FLASH AND FIRE | Jackson Wang keeps it real in well-received Manila concert

When Jackson Wang descended from the rafters, suspended midair, his arrival was exactly the kind of larger-than-life spectacle his global fandom expected.

The Smart Araneta Coliseum was packed corner to corner on November 2, lightsticks and phone flashlights like stars in the sky as the first chords of ‘High Alone’ filled the air. All were waiting with bated breath for him to bring the magic he promised on his MagicMan II World Tour.

But beyond the smoke, pyrotechnics, and hypnotic staging, what made the Manila concert memorable was how it exposed the fault line between the artist as product and the artist as person. Paradoxically, Jackson Wang used smoke and mirrors to unmask his most vulnerable self.

Jackson plunged into the stage, bellowing, ‘Let’s have some fun!’ The plumes of flame fanning across the stage synchronized with his powerful dance, making the arena thrum with life. He put on a show, but more than that, he stuck to the truth of who he is.

In interviews leading up to the release of MagicMan II, Jackson opened up about questioning his identity and direction in life; a search for the boundary between the Jackson the world consumes and the Jackson who exists when the lights go out. The album itself seems to question what happens to the artist when the person themself becomes the product.

Cultural critics of the music industry have long noted how the machine – agencies, management, PR – tend to shape the artist into a product, often at the expense of the person they are. The modern pop landscape has long blurred the distinction between person and product. Labels and management teams manufacture the myth, sculpting personalities into neatly marketable archetypes – the ‘wild one,’ the ‘heartthrob,’ the ‘artist-genius.’

With over a decade in the industry under his belt, Jackson Wang is no stranger to the entanglement of his authentic self and the expectations he must inhabit. His Manila concert, presented by IME Philippines, felt like an act of rebellion against it.

In a scene where many artists struggle behind the scenes with identity, his willingness to bare his struggles and articulation of ‘am I the Jackson Wang people know or am I me?’ is a manifestation of him taking control of his own narrative.

The irony was almost poetic: it took an arena-sized production, an army of dancers, and industrial levels of smoke and flame to stage something so deeply human. His raw honesty grounded the spectacle of bodies leaping from trapdoors and fireworks licking the LED screens.

The chaotic shifts in mood – from hype to horny to heartfelt – mirror the many different sides there are to a person. Even if the transitions were messy, so what? People are, too.

‘For us, ever since there was an announcement for the Manila stop, we actually conceptualized the fan projects way back in August,’ a representative of Jackson’s Filipino fanbase, Team Jacky Philippines, said in an interview. And there were many fan projects indeed: lamppost banners surrounding Araneta, ticket and merch giveaways, a message board, and a gift box addressed to Jackson himself. Such gestures transcend consumption and move into sustaining a community.

Their labor, love, and organization represent the paradox at the heart of pop culture: if the artist’s image is engineered for mass appeal, is the emotional connection it fosters just as fabricated?

Jackson’s insistence on imperfection – on making room for feeling lost, angry, directionless – is precisely what makes him real to his fans. ‘Selfish is not a bad thing. Feeling not okay is okay,’ he emphasized during the talkback section. The show was an embodiment of the tension between the artist as brand and the artist as human. As he said to Filipino media, ‘I make sure that I show all sides of myself to my fans because fans always show love and support. and in return, I want to make sure that I show them who I am.’

What is fascinating is how Jackson makes use of the machinery of pop. On one hand, the levitation, the fire, and the VIP tiers are all classic pop industry mechanisms that commodify proximity and magnify the spectacle.

On the other hand, he uses those very mechanisms to signal distance: distance from the image people have of him, distance from being merely an idol. When he floats above the stage, he is elevated-yes-but also physically removed from the crowd, symbolizing how the artist is separated from the audience, from real life, from self.

In the smoke, the lights, the call-and-response, and the roaring crowd in Manila, Jackson Wang delivered a show that was both high spectacle and high stakes. It reminded us that beneath the aerial stunts and pyrotechnics, there’s a person asking: ‘Who am I?’ In pop culture, we seldom get this level of meta-honesty at an arena-level show.

Perhaps that is Jackson Wang’s real magic – not the artifice of perfection, but the courage to stand suspended between two selves, letting both be seen.

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