CHARBONNEAU: The rise and fall of Michael Jackson
I’M A FAN OF POP MUSIC that spans decades: Elvis Presley, the Beatles, Tony! Toni! Toné!, Michael Jackson.
I cringe at admitting the latter: Michael Jackson, the accused child-abuser. How can I possibly like his music when his actions were so abhorrent? Or does art transcend the artist?
It’s been ten years since the death the “King of Pop” and, unlike other artists of his stature, there’s been no celebration. One grim commemoration of his life is the release of a documentary Leaving Neverland in which two men in their thirties, once boys in Jackson’s thrall, describe their childhood years in which Jackson abused them.
There were more than the two. In 1993, he was accused of sexually abusing the child of a family friend and the case was settled out of court. In 2005, he was tried and acquitted of further child sexual abuse allegations and several other charges.


