Jason Whitlock (K.C. writer) is one ignorant fool!!

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Tony

Sicc OG
May 15, 2002
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http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/7343980

NFL truth: Hip hop culture an NFL epidemic
Jason Whitlock / FOXSports.com

Posted: 22 minutes ago

You get one NFL Truth today. Watching Chad Johnson and Larry Johnson undermine their respective head coaches, Marvin Lewis and Herm Edwards, on Sunday gave me a singular focus, forced me to contemplate an uncomfortable truth.

African-American football players caught up in the rebellion and buffoonery of hip hop culture have given NFL owners and coaches a justifiable reason to whiten their rosters. That will be the legacy left by Chad, Larry and Tank Johnson, Pacman Jones, Terrell Owens, Michael Vick and all the other football bojanglers.

In terms of opportunity for American-born black athletes, they're going to leave the game in far worse shape than they found it.

It's already starting to happen. A little-publicized fact is that the Colts and the Patriots — the league's model franchises — are two of the whitest teams in the NFL. If you count rookie receiver Anthony Gonzalez, the Colts opened the season with an NFL-high 24 white players on their 53-man roster. Toss in linebacker Naivote Taulawakeiaho "Freddie" Keiaho and 47 percent of Tony Dungy's defending Super Bowl-champion roster is non-African-American. Bill Belichick's Patriots are nearly as white, boasting a 23-man non-African-American roster, counting linebacker Tiaina "Junior" Seau and backup quarterback Matt Gutierrez.


For some reason, these facts are being ignored by the mainstream media. Could you imagine what would be written and discussed by the media if the Yankees and the Red Sox were chasing World Series titles with 11 African-Americans on their 25-man rosters (45 percent)?

We would be inundated with information and analysis on the social significance. Well, trust me, what is happening with the roster of the Patriots and the Colts and with Roger Goodell's disciplinary crackdown are all socially significant.

Hip hop athletes are being rejected because they're not good for business and, most important, because they don't contribute to a consistent winning environment. Herm Edwards said it best: You play to win the game.

I'm sure when we look up 10 years from now and 50 percent — rather than 70 percent — of NFL rosters are African-American, some Al Sharpton wannabe is going to blame the decline on a white-racist plot.

That bogus charge will ignore our role in our football demise. We are in the process of mishandling the opportunity and freedom earned for us by Jim Brown, Walter Payton, Doug Williams, Mike Singletary, Gale Sayers, Willie Lanier and countless others. And those of us in the media who have rationalized, minimized and racialized every misstep by Vick, Pacman and T.O. have played an equal role in blowing it.


By failing to confront and annihilate the abhorrent cultural norms we have allowed to grab our youth, we have in the grand American scheme sentenced many of them to hell on earth (incarceration), and in the sports/entertainment world we've left them to define us as unreliable, selfish and buffoonish.

I take you to Arrowhead Stadium this past Sunday when two competent and respected black head coaches led the Chiefs and the Bengals in battle, and their efforts were periodically sabotaged by Chad and Larry Johnson, the two players Lewis and Edwards have defended the most.

Football fans are aware of Lewis' love affair with Chad Johnson, the Flavor Flav of the gridiron. Johnson's insistence on conducting a minstrel show during games has long been reluctantly tolerated by Lewis. Johnson, I guess, is just too talented, productive and well-compensated for Lewis to discipline. So Lewis has chosen to enable, going as far as making excuses when Johnson's selfish behavior extended to an alleged locker-room shoving match with coaches (including a swing at Lewis) at halftime of the Bengals' Jan. 8, 2006 playoff loss to the Steelers.

Coming off an 11-5 regular season and having been crowned the toast of Cincinnati, Lewis responded to that Johnson meltdown by vowing to cut the player who leaked the fight information to the media.

Since then, the Bengals have been one of the league's biggest disappointments, finishing 8-8 last season and starting 1-4 this season. Injuries have played a significant role in Cincy's troubles, but so has a lack of on- and off-field discipline and focus. Lewis' coddling of Chad Johnson has destroyed the chemistry that made the Bengals a playoff team in 2005.

On Sunday, with the Bengals trying to rally out of a two-score deficit, Johnson failed to finish a pass route, which contributed to Carson Palmer throwing an interception.

Not to be outdone, Larry Johnson continued his season-long pattern of immature behavior, spiking the football in frustration with 4 minutes to play and the Chiefs attempting to run out the clock. The Bengals were out of timeouts and the spike stopped the clock, giving Cincy one last chance to make a comeback.


