King of Pop
English
editEtymology
editThe earliest known attestation of this term as a nickname for Michael Jackson is in a newspaper article in the New York Post of February 8, 1984.[1]
Proper noun
edit- (informal) A nickname of the American singer-songwriter, dancer, and philanthropist Michael Jackson (1958-2009).
- 1992 January 9, Michael Goldberg, “Michael Jackson: The Making of ‘The King of Pop’”, in Rolling Stone[2]:
- The King of Pop.” That’s how Fox, Black Entertainment Television (BET) and MTV, the American TV outlets that got the rights to première Jackson’s “Black or White” video, now refer to him. That was the deal. You want to get “Black or White” first, you dub Jackson “the King of Pop.”
- 1995 June 18, Jon Pareles, “POP VIEW; Michael Jackson Is Furious, Understand?”, in The New York Times[3]:
- When he billed himself as the King of Pop, no one contested the title.
References
edit- ^ “Some Loving Balm on Injured New King of Pop”, in New York Post[1], 1984 February 8, archived from the original on 2015-06-09