
At 2:26 pm, a synchronised ‘Heal the World’ spans continents for Michael Jackson
Seventeen years after his death, a fan-led global playback and a blockbuster biopic reveal a legacy sustained by catalogue management and generational distance.
At exactly 2:26 pm in Los Angeles on 25 June, thousands of mobile phones, laptops and vintage hi-fi systems began playing the same song. In Bogotá, São Paulo, London and Manila, fans had agreed to press play on ‘Heal the World’ at the moment Michael Jackson was pronounced dead in 2009. The coordinated gesture, organised informally across social media platforms, was not sanctioned by the estate or a record label. It was a quiet, self-orchestrated ritual, built on the conviction that a humanitarian anthem from 1991 could still bind a scattered global audience.
Jackson died at 50 from cardiac arrest caused by acute propofol intoxication, a death that led to the involuntary manslaughter conviction of his personal physician. The shock of that day rippled through a world already navigating the H1N1 pandemic, the aftershocks of the 2008 financial crisis and a pop landscape in transition. In June 2009, Lady Gaga’s ‘The Fame’ and Beyoncé’s ‘I Am… Sasha Fierce’ dominated charts; Taylor Swift’s ‘Fearless’ was crossing over from country; and the first season of Brazil’s ‘A Fazenda’ was being taped. The digital ecosystem was embryonic: Orkut still reigned in Brazil, Twitter was just gaining traction among celebrities, and the term ‘influencer’ did not yet exist. Jackson’s catalogue, however, was already behaving like a pre-digital asset built for streaming longevity.
Seventeen years later, that catalogue remains a commercial force. ‘Thriller’ is still the best-selling album in history, and its title track’s video surpassed one billion YouTube views in 2024. Alejandro Marín, director of the Colombian station La X Más Música, attributes this persistence less to spontaneous rediscovery than to careful stewardship. “Those songs are very well administered by those who have had the opportunity to do so, despite all the controversies,” he says. The recent biopic ‘Michael’, directed by Antoine Fuqua and starring the singer’s nephew Jaafar Jackson, has functioned as a powerful reactivation engine. In Brazil, the film drew 6.8 million spectators in its first weeks and grossed over R$155 million, becoming the year’s second-highest earner. A sequel is reportedly already in production.
Yet Marín draws a sharp distinction between catalogue consumption and active cultural influence. “I don’t think Michael is such an active referent; I think there are already other referents and they are much more recent,” he notes. In his analysis, young artists in Latin America now aspire to the trajectories of Bad Bunny, Karol G or J Balvin, not to the moonwalk. Jackson’s position, viewed from Bogotá, is that of a global standard—a historical benchmark whose sonic and visual architecture, forged in the ‘Off the Wall’ sessions with Quincy Jones and extended through the short-film logic of his videos, still teaches but no longer leads. The fan-led ‘Heal the World’ playback, in this light, is less a claim to contemporary relevance than a maintenance ritual, a way of tending a legacy that the market already tends efficiently.
As the last notes of the song faded across time zones, the gesture left behind an image of a dispersed congregation, each listener alone with a speaker, momentarily synchronised. It was a reminder that Jackson’s posthumous life is now shaped as much by the administrative machinery of his estate and the algorithmic afterlives of streaming as by the devotional acts of those who still set an alarm for 2:26 pm.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
Seventeen years after his death, the world synchronizes to 'Heal the World' in a global tribute. Michael Jackson's legacy endures, with millions of streams and new film projects. His tragic 2009 death has not dimmed his worldwide influence.
More than thirty years ago, ten statues of Michael Jackson were made to promote an album. Today, these rare statues are found in unexpected places, from London to Las Vegas to a small Swedish town. The piece traces their current locations with a detached, slightly amused tone.
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