Johnson, despite receiving a new $45-million contract, has brooded, pouted and complained all season. He spent the off-season promising to be a leader and has spent the first six weeks of the season spreading locker-room cancer. Edwards-coached teams have traditionally been the least-penalized squads in the NFL. This year's Chiefs are one of the most-penalized squads. Nickel back Benny Sapp drew an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on Sunday, had to be dragged off the field by Donnie Edwards, and was spotted on the sideline arguing with players and coaches.

Race is not the determining factor when it comes to having a good or bad attitude. Culture is.

Hip hop is the dominant culture for black youth. In general, music, especially hip hop music, is rebellious for no good reason other than to make money. Rappers and rockers are not trying to fix problems. They create problems for attention.

That philosophy, attitude and behavior go against everything football coaches stand for. They're in a constant battle to squash rebellion, dissent and second opinions from their players.

You know why Muhammad Ali is/was an icon? Because he rebelled against something meaningful and because he excelled in an individual sport. His rebellion didn't interfere with winning. Jim Brown, Bill Russell, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, etc. rebelled with dignity and purpose.

What we're witnessing today are purposeless, selfish acts of buffoonery. Sensible people have grown tired of it. Football people are recognizing it doesn't contribute to a winning environment.

Whether calculated or not, the Patriots and the Colts have created settings in which Brady and Manning can lead and feel comfortable. I remember back in the 1980s when some black sports fans accused the Celtics of being racist for having a predominantly-white roster when Larry Bird was the star. No one remembered that Red Auerbach occasionally fielded an all-black starting lineup during Bill Russell's heyday.

My point is that it makes sense to cater to your stars. And it makes even more sense to fill your roster with players who don't mind being led, even if you sacrifice a little 40-yard dash speed.

If things don't change quickly, we're going to learn this lesson the hard way.
 

Tony

Sicc OG
May 15, 2002
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#3
This uncle tom/house nigg is always blaming "hip hop" music in some way, shape, or form. NFL needs to whiten their rosters? LOL...

What does rap music have to do with Chad and Larry Johnson acting a fool? Hip Hop culture? WTF?
 
May 2, 2002
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Where does it say that he’s saying the NFL “needs” to whiten their rosters? He’s saying that’s what may happen if things don’t change.

With all the crap happening with players nowadays and the team losing out…who knows…maybe that will happen. I don’t look at everyone in the league getting in trouble…or who acts out…but I don’t recall many being white.

By the way…did you ever read the article I posted a while back on Whitlock? It may change your view about him.

http://wheresmyplan.blog-city.com/jason_whitlock_the_freedom_to_speak_ones_mind_and_racial_iss.htm

Jason Whitlock, the freedom to speak one's mind, racial issues, and pop culture
« H E » Poetry :: "Serious" :: Political :: Music :: JohnSherck :: email
posted Monday, 16 October 2006

Jason Whitlock, a colmunist for The Kansas City Star who has written for ESPN, now writes for AOL Sports, and has appeared in guest spots on several ESPN programs, was fired from his freelance position with ESPN recently.

My acquaintance with him was two-fold--I had seen him guest host Pardon the Interruption (PTI) and he was fine there, and I'd read a couple columns in which I thought he was articulating absolutely stupid ideas in prognosticating this NFL season. But hey, that's what columnists do.

He was fired from ESPN for making comments critical of other sports journalists working for the company, and I'm torn on this. On the one hand, it would be great if ESPN was self-confident enough to take criticism, but really, I can't fault them for firing an employee who, in their opinion, publicly blasted them on several occasions. They don't have to pay a guy who, in their opinion, is working against them. I think they might be misguided, but whatever.

This whole affair has actually given me a lot more respect for Jason Whitlock. In his own column in The Kansas City Star, he didn't protest the decision or complain about it, he just laid out his side of the story--the when it came down to it, he found it more important to tell the truth as he sees it than to keep his job.

I also read the blog interview for which he was fired (though, to be fair to ESPN, it seems pretty clear that it wasn't just one incident). I found this portion, which starts off as a criticism of ESPN reporter Scoop Jackson, particularly interesting:

Scoop is a clown. And the publishing of his fake ghetto posturing is an insult to black intelligence, and it interferes with intelligent discussion of important racial issues. Scoop showed up on the scene and all of a sudden I’m getting e-mails from readers connecting what I write to Scoop. And his stuff is being presented like grown folks should take it seriously. Please. I guess I’ll go Bill Cosby on you, but it’s about time we as black people quit letting Flavor Flav and the rest of these clowns bojangle for dollars. There’s going to be a new civil-rights movement among black people and the people bojangling for dollars are going to be put in check.

