Ever since Mae West was sentenced to a week in jail for 
corrupting the morals of youth with her play “Sex”, celebrity justice has been 
almost a drug for the masses. Zsa Zsa Gabor belts a cop, she gets 
headlines. Robert Downey Jr. falls off the wagon, and he gets publicity 
that money just can’t buy. Even banalities like Hugh Grant hiring a 
hooker is worthy of throngs of cameramen and reporters. And the public laps it 
up like cats at a bowl of cream, anxious for every bisel schmutz they can 
get that brings down the mighty and reduces larger-than-life to our own scale. 
 
Currently, the masses are salivating over the Michael Jackson trial, 
arguably the most out-of-proportion sideshow ever. Missheghas. Some 
channels are even offering re-enactments of the drama in the courtroom, using 
look-alikes to play the parts, (with an especially frightening looking Jackson 
clone glowering at everyone in the witness stand,) and lawyers turned reporters 
butting in and offering up their treyfe opinions between the bouts of 
testimony.  
 
As a veteran actor, I know first hand how difficult it is to ignore the camera 
when playing a role. It’s hard not to look into that lens! But on a soundstage, 
everyone is aware of the artificiality, and treats it accordingly. In a 
courtroom however, it can turn even the most dedicated lawyer into a sideshow 
performer, making them image conscious and detracting the focus from the matter 
at hand. I was one of the few who was fortunate enough to get hold of one of the 
unlicensed copies of the O.J. Simpson trial, (only the highlights of 
course, the whole dreary debacle would have been a nightmare to store,) before 
the authorities put the kybosh on the sales. Watching it again, I was more 
amused than ever at how it went from a murder trial to a dog-and-pony show, with 
the now late Johnny Cochoran’s demeanor often reaching Shakespearean 
proportions, and Marcia Clark’s innumerable makeovers grooming her for 
her after-the-fact career in writing and television. Had there been no cameras 
in the courtroom, the outcome might have been different. Maybe the prosecution 
would have put their energies into a competent case rather than their images. 
But then again, let’s face it…everyone wants stardom, and everyone connected 
with the O.J. trial knew damned well that regardless of the outcome, their 
fortunes were made from the minute the opening statements were made, especially 
Ms. Clark who’s constant playing to the camera made one expect her at any moment 
to look right into the camera and say, “I’m ready for my close-up now, Mr. 
DeMille!” These people became instant celebrities the minute the trial began, 
and as Melvin Belli commented after his guest appearance on ‘Star Trek’, 
“Lawyers are just actors with a smaller audience and a college degree.” 
 
But, in the case of the Michael Jackson trial, I have to admit, I’d love to be 
able to see into that forum. He is one of those rare examples of a celebrity 
who, like him or hate him, fascinates us and we never seem to get enough of his 
bizarre hi jinks. His vacillation between genius performer and lunatic circus 
clown is a source of morbid delight for the public. Unlike O.J. Simpson, Jackson 
himself has turned the courtroom into a vaudeville venue that might well deserve 
to be captured on tape for posterity. No one can say for sure why he does what 
he does, and we members of the Hollywood Fourth Estate, delight in arguing if 
he’s going for a bogus insanity defense by example, or if the man has truly 
crossed the fine line between brilliance and lunacy.  
 
Does press coverage hamper the judicial process? Of course, and most judges know 
this, which is why for decades we had to settle for cheesy cartoons drawn in the 
courtroom to illustrate the goings on. Does it widen the inequity between 
celebrity justice and justice for the common man? Absolutely. Hell, O.J. Simpson 
might be on death row, had Marcia Clark worried less about “Does this outfit 
make me look fat?” and more about “Are you sure the gloves will fit him?” But 
like it or not, the public hasn’t changed much since Madame DeFarge sat 
ringside, watching the heads of the French monarchy fall. The only thing we love 
more than watching an someone’s ascent to the top of the pedestal, is watching 
them fall off of it. 
 
I doubt that very many people really give a merry damn about the outcome of the 
Michael Jackson trial, or any celebrity trial for that matter. Because we don’t 
regard it as a real trial. We tend to view it as just another reality show, and 
when it’s all over, we’ll spend a few weeks intellectualizing over the result, 
then, growing bored with the whole thing, we’ll sit back and wait for another 
star to screw up, and the whole cycle will repeat it’s self. Only one thing is 
certain…Michael Jackson will be a hard act to follow! 
 
Until next month! 
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