JD Records did not apologize for what Dayo said during the interview.
That was the first thing people noticed.
After a full night of arguments, think pieces, angry posts, fan wars, stitched clips, and old Michael Jackson performances being thrown across timelines like sacred evidence, many expected the label to soften the ground by morning. Some expected a statement full of careful regret. Others expected Dayo to post something vague about being misunderstood, respect the legends, love and light, back to the music.
Instead, JD Records released the full interview.
No dramatic caption. Or a defensive thread. Neither was it a long explanation that sounded like it had been written by a committee afraid of losing sponsors.
