There had to be SOMETHING either on or in there, and it's gone now. Around here I get mud-dauber or bug nests in every tiny hole, hose, and pipe that's open - may have been a bug-nest that finally got sucked in and burned up.
That plug looks fine color-wise.
If the threads are stripped in the head you've got a problem. You can't just re-thread them the same size, the plug will just pull out again. You'll need a thread repair kit, either call your local parts place or look online for one that matches your sparkplug threads. Google "stripped spark plug repair" for a ton of info...
"They" say you need to pull the head, but IF you're paranoidly-careful, you can do it in place. Best if you can get the sparkplug hole aimed downwards so that gravity is on your side, and the piston at TDC on the compression stroke. Load up the tap with a ton of wheel bearing grease at the tip and between the flutes, TAKE YOUR TIME (you've got to get every piece of aluminum shaving from going/staying in the cylinder). If you have an air compressor with a nozzle that'll actually go inside the hole, that's a great tool.
Once you tap the head oversized, you'll put an insert in there that'll bring it back to stock thread size, often with some threadlocker (be sure and let it set according to directions).
Just to make absolutely sure there's no metal particles left in the cylinder, I'd back the piston down about halfway and flood/flush the cylinder out a time or two of lighter oil like ATF and compressed air. Prepare for a huge mess, and a ton of oil-smoke when you first start it back up.