On the occasion of its 20th anniversary,
20 Minutes
shares with you the most striking memories of its journalists.
Today, the death of Michael Jackson in 2009, when the editorial staff was divided between a web team and a print team.
Confirmation of the singer's death came too late to appear in the next day's newspaper.
2009. On June 25 in the evening, my cell phone vibrates at regular intervals: “Michael Jackson is dead?
!
?
“My reflex, like everyone else that evening, is to turn on my television on BFMTV.
Eight years after 9/11, the astonishment in the face of a looping image is still just as strong.
In the case of this pop culture September 11, the images of an ambulance in front of a Los Angeles hospital replace those of the smoking Twin Towers.
In retrospect, what I remember from this event is the long period of vagueness around this supposed death.
For several hours, only the people news site TMZ (still poorly known and very poorly regarded in France) announces with certainty the death of the singer at 44, after a heart attack.
In France, the official confirmation of death occurs after midnight.
At
20 Minutes
, at that time, we have already completed the next day's newspaper.
It's very annoying but there will only be a very small article to announce the information in the newspaper.
In the same way, it will be necessary to wait for the second editions of the main French newspapers to see front pages on Michael Jackson.
And like
20 minutes
s doesn't appear on Saturdays and Sundays, I won't be able to write an article for three days… For the music journalist that I am, it's very frustrating.
The pace of the news
On Friday, June 26, 2009, I woke up to a world without Michael Jackson.
Officially at the weekend, I still go to the editorial staff of
20 Minutes
to start working on future articles around this disappearance.
I arrive in a newsroom in full turmoil.
Journalists from the
20 Minutes
site have worked on the subject since the day before, multiplying articles in different formats, noting the emergence of memes and tributes of all kinds.
While I was settling down to work on an article on the consequences of this death, the journalists of 20minutes.fr recorded a lipdub (it was the fashion) of the songs of the King of Pop in the editorial staff.
Two contemporary tempos confront each other in music.
A few years later, the Web and print newsrooms of
20 Minutes
will merge to react in time to the vagaries of current events.
And, in 2017, we will test this organization during the death of Johnny Hallyday.
But that's another story, which we'll tell you in a few days.
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pop-culture
michael jackson
People
20 minutes
Culture
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