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HomeCELEBRITYMichael Jackson’s Estate Proves the King of Pop Still Runs the Culture

Michael Jackson’s Estate Proves the King of Pop Still Runs the Culture


Michael Jackson’s name still moves culture, and the estate behind it knows exactly what it’s doing. The official @michaeljackson account on X posted an open question this week, calling on both longtime devotees and people newly discovering his catalog to share their thoughts. Followers were directed to drop answers in the comments.

The prompt pulled in over 3,200 likes and nearly 400 retweets. For estate-run content in 2026, those are real numbers. Jackson passed in June 2009, almost 17 years ago. His audience didn’t shrink. It keeps refreshing.

The catalog explains a lot of that. Tracks like “Billie Jean,” “Beat It,” and “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough” clock consistent streaming numbers year after year. His 1982 album Thriller remains among the top-selling records in history, with global estimates around 100 million copies sold. No other album is competing at that level.

The framing is lowkey smart. By welcoming new listeners alongside the longtime crowd, the estate is signaling the catalog is still in recruitment mode. Gen Z has been finding MJ through short-form video trends, algorithm rabbit holes, and soundtrack placements. A viral clip drops a “Smooth Criminal” sample and a whole new wave starts digging backward through the discography. That’s how iconic catalogs survive the streaming era.

Jackson’s influence on R&B and hip-hop runs deep. Usher, The Weeknd, Bruno Mars – each has drawn straight from his blueprint. The footwork. The falsetto. The showmanship. A generation of artists built their performance instincts watching him. That lineage runs right into the present.

His reach extended well past music. Jackson’s fashion choices became cultural reference points on their own. The single glove alone has appeared in tribute acts and Halloween costumes for decades. Designers and stylists still nod to that era regularly.

The estate has stayed active keeping his name in circulation. MJ the Musical brought his story to Broadway audiences who were barely alive during his peak years. Archival releases and anniversary campaigns have kept the conversation going on a rolling basis.

This kind of prompt is a smart, low-key engagement play. Open-ended question, broad appeal, no hard sell. Let the community do the work. For a catalog this expansive, the audience tends to show up on its own.

One question and a link. Thousands of people stopped scrolling to share what Michael Jackson‘s music means to them. In 2026, that kind of pull doesn’t come from a marketing budget. It comes from the music itself.



This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider

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