Saturday, February 24, 2007

Sometimes, you just have to link

Sports Media review explains why Sports on My Minds' blog on Jason Whitlock is so exemplary. (It has to do with holding sports mediamouths accountable for their inconsistencies & lunacy.) But the entry in itself represents something major : a full-blown attack on the racism of an African-American journalist : complimented by a lengthy "comment" added by one of dwil's readers on the topic of white fear. The blog & that comment are must reads.

peace love gap
Johnny Hatchett

Monday, February 19, 2007

Jemele Hill raises & drops issue..


Red Sox spring training - all sorts of non-events, like Julio Lugo being bananas about Boston - keeps the news on Tom Brady's person life on, as they say, the back burner. (It's actually the way-back burner, not making the top headline on the Patriot's page @ Boston.com.)

Discussing the "baby-mama drama" that Brady &, earlier, Matt Leinart have gotten themself into, Jemele Hill wonders, & then proceeds to ignore her wonderment,

So, what's going on here? Does ESPN The Magazine need to do a Where's (White) Daddy cover story? [In 1998, Sports Illustrated had a cover story about athletes having babies out of wedlock and that feature focused predominantly on black athletes.] Do white NFL quarterbacks now represent the new at-risk baby-daddy population?

What I'm wondering about is how Bill Simmons is going to spin the news. One of Simmons' (many) running joke comes at the expense of N.B.A. players. Less than a week ago, Page 2's Alpha Male wrote one of the things we "know" about the N.B.A. All-Star Game's setting is that it will inspire
2. Every ovulating groupie within a 12-hour vicinity will be making the weekend drive to Vegas to hopefully get impregnated by an NBA player -- a list that includes every hooker, stripper and jock-sniffing female between 16 and 40 from Vegas, Reno, Sacramento, San Diego, San Francisco, Oakland, Phoenix and every city and town in the Los Angeles area. To its credit, the NBA is recommending that all players wear two condoms at once, even during the day and when they're sleeping.
(Don't try this at home : medical professionals urge you not to wear two condoms at once.)

There's not much that I want to say about The Sports Guys' comments. Simmons likes to repeat himself &, in this case, I'm not sure why this repetition is amusing or pleasurable. I'll just leave it at that. (To be clear : I'm not requesting that Leinart & Brady get their "images" pan-fried by the media as relentessly as the average N.B.A. player about whom Simmons jokes. I just kind of wish everyone had Brady's access to a teflon-image.)

By the way, on this evening's P.T.I., Michael Wilbon said that the news on Brady wouldn't hurt his "Golden Boy" image, because it's 2007 & this kinda of thing is fine. Apparently, Wilbon doesn't read Simmons' writing on N.B.A. players.

peace love gap,
Johnny Hatchett

Sunday, February 18, 2007

The NBA in Vegas?

Forget all the issues of gambling & sin, forget "What happens here stays here," the reason that the NBA shouldn't be in Vegas is because that city is the anti-thesis of professional basketball. The excitement of the N.B.A. comes from (1) player personalities & idiosyncrasies (see: Arenas, Gilbert) & (2) player spontaneity & creativity. Vegas offers neither. Everything is lit-up, pre-fabricated choreography. Turns out that the NBA is living that up : having a poorly-programmed, broke-down cyborg mouth a mash-up of Vegas classics during introductions & having scantily-clad, but static & bored women appear. No doubt the players felt it : their body language expressed indifference & suppressed personality. &, lest you think players just don't care about introductions...see the 2006 All-Star dance-off or the 2005 All-Star introductions.

&, as Mark Stein points out, the absense of some of the guys who create the in-game spontaneity - Kidd, Nash, & A.I. - might hurt the game itself.

Call me old-fashioned, but I hope this is the last we hear about the league in Vegas.

peace love gap
Johnny Hatchett

Friday, February 16, 2007

Tim Hardaway, homophobia, & race

Editor's Note : Tim Hardaway, homophobia, & race : aka : Why white is right.

