It is official, music icon Michael Jackson’s memorial will be held on Tuesday at the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles.
AEG Live, Jackson’s promoter (also incidentally the owner of Staples Center) and the Jackson family publicist have announced that a motorcade will go from Forest Lawn Mortuary in L.A. to the Staples Center complex in downtown Los Angeles.
According to Randy Phillips, AEG's chief executive, it will be a public memorial and that about 11,000 tickets will be given away free of charge for the 20,000-seat arena. Actual distribution of the tickets however, was not discussed.
While fans who hoped for a public memorial at the famed Neverland ranch are coping with the disappointment (and the fear of not getting a last look at the musician), Los Angeles officials are fretting over what may be a huge and potentially uncontrollable outcome.
In fact, Los Angeles City Councilman Dennis Zine has said the Jackson family should consider delaying the public memorial to allow more time to plan. Given the current financial meltdown of California, he also said the city can't afford to pay police overtime.
If the nationwide and worldwide outpouring of grief for the singer’s death is any indication, people will be coming in at droves and in hundreds of thousands at the memorial just to see the late great Jackson.
He also said that the memorial announcement took the worst timing as things are also busy over the July Fourth holiday weekend. Zine said that, “If you can imagine 100,000 people show up and you have 20,000 capacity (at the Staples Center), there is not sufficient room. Now you have a crowd-control problem.”
Indeed, with a motorcade also in the works, traffic is bound to be equally horrible as well. The organizers and local authorities will have to pull something short of miracle to keep things peaceful and orderly.
Hopefully, the activities for Tuesday as well as the crowd will not be anything like the aftermath riot following the Lakers’ championship. Authorities will have to be on the look-out, not just for unruly crowds but also for people who may take advantage of the situation by inciting fights, doing property damage, or even drinking and stealing.
Emotional situations such as the death of a music legend can bring out the best and the worst out in people. Since the number of actual policemen on duty will be far outstripped by the masses, the fans (bystanders, onlookers and the simply curious) should pay their respects to the legend by abiding the law and avoiding accidents.
AEG Live, Jackson’s promoter (also incidentally the owner of Staples Center) and the Jackson family publicist have announced that a motorcade will go from Forest Lawn Mortuary in L.A. to the Staples Center complex in downtown Los Angeles.
According to Randy Phillips, AEG's chief executive, it will be a public memorial and that about 11,000 tickets will be given away free of charge for the 20,000-seat arena. Actual distribution of the tickets however, was not discussed.
While fans who hoped for a public memorial at the famed Neverland ranch are coping with the disappointment (and the fear of not getting a last look at the musician), Los Angeles officials are fretting over what may be a huge and potentially uncontrollable outcome.
In fact, Los Angeles City Councilman Dennis Zine has said the Jackson family should consider delaying the public memorial to allow more time to plan. Given the current financial meltdown of California, he also said the city can't afford to pay police overtime.
If the nationwide and worldwide outpouring of grief for the singer’s death is any indication, people will be coming in at droves and in hundreds of thousands at the memorial just to see the late great Jackson.
He also said that the memorial announcement took the worst timing as things are also busy over the July Fourth holiday weekend. Zine said that, “If you can imagine 100,000 people show up and you have 20,000 capacity (at the Staples Center), there is not sufficient room. Now you have a crowd-control problem.”
Indeed, with a motorcade also in the works, traffic is bound to be equally horrible as well. The organizers and local authorities will have to pull something short of miracle to keep things peaceful and orderly.
Hopefully, the activities for Tuesday as well as the crowd will not be anything like the aftermath riot following the Lakers’ championship. Authorities will have to be on the look-out, not just for unruly crowds but also for people who may take advantage of the situation by inciting fights, doing property damage, or even drinking and stealing.
Emotional situations such as the death of a music legend can bring out the best and the worst out in people. Since the number of actual policemen on duty will be far outstripped by the masses, the fans (bystanders, onlookers and the simply curious) should pay their respects to the legend by abiding the law and avoiding accidents.