Forty-three years since its release, people are still celebrating Michael Jackson's "Thriller." (Courtesy of MichaelJackson.com)

Forty-three years after Michael Jacksonโ€™s โ€œThrillerโ€ hit the airwaves, the music phenomenon is still celebrated like a global holiday. 

Released on Nov. 30, 1982, Jacksonโ€™s sixth studio album not only topped the charts of the 1980s, but redefined generations of pop culture through classics like โ€œBillie Jean,โ€ โ€œWanna Be Startinโ€™ Somethinโ€™,โ€ โ€œHuman Nature,โ€ and the title track, all of which boost streams annually around Halloween.ย 

Now, as fans commemorated the 43-year milestone over the weekend, the decades-long impact of the highest-grossing album of all time stretched from one continent to the next, nodding to a legacy that many consider integral to the modern music landscape. 

โ€œOn this day in 1982, Michael Jackson released Thriller, the album that broke records, shattered racial barriers and forced MTV to open its doors to Black artists,โ€ one user wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Nov. 30. โ€œIt remains the biggest-selling album ever and 43 years later, nothing has matched its influence.โ€

In London, a Brixton record stall blasted the bassline of โ€œBillie Jeanโ€ as shoppers argued over vintage vinyl. In Paris, a street musician near Chรขtelet blended Jacksonโ€™s melodies into a Metro platform performance. 

Meanwhile, clusters of teens practiced the zombie routine in Yoyogi Park in Tokyo, while key cities such as New York, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C., played singles on the street like it was 1983, reflective of the inevitable force that landed when the project first dropped four decades ago.ย 

Produced by Quincy Jones, the projectโ€™s earliest success saw seven singles hit the Hot 100. โ€œBeat Itโ€ and โ€œBillie Jeanโ€ reached No. 1, and more than 100 million albums sold across continents, according to the attached material. 

 This past fall, Forbes reported that โ€œBillie Jeanโ€ reached a new global chart peak with the No. 40 spot on Billboard Global Excl. U.S. and No. 49 on the Billboard Global 200. The track has now lived more than one hundred weeks on those charts. 

Additionally, NPR notes that the titletrack jumped from No. 32 to No. 10 in October, giving Jackson the historic distinction of scoring top 10 hits in six different decadesโ€” a feat no one else has accomplished.

โ€œAn absolutely one-of-a-kind album, for an absolutely one-of-a-kind artist,โ€ Jones, who died in November 2024, wrote on X in 2022, in honor of the 40th anniversary. โ€œIโ€™ll forever cherish everyone involved in the making of this album & for all-a-yโ€™awl for continuing to rock with the music we made 40 yrs later!โ€ 

While fans revisited โ€œThrillerโ€ this weekend, Jacksonโ€™s overall legacy continues to pay forward. In the upcoming biopic โ€œMichael,โ€ set to hit theaters next spring, the King of Popโ€™s nephew Jaafar Jackson plays the lead in a rare family-approved performance. 

The film features Colman Domingo, Lorenz Tate, and Nia Long, and is already generating global attention as the next chapter in the story that began with a groundbreaking album and an artist who refused to be predictable. 

Quietly behind it all is the reminder that Jacksonโ€™s posthumous projects continue to reach audiences on nearly every continent. Across various ventures, the late icon has generated more than $2 billion in ticket sales, reflecting the scale of the global appetite for his work. 

โ€œI never got the chance to see Michael Jackson live, and Iโ€™m not letting this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity slip away,โ€ commented one YouTube user under the trailer for the โ€œMichaelโ€ biopic. โ€œBuying this ticket feels like finally reaching out to the King of Pop himself โ€” something Iโ€™ve dreamed of for years.โ€

In the meantime, the continued success of his work speaks for itself. From the opening crack of โ€œBillie Jeanโ€ to the guitar snarl in โ€œBeat Itโ€ and the eerie Vincent Price laugh that still echoes each Halloween in โ€œThriller,โ€ 43 years later and the world still moves to the same beat established in November 1982.

โ€œWhat Michael Jackson brought with โ€˜Thrillerโ€™ revolutionized not only music,โ€ social media user, librarian and artist Simon Barre Brisebois wrote on X, โ€œbut also the world of music videos and cinema.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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