The upcoming Michael Jackson film hitting screens at 9 PM at the AMC theater on 34th Street in Manhattan is more than just a cinematic event—it’s a cultural moment. But to fully understand why it resonates so deeply right now, you have to look beyond the screen and into the voices that helped shape the legend in real time.
That’s where Howard Bloom comes in.
Long before retrospectives, documentaries, and big-screen portrayals, Bloom was there—on the front lines of media, representing Michael Jackson during one of the most defining periods in modern pop history. He wasn’t analyzing the phenomenon from a distance. He was inside it, helping navigate the intensity, the scale, and the unprecedented global attention that surrounded Jackson at his peak.
And that’s exactly why his book, Einstein, Michael Jackson and Me, feels so urgently relevant today.

While the film offers a curated, cinematic interpretation of Michael Jackson’s life, Bloom’s work delivers something far more immediate: perspective from within the storm. His book doesn’t just recount events—it explores the deeper mechanics of fame, genius, media, and the forces that elevate individuals into something larger than life.
Bloom draws parallels that others wouldn’t dare—placing Michael Jackson alongside Einstein, not for shock value, but to examine how extraordinary minds and cultural forces operate on a level that reshapes the world around them. It’s not just about celebrity. It’s about impact, influence, and the unpredictable nature of brilliance.
At a time when audiences are once again turning their attention to Michael Jackson’s story, Bloom’s voice cuts through the noise with authenticity. He doesn’t rely on hindsight alone—he writes from experience. From proximity. From having witnessed firsthand how a global icon is constructed, protected, and sometimes misunderstood.
That’s what makes the book essential right now.

As viewers sit in theaters absorbing a dramatized version of Jackson’s life, Einstein, Michael Jackson and Me offers the missing dimension—the reality behind the narrative. The complexity behind the image. The human and the phenomenon, intertwined.
Howard Bloom may not be in that theater on 34th Street.
But his insight is.
And in many ways, it may be the key to understanding why Michael Jackson still matters—not just as a performer, but as a force that continues to shape culture long after the music stops.
The official website for Howard Bloom may be found at https://www.howardbloom.net