Maybe it's me, but...

It's one thing to offer a thoughtful, weighty discussion of what Tim Hardaway's blackness has to do with his comments about gay men. It's useful, in fact, to point out how homophobia limits the agenda & activism of any organization. (In the above case, the blogger is writing on the N.A.A.C.P.)

It's another thing to bring it up flippantly, in passing, & with no substantive context...to accomplish what? Hell if I know.

One blogger writes,
... the African American community, including the churches, have not been exactly helpful to the gay community over the years. Religious beliefs play a big part in it.
Or, as one blogger points out, there's FoxNews (gulp!)

Hardaway's bigotry, while hardly unique, is particularly sad given that he played college ball at the University of Texas-El Paso, which made history in 1966 as Texas Western by defeating Kentucky in the NCAA final with an all-black starting five. When the Miners beat Kentucky, which was coached by the retrograde Adolph Rupp who refused to recruit black players, it was a landmark on the "glory road" to racial equality in college athletics. Presumably, Hardaway, an African-American, would reject Rupp's racism as immoral. But apparently he would have no problem with discrimination against gays.
Briefly, some thoughts on this :
  • When a white person says something homophobic, we should relentlessly bring up white people's legacy of dominance over others as proof that white people just don't get it. That might make some sense.
  • Is it surprising that religion might be involved in the production of homophobia amongst black people? Did we expect that all religious black people would be less homophobic than some religious white people?
  • To suggest that a person who faces one form of discrimination should develop some radical ethos of equality is a bit daffy; in a way, it suggests that white racism might actually benefit black people. It'll help them get enlightened, or something like that.
  • Sometimes, one's own experience of discrimination generates solidarity with others facing different forms of discrimination. Often, it doesn't. Which is why scholarship on African-American feminism or uneasy amalgamations of Marxism & feminism exists.
  • Sometimes, the white gay & lesbian community have not exactly been helpful to the black gay & lesbian community. Again, there's no such thing as automatic & easy solidarity.
  • Anyone else have thoughts on this? I'm just a little stumped & perplexed, though not surprised.

peace love gap
Johnny Hatchett

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Free Tim Hardaway(?)


Editor's Note : Free Tim Hardaway? What?

If there is such a thing as a definitive take on Tim Hardaway's homophobia | p.r. gaffe : (depending on how you look at it) : it might just be Sports on My Mind's
Tim Hardaway and the Language of Hate; Chris Broussard is LZ’s Good Buddy (as long as LZ Doesn’t Check out his Johnson in the Shower, That Is). (God I love that title.)

Sports on My Mind offers a good summation of Hardaway's comments & apology, & ties it to ESPN's Chris Broussard's equally asinine, yet less publicized, message of born-again, Christian love.

Apparently, SoMM notes, the N.B.A. removed Hardaway from all league-related appearances. To be brief : I'm fine with that. Hardaway has a right to believe what he wants & speak what he wants, but he, of course, has no inherent right to a league position, nor access to the public airwaves that disseminate his hatred & paranoia.

The thing is, I don't think that this (legitimate-form-of-)censoring Hardaway is an adequate response. It seems to me that the solution de jour of an ambiguous mixture of media mouths & the masses for the expression of hate, stereotype, racist, or offensive discourse is ... simply ... fire him/her. See: Michael Irvin, see: John Edwards' bloggers. (Neither Irvin nor the bloggers was fired, though those bloggers may as well have been. Looks to me like they took one for the team.)

