Last Moments of Michael

Tracking celebrities' final moments has become a kind of collective, Internet parlor game. The e-mails start flying: Who's getting the best scoop? Who can spot the first credible death announcement? I'm currently standing vigil over Michael Jackson's Wikipedia page, wondering if I can catch the moment when someone adds in a date of death and all the verbs fall, like dominoes, into the past tense. (Editit just happened, at exactly 6:30 p.m. Watching the text ripple when I hit "refresh" felt oddly final.)

I've often wondered: Is this ghoulish? Perverse? Or is the intense way we've all spent the last hour focused on Los Angeles a fitting homage to this strange, super-famous man, who lived his entire life dancing in and out of our view? One thing I can't get over: I simultaneously can't believe Jacko is dead, and can't believe he lived this long.

Photograph of Michael Jackson by Stan Honda/AFP/Getty Images.

Tags: michael jackson, wikipedia

Nina Shen Rastogi California native, theater and comics fan, Slate "Green Lantern" columnist

Comments

Twittering MJ's last moments

By: Nina Rastogi | Thu, 06/25/2009 - 18:21

My Slate colleague Farhad Manjoo just sent around the following tidbit, from the NY Times' Lede blog:

 

"Ethan Zuckerman, a senior researcher at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School, notes on Twitter:

My twitter search script sees roughly 15% of all posts on Twitter mentioning Michael Jackson. Never saw Iran or swine flu reach over 5%

Mr. Zuckerman adds: 'MJ seems like a topic that’s very likely to crash twitter.'"