Photo Credit:Robert Sullivan/AFP/Getty Images, Fred Duval/FilmMagic
 
Inside the real Prince vs. Michael Jackson rivalry, with the hitmaker who worked with both pulling back the curtain on ego, genius, and mutual respect. The rivalry between Prince and Michael Jackson was real—but it wasn’t as simple as the headlines made it. According to producer Jimmy Jam, who worked with both icons, the competition was rooted in a baseline of respect that never fully disappeared.

Speaking to People at the Hollywood premiere of Michael, Jam cut through the mythology. “_They probably were both competitive, but they also were very respectful of each other,” he said. _That tension—ego and admiration at the same time—defined how the two operated at the top of the music industry.

Jam pointed to their drastically different creative styles as a key factor. “_Prince would start a record at the beginning of the day, and at the end of the day, the record would be totally done, mixed, ready to go,” he said_, describing a fast, instinct-driven process.

Jackson, meanwhile, moved the opposite way. “_We literally spent three days changing one line_,” Jam recalled of working on “Scream,” adding that Jackson pushed collaborators because “_we have to challenge ourselves.”_

That contrast played out publicly in the 1980s, when both artists were chasing the same crown. Jackson’s Thriller redefined global pop success and became the best-selling album ever, while Prince’s Purple Rain made him a one-man empire across music, film, and live performance.

Combined, they racked up dozens of Top 10 hits and forced the industry to expand what mainstream pop could look like.

The rivalry didn’t stay theoretical. Prince declined to participate in “_We Are the World” _in 1985 and later turned down a duet on Jackson’s “_Bad_,” objecting to the line “Your butt is mine,”as he explained in a 1997 sit-down with Chris Rock.

Their first shared stage moment at a 1983 James Brown concert was tense, and over the years, stories of subtle digs and competitive stunts only added to the narrative.

Even so, Jam insists the influence went both ways. “Prince was definitely influenced by Michael, and I think Michael was definitely influenced by Prince,” he said. Jackson died in 2009 at 50, and Prince in 2016 at 57.