Joe Jackson’s death has left many people reeling, unsure how to feel.
Piers Morgan, for example, tweeted that he was a “tough, uncompromising, charming & complex man who drove his children from the mean, poor streets of Gary, Indiana to global stardom. But at what cost? He made no apologies when I interviewed him in 2013: ‘I did what I had to do to give them a better life.'”
Jackson’s legacy is a complicated one. He famously helped make towering pop stars out of his children, particularly Michael and Janet Jackson, by overseeing their rehearsals, booking shows for the Jackson 5 and even managing Janet for a brief time. But his methods were suspect, to put it mildly.
When forming the Jackson 5, he forced his children into long, arduous and physically painful practice sessions. He has been accused of physically and sexually abusing them and of carrying at least one decades-long affair behind their mother’s back.
Many of his children spoke out against him over the years. Michael Jackson once told Oprah that the sight of his father made him want to throw up.