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Just an observation
July 24th, 2009, 16:43
.. and maybe food for thought. (<Homer voice> Foooooood</Homer voice>)
After the death of MJ, there has been a lot of advertising for his back catalog. No surprise, and I can't really say anything against it.
But whenever I see the commercials I think about Vincent Van Gogh who was extremely poor throughout his lifetime. And today his paintings are sold for tens of millions of dollars. Again I can't really say anything against it. But it is a sad paradox.
For once I didn't mention Norway in my post.
After the death of MJ, there has been a lot of advertising for his back catalog. No surprise, and I can't really say anything against it.
But whenever I see the commercials I think about Vincent Van Gogh who was extremely poor throughout his lifetime. And today his paintings are sold for tens of millions of dollars. Again I can't really say anything against it. But it is a sad paradox.
For once I didn't mention Norway in my post.
Guest
July 24th, 2009, 16:48
Yeah. It's a shame MJ never made a cent on his songs during his lifetime.
No, wait…!
No, wait…!
RPGCodex' Little BRO
July 26th, 2009, 04:36
we had a local multi-talented artiste (actor, comedian, director, songwriter, singer, musician) many years ago who was ridiculed in his later days but after he died, the accolades poured-in and he was given a national award posthumously.
i remember there's a quote that goes like this: society likes heroes but what they like even more is fallen heroes. sad truth of fact.
i remember there's a quote that goes like this: society likes heroes but what they like even more is fallen heroes. sad truth of fact.
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• Intel C2D E4500 @2.20GHz • Kingston 2GB RAM (DDR2 667) • MSI NX 9800GT (512MB DDR3)
• Intel C2D E4500 @2.20GHz • Kingston 2GB RAM (DDR2 667) • MSI NX 9800GT (512MB DDR3)
Sentinel
July 26th, 2009, 12:37
Originally Posted by lghartveitIronically, I wrote exactly this in a post in the Larian forum.
After the death of MJ, there has been a lot of advertising for his back catalog. No surprise, and I can't really say anything against it.
But whenever I see the commercials I think about Vincent Van Gogh who was extremely poor throughout his lifetime. And today his paintings are sold for tens of millions of dollars. Again I can't really say anything against it. But it is a sad paradox.
Cynically said, everybody became suddenly busy in argueing that there are no similarities at all in this case.
The main argument was, as far as I can remember, that nowadays there aren't millions of Van Gogh paintings sold - like CDs by Mr. Jackson are sold nowadays.
From this argument on, it was argued that there are no similarities there. Simple as that.
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"Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction." (E.F.Schumacher, Economist, Source)
"Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction." (E.F.Schumacher, Economist, Source)
July 26th, 2009, 16:37
There is a general upswell of attention when a popular artist dies … whether it is Michael Jackson, Elvis, Miles Davis, or whomever …
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-- Mike
-- Mike
SasqWatch
July 26th, 2009, 16:39
RPGCodex' Little BRO
July 26th, 2009, 19:52
Originally Posted by Prime JuntaHereafter I will just refer to the country, which name I shall no longer mention, as "Paradise" (or if I for some reason want to annoy dte: "Lefty Paradise").
He said "Norway!" Stone him!
But back to the thread: My intention wasn't really to compare MJ and VVG, but to dwell upon the sad paradox: VGG's life in extreme poverty, and the sales his paintings get today. MJ was only the spark that triggered the association in my mind.
Guest
July 26th, 2009, 19:57
Edgar Allen Poe died drunk and penniless in a gutter, now an NFL team is semi-named in his honor. Galileo was found guilty of heresy for saying the Earth revolved around the sun, only to have the Pope in the early 1990s publicly apologize and express regret at the handling of the situation. Funny how it all works out.
RPGCodex' Little BRO
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