Q: A Civil Rights movement? In 2006?
Dude, it’s in the air. Black people are tired of letting idiots define who we are. It’s dangerous. I grew up loving hip hop music. But the [bleep] is way out of hand now. Flavor Flav went from fighting the power with Chuck D to a minstrel show on VH1. You have all of these young rap idiots putting out negative images about black men and black women, and it’s on us to stop it and say enough is a enough. It’s not on white people. And it’s not on old black people like Cosby and Oprah. We have to police our own. W.E.B. Dubois talked about the talented 10 percent leading the black masses. We’re letting the Ignorant 5 lead us straight to hell. The Ignorant 5 are telling white folks, “Yeah, this is how we really is. Let me bojangle for ya, boss. You say step and I’ll show ya I can fetch.” And what’s even more dangerous, the Ignorant 5 are telling black kids, “It’s cool to be locked up. It makes a man out of you. And don’t embrace education. Dealing dope and playing basketball are better career choices.” The Ignorant 5 is the new KKK and twice as deadly. That’s why you don’t hear ‘bout the KKK anymore. The Klan is just sitting back letting 50 Cent and all the other bojanglers do all the heavy lifting.

Or this:

Q: People say you play the race card far too frequently. Your response?

Black people think I’m too hard on black people. They write me and tell me I’m a sellout. White people say I play the race card too much when I question the timing of Charlie Weis’ contract extension. But those same white people write me love letters when I blast off into the way the media and a prosecutor tried to crucify the Duke lacrosse players on the word of a couple of black criminal escorts. I’m going to write about race because race is an issue in America and my life experience has put me in a position to have something insightful and intelligent to say about race. I don’t have an agenda when it comes to racial issues. There’s enough stupidity on both sides of America’s black-white dilemma to keep me typing for years. I don’t have a guilty conscience about race. The people in my life know that I choose my friends solely on the content of their character. And I don’t choose sides in my column based on the color of anyone’s skin.

Good call. This happened several weeks ago now, and I didn't really know where I wanted to go with this. Yesterday, though, when I was looking for Sekou Sundiata, I found a review of one of his albums of poetry to be an interesting juxtaposition to Whitlock's comments:

Before there was Run-D.M.C., before Grandmaster Flash, before Afrika Bambaataa, rap's true infancy exosted with a few black radicals like the Watts Prophets and Gil Scott Heron. For artists such as these, flow, beats, or danceability didn't matter as much as the message. They were political poets who were more effective witha musical background. Sekou Sundiata picks up this torch and carries it on, years after rap has gone the way of MTV, dance clubs, and innocuous million sellers.

It's an echo of Whitlock's criticism about which elements in African-American culture are the dominant. Not surprisingly, of course, they are the most marketable ones. "The revolution will not be televised," we were told once upon a time, but if a corporation can turn it into a t-shirt or hit single and find a way to market it , they will. As Sundiata is quoted in the review, "People be droppin' 'revolution' like it was a pick up line / You wouldn't use that word if you knew what it meant." Shallow slogans and trendiness dominate our popular culture because that's what sells big numbers. In the process, it dumbs things down. Oh, there will still be intelligent people out there, but it's the people in the middle of the spectrum who are dragged down, and we all lose out in the process. It's not, in that sense, a race issue, but a cultural one. The way that it becomes a race issue is because minorities are perceived more narrowly, as though there is a monolithic "black culture" and the loudest voices represent it, whcih is something Whitlock sort of points out, perhaps without fully realizing it.
 

Tony

Sicc OG
May 15, 2002
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#5
@ Gimpy to answer your question... read what I put in quotes closely.... why didn't he include Moss? Because he's a patriot now putting up big numbers? Randy Moss used to act a fool too...

"African-American football players caught up in the rebellion and buffoonery of hip hop culture have given NFL owners and coaches a justifiable reason to whiten their rosters. That will be the legacy left by Chad, Larry and Tank Johnson, Pacman Jones, Terrell Owens, Michael Vick and all the other football bojanglers."
 
Apr 25, 2002
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He should hit up journalism class again cuz dude over uses Flava Flav and Bojangles waaaaaaaaaaay too much.

Flav's antics are not the standard bearer for African Americans or Hip Hop culture.

And there are plenty of other ways to describe general buffoonery that degrades the over all image/creates negative stereotypes for the race.
 
Feb 10, 2004
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#8
I don't like how he ties everything into hip hop, but I am starting to notice how other races think they know our culture and know us, cause they have watched some BET, listened to the radio, or watched flavor of love, or dave chappele. They then take that "knowledge" and stereotype and use those stereotypes in how they treat every person that fits a part of it. We need to watch our image in mainstream culture. I wish dudes like whitlock spent more time, talking to us instead of talking about us to others.