I do not condone Hardaway's beliefs, nor do I think that he is a victim of some panoptic, prohibitory p.c. police force. But, by calling for the banishment or actually banishing a single voice, I speculate that the following occurs :

  • We mistake the production of silence with the production of an "aware," "tolerant," or, even "gay friendly" league. Of course, a locker room filled with hate speech can't contribute to any of those things. But will a locker room of stifled hatred either? (Perhaps Broussard is over-estimating who's "with him," but he seems to think that most players feel like he does about gay people.) In other words, the homophobia doesn't go away; the environment might simply be hateful-1.
  • Confronting homophobia isn't only a p.r. move. Hardaway showed his hand, apologizing for saying that he hates gay people, not for hating them.
    Yes, I regret it. I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have said I hate gay people or anything like that,” he said. “That was my mistake.”
    It's not at all disingenuous; he's apologizing for exactly what got him in trouble in the first place. &, I think, by engaging in this cycle of speak-(apologize)-&-fire, we tend to diminish non-speech related contributors to homophobia.
  • This narrative, now common : speaker says something asinine, public & other media mouths call for firing, speaker is fired or resigns : is particularly easy to understand & easy to broadcast. ESPN can run the whole story through its nauseatingly repetitious Sportscenter machine thanks, especially, to the fact that we get a neat ending. There's no wider discussion; the words Hardaway spoke are his problem, we disavow them, & he's been taken care of, in one way or another. I know the job of ESPN isn't that of sociology, nor is it David Stern's work to conjure the ghost of C. Wright Mills, but let's dig a little deeper. For example, let's wonder what Hardaway's remarks have to do with Broussard's & what do both of them have to do with Tony Dungy's public support of an anti-gay organization? The N.B.A. Commish has some remarks credited to him about when the league's "inquiry" about its players end: right about when the players put the ball on the floor (so long as you have played one year in college, & abide by the dress code, & stay away from the clubs). But let's not buy what Stern is selling without investigating the evidence. For example, dig around, ESPN, to find out whether the NBA & its union provide the same benefits to a married, homosexual couple as it does a married, heterosexual couple. (It hasn't happened yet, so I'm talking about a theoretical couple ... & the league's complicity with heterosexism.) But, more importantly, let's strive to generate a real conversation : not only Amaechi's powerful biography & critiques narrating us through other player's soundbites.
I hate what Tim Hardaway said. But that's not the end of this story...

peace love gap
Johnny Hatchett

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Nope.

See last post.

Gosh, I feel bad for this team. They can't buy a thrill.

Boston wins?

This is a premature post. With just under 3:00 left in their game, the Boston Celtics are leading the Minnesota Timberwolves. If Boston hangs on & wins - a huge IF since this team can't seem to succesfully draw up & run a play in the final minute of a game - then the T'Wolves will have done the impossible : ruined a 17 game winning streak (the Suns', on Jan 29th) & a 17 game losing streak (the Celts').

Here's hoping.

David Stern's airball

Sports Media Review has a few days worth of discussion on John Amaechi's revelation that he is a retired NBA player and a gay man.

Meanwhile, Sports on My Mind offers a review of player, coach, & Commish reaction to the news on Amaechi.

Specifically, Commissioner Stern has this to say.

“We have a very diverse league. The question at the N.B.A. is always, ‘Have you got game?’ That’s it, end of inquiry.”
It's goofy how disingenuous this statement is. Stern has presided over some recent rule changes that are decidedly not about the question "Have you got game?" In fact, the implementation of an age-limit runs counter to Stern's logic. Prep-to-pro ballers frequently have game; some of them - LeBron, Amare, Dwight, (Durant?) - have game-in-excess. But, at least in this case, that wasn't the end of the inquiry.

Briefly, two additional critiques of Stern's public statement.

  • As proof that "Have you got game?" is not the end of the N.B.A.'s inquiry, I point you to one reality of the N.B.A. - its dance teams - that is (again) decidedly not about the question "Have you got game?" and is (obviously) about other, more messy questions, such as gender in sports, (hetero)sexuality in sports, etc.
  • While it is important that all players, regardless of race, class, religion, sexuality, get a fair shake in the league, this is only part of the discussion. The excerpts of Amaechi's book indicate that he had a mixed experience in the league. Certain players - namely Greg Ostertag and AK47 made Amaechi's time in the league bearable, others (Amaechi names coach Jerry Sloan as one of those others) did not. The conversations journalists, players, and bloggers are having about Amaechi are generally not about whether gay men should be allowed to play in the league, which, if that was our question, Stern's statement would be an adequate response. Rather, people are wondering about the personal, psychological, & social costs of being gay in the N.B.A., as well as the possible hostilities and acts of generosity that a publicly gay N.B.A. player might experience.
peace love gap
Johnny Hatchett

Saturday, February 10, 2007

I eat Snickers every chance I get.

