led a sad life, but a life that is worth celebrating becuase it gave the joy of music to so many.

May he rest in in peace.

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45 comments posted

Comment Pages: « 6 5 4 3 2 [1]

  1. Benawa says:
    June 27th, 2009 10:26 pm

    Adil, you got it down pat! When I gave a moment’s worth of
    thought to the idea of the connection betwee MJ and Pakistan,
    guess what was the first thing that popped into my head? Why
    the very 50/50 skit that you have just posted. Uncanny!

    However, poor MJ had yet another connection to Pak Watan
    which may not be visible to the casual observer: through the
    last 2 dcades of his life, he got the same kind of treatment
    that the mainstream Western media routinely metes out to Pakistan, i.e., everything he said or did was givn a negative
    spin. And now thy are milking his death for all it is worth!

    The other thing that occurred to me was the following
    Urdu verses. Writing Urdu in English is such a chore for me
    that I can only muster a translation. I’d let ATP readers
    guess the original lines:

    Lord, don’t give me th long lasting rankle of a thorn
    I’d rather have the fleeting, pinkish intoxication of
    flowers
    Don’t curse me with a long life,
    Just give me a few rollicking nights and days

    (Alas, I can’t offer you any prize for guessing it right!)

    Last, but not the least: MJ died on a Thursday. There is a
    common superstition in PW that Munker and Nakeer go
    easy on people who are lucky enough to die on Thursdays.

  2. Durrani says:
    June 27th, 2009 8:24 pm

    The height of the Michael Jackson craze in Pakistan was exactly when this album and 50-50 skit came. After that it went down. But at that point Michael Jackson was king in Pakistan too. May he rest in peace.

  3. Gardezi says:
    June 27th, 2009 6:36 pm

    Yes, the influence of DISCO on Pakistan was really an MJ phenomenon. Wasn’t there also a stage actor who named himself Michael Jackson and had this bad moonwalk routine for stage dramas?

  4. June 27th, 2009 6:21 pm

    Might it humor us to note that TODAY 27th June - the Sindh Assembly held a minutes silence at the start of its session for Michael Jackson - http://bit.ly/bSNBr

    It makes me furious to see that our idiot politicians have enough time to commemorate Jacko - while they are least concerned about the growing disaster of over 3 millions IDP’s that have been displaced by a grwoing situation or for that matter try their best to stop the growing terrorism in the country - BUT they still honored Michael Jackson who has ZILCH to do with Pakistan - I question the rationality behind our Sindh Assembly making such a statement from our public offices

  5. Mamoon says:
    June 27th, 2009 5:02 pm

    One of the biggest lines I still remember from my childhood was when ever in school some one try to be more “DISCO” , there use to be a line ” tu bara micheal jackson ban raha hai”. When you reach a certain level in your career then you become a fashion & surely he was.
    The first ever album in my life I bought as 8 yr old was BAD ( still remember it took me 3 months to get those 10 rupees together ). Not because at that time I was such a big fan of MJ , just coz it was FASHION !

  6. Huma says:
    June 27th, 2009 4:59 pm

    I was definitely a fan of MJ’s growing up. One of the first cassettes in my walkman was his…my brothers and I listened to his songs and sang them everywhere we went…tried to copy his moves (who didn’t?) All the boys in the school tried to emulate his style and dancing…he was just so international…like him or not, it’s undeniable that he was a musical legend of the century…And i for one, highly doubt there will any voice as famous, far-reaching and as memorable as his, ever again…
    May God bless his soul…I MISS MJ!!!!

  7. Haroon says:
    June 27th, 2009 3:59 pm

    Yes, and I do remember the white socks tight pants phase that everyone in my school was going through!

  8. Haroon says:
    June 27th, 2009 3:58 pm

    Wow. What a post.

    And what a great find that Fifty-Fifty video. One of the best and shows just how far reaching this man’s impact was.

Comment Pages: « 6 5 4 3 2 [1]


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