Sit wrote:Thanks alot ppls! maybe i'll hire it out.. maybe i can play with ppl's minds!
trust me.. im in australia, MJ's perceived image is aquaeky clean to most here to start off with. Only once you look into his life through rerading- then u know the true michael. My job is to persuade ppl. If they dont know much, i can use my speech, otherwise- true. I need to defend my speech!
You manage to confuse me more with every sentence in that reply. First you say that his image is clean in Australia (it is clean in all over the world), adn then you say that only once in your life you learn this what you call "true michael". Is yous true michael then this clean image youve drawn in your essay?
Your job is to persuade people? If they dont much, then you draw more and more on this canvas of clean image making it more beautiful, and more like a myth.
The beauty though, that separates myth from the beauty of real life, is the balance with the ugly part. Michael became near-perfect basketball player through his imperfect-basketball play.
If you persuade peopel that he is indeed so pure and godlike, then theres really nothing to defend against, or give to the audience except just more and more this godlike myth.
Michaels life was far from myth, and that is the reason I respect him. I cant find respect for someone who is described only through his good and moral part of his life. You can never really give the subject to the audience that way. Through both sides of life, the good and the bad, you can really build up to what made him who he was as a basketball player. Just going through the awe-inspiring incidents in his life is yes perhaps good, but it shall only give the myth of the man and never, ever the man himself.
So if you talk about this "only once in life you see the true michael" and such, along with "to persuade peopel who dont know that much", all you are really giving to your audience is more and more of this myth, and not this true michael you yourself name as once-in-a-lifetime moment.
Perhaps its better for you to ask yourself, what do you want to listen to in a lecture, the truth, or the myth that no one can really relate to?