Editor's Note : A few weeks ago, Sports Media Review insinuated that the reason this blog develops so slowly is because Johnny Hatchett has a life. This is not true.

Yes, this blog develops slowly. I can't seem to keep pace with the mighty, mighty blogosphere. Also, I'm attempting to blog as part of my coursework; the project that I've begun to that end is housed at emptypanopticon.org. It's supposed to be a blog informed by sociological research on technology, surveillance, & social control. But I finds ways to sneak in some sports anyway.

That said, I do hope to (intermittently) keep up with this blog. Maybe I'll be a day or two late on every issue that I write on, but so it goes. Not every thought needs an instant voice, right?

So : with that said :

There are a few ingredients that will keep me away from a product. Right now, I eat vegetarian meals, so any kind of meat is one of those ingredients. The other two are high fructose corn syrup & partially hydrogenated oil. I'm not sure why I avoid those : have little in the way of science to prop my decision : but I generally do.

Why am I exposing my nutritional superstitions? Well, because Snickers® Brand products have one of those two ingredients - the partially hydrogenated (soybean) oil. (To my astonishment, some of the Snickers® Brand products, including the traditional candy bar, do not use that high fructose gunk. Good for them.)

What this means is that I wouldn't likely be eating Snickers® Brand products before their Super Bowl debacle.

But, apparently, Snickers® Brand products are more than gooey amalgamations of caramel, peanut, nougat, etc. They're either a delicious prop in a really funny advertisement or, as super-blogger Americablog.com tells us, they're a nefarious prop in a homophobic advertisement. (Americablog.com tells you just about everything that you could ever possibly need to know about this advertisement, the marketing campaign built around it, the N.F.L.'s explicit support of it, etc.)

Personally, I agree with Americablog.com. The advertisement wreaks of homophobia, not because it incites Snickers® Brand consumers to hate people who are gay, but because it contributes to the enforcement of a social taboo against (certain forms) of homosexual desire & intimacy. If the advertisement is "about" anything, it's as much "about" what I (as a male viewer) should feel about my own desires & intimacy as it is about what I should do about other male viewers' desires & intimacies.

But isn't the advertisement hi-bloody-larious?

Well, as Mars, Inc. acknowledged, humor is subjective. What that acknowledgement ignores is that humor & homophobia (or any form of hate &/or inequality) are not mutually exclusive. This logic seems to imply that good, effective humor excuses - or even decreases - the significance of the stereotype the humor depicts.

Yes, the ways that humor undermines or exploits stereotypes & inequalities is complex. Spike Lee speaks to this in Bamboozled, closing the movie with a montage of the ways that whites used/continue to use humor to reinforce racist beliefs. (Or was that montage in The Confederate States of America?) More recently, we've struggled with this when watching Chappelle's Show. Or Borat.

&, anyway, even if we could forget about homophobia & heterosexism for a minute, what's so funny about a visual punchline that everyone in the room knew was coming?

peace love gap,
Johnny Hatchett

PS : Let's talk a little more about the straight men who were disgusted, not by the homophobia, but by the kiss. Let's talk a little more about what I think was the sensuousness : the close up : : the open mouths : hungry lips : the closed eyes : of the approach : even if a joke & accidental, even if around a goddamn Snickers® Brand candy bar. That sensuousness made a lot of people uncomfortable... & gosh, imagine if the commercial had ended here : with "I think we just accidentally kissed" returned by a look of acknowledgment from the long-haired mechanic. This country would buzz, would still be buzzing.