Chicago Sun-Times

Justin Timberlake owes Janet Jackson an apology

Super Bowl news recalls ‘wardrobe mal function’

- Maeve McDermott

Justin Timberlake needs to apologize to Janet Jackson. He should start now, with the news that he’ll perform at the 2018 Super Bowl halftime show. He should do so as publicly as possible. And at the very least, he should invite her onstage to perform a song, or 10.

Those are several demands of the viral # Justice For Janet hashtag, which emerged following the news of Timberlake’s booking. Because, even as Timberlake’s career has flourished in the 13 years since “Nipplegate,” Jackson’s fans haven’t forgotten that he is complicit in the unjust treatment of their icon.

In a moment that’s still painful to watch more than a decade later, Timberlake exposed Jackson’s breast during her Super Bowl halftime show in 2004 in front of 143.6 million viewers. The night was supposed to belong to Jackson, who was the seasoned pop star to Timberlake’s rookie. Jackson had invited the boy band * NSYNC to open for her Velvet Rope tour in 1998, then lent her vocals to Timberlake’s debut solo album.

Timberlake has molded himself in Michael Jackson’s image from the beginning of his solo career. His Super Bowl cameo was meant to be a chance to pay homage to Janet’s pop legacy.

Timberlake needs to apologize because he played a role in hijacking this legacy, starting with the incident that barely impacted his career while sending hers into free- fall.

In the weeks after the “wardrobe malfunctio­n,” a phrase that will be forever linked to Jackson, she became a comedy punch line and was blackliste­d by Viacom ( which kept her music off MTV, VH1, and radio stations around the country).

There seemed to be no question the incident was Jackson’s fault, down to the media outlets that selectivel­y edited her video apology. “Sometimes they cut out that I said it was an accident,” she later told Ebony.

And while Timberlake has maintained that the incident was an accident, he hasn’t taken responsibi­lity for the part he played. “I’m frustrated at the whole situation,” he told reporters the week after the Super Bowl. “I’m frustrated that my character is being questioned.”

Timberlake has apologized further in the years since, telling MTV in 2006 that he “probably got 10% of the blame,” and that America is “unfairly harsh on ethnic people.”

Yet, he’s still unsure how to address the scandal, bungling an exchange last year when a Twitter follower called on him to “stop appropriat­ing our music and culture” and “apologize to Janet too.”

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA, AP ?? The “wardrobe malfunctio­n” at Super Bowl XXXVIII in 2004 prompted many networks to institute a five- second delay during some live performanc­es.
ELISE AMENDOLA, AP The “wardrobe malfunctio­n” at Super Bowl XXXVIII in 2004 prompted many networks to institute a five- second delay during some live performanc­es.

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