Chris Berman, ESPN, NBA Draft, Stuart Scott

The Pretentious Ballad of Stuart Scott

While watching the NBA Draft last night, it became apparent that the biggest question wasn’t about what Cleveland would do with the first pick or how many times Minnesota fans would scream “KKKKKKKKKAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN!” There wasn’t much trepidation around who would select Jimmer Fredette and where.
No, it became obvious our biggest concern should have been how uncomfortable Stuart Scott was going to make it to watch the coverage of the draft itself.
I twisted and squirmed uncomfortably for most of the broadcast each time Scott opened his mouth. The absolute worst was the wide shot of the crew: Jay Bilas, Jeff Van Gundy and Jon Barry sitting next to Scott as he cracked an absolutely horrendous joke about the Chicago Bulls drafting “a certain Bobcats owner from North Carolina.”
Nobody on the set moved. No one made eye contact. No one laughed.
After at least a good four or five seconds of dead-air (which feesl like an eternity when there’s no music, no one speaking and no one even blinking), Scott said with a wry smile, “So we’re pretty sure the Bulls aren’t going to take Michael Jordan with this next pick.”
Again, no one moved a muscle. No one spoke.
And no one laughed.
Yeah, Stu, we’re pretty certain Jordan won’t be drafted by the Bulls. It also marked the 957th consecutive time he’s referenced either Jordan or North Carolina when on-air.
It was yet another example of Stuart Scott showing what a caricature of himself he’s become. It’s like he sat down with Chris Berman one day and they shared career notes. All that’s left is the YouTube clip of Scott completely losing his mind on set during a commercialbreak because someone walked in front of a camera.
Scott’s biggest problem is he puts too much of himself into every situation to the point that you are readily aware of his presence before he even opens his mouth. As with too many studio hosts these days, he sees himself as a personality, instead of the guy steering the ship.
Scott forgets we already have personalities like Magic Johnson and Jon Barry on the set. Often, during the pre and post-game, Michael Wilbon is there to provide context – which he can, because, you know, he’s one of the most respected journalists and opinion givers in sports media. Scott’s job is supposed to be that of a classic point guard – throw a bone to each of them in each segment, let the analysts do their thing and reign it back in when it starts to drift off topic.
Every “Boo-yah” is grating, like nails on a chalkboard or my beagle’s howl in the middle of the night because she saw a leaf blow across the yard four houses down. In other words, much like I yell at my beagle in those moments, when I hear Scott my first reaction is “Shut up!
As viewers, it’s difficult to watch the mind-numbing absurdity of the questions Scott poses during a broadcast. A few examples:

  • “If Carlos Boozer stays healthy, how much does that help the Chicago Bulls?”
  • “If Kobe Bryant doesn’t score points, does this make the Lakers a worse team offensively?”
  • “Was Michael Jordan a big reason the Bulls won the 1991 Finals, Magic?”
It’s mind-numbing, really. I can’t tell which is worse, the pretentious, semi-loaded questions (and the fact that even the people he’s asking the questions to don’t know if he’s being serious) – or the forced jargon that he works into the highlights. This play was sick, that play was “phat with a capital P”, someone’s “as cool as the other side of the pillow.” Or, the classic, “holla” – which was what they named his recurring column in ESPN The Magazine.
Of course they did.
The man uses “boo-yah” as a verb, noun, adjective, period and an exclamation point. Apparently, it’s the most versatile word in the English language that’s not even technically a word.
Scott often just lacks awareness, which makes him come off as a sideshow. Case in point, during the 2008 NBA Draft, he asked Indiana Pacers president Larry Bird about drafting Jerryd Bayless and his strengths as a player – except the Pacers had traded him to Portland about five minutes earlier.
People can respect a shtick, but they can’t respect clueless hyperbole.
It’s difficult to criticize a man who has cancer and has valiantly fought that battle. But this isn’t even meant to be criticism – it’s just annoyance. Annoyance with an overwhelming number of people in media who’ve become characters and caricatures, who search wildly for a catchy phrase and try to inject more and more of themselves into the broadcast.
Scott often tries to appear hip and smart, all while trying to drop words that give him street cred. It’s a recipe for disaster. What he and so many others do not get is that we tune in to watch the game or event, not them.
The self-aggrandizing nature in which Scott, Berman and so many others conduct themselves takes me down a path where I have to question their motives, their intent and purpose for becoming the show instead of part of it. And just by making me do that, I resent them for it.
By approaching their profession this way, folks like Scott take away what I’m looking for when I sit down for the first time after working all day, playing with my kids, cleaning up from dinner, giving baths and doing laundry. I need entertainment in the form of a game. If I wanted jokes, I’d watch Colbert, Jon Stewart or throw in a Will Ferrell film on DVD. Same as if I want news, I’ll put on the news.
And by not staying out of the way, these personalities are robbing me of “me time” by forcing me to think about if the latest “boo-yah” was used as an exclamation point or a period. Everything we get now, in the form of pretentious hyperbole, is delivered in a self-promotional fit of megalomania.
Sports has become like too many other things in life that are fluffed up and given the works. Now all steaks are marinated in eight different spices. Drinks are all combos of four liquors and juices. TV shows are a weird mix of comedy, drama and reality. Cars have rear-view cameras, GPS, talk to you and plug into an outlet. It’s not enough to have an open bar and a good DJ at a wedding, we have photo booths with crazy outfits and paper mâché stations.
You know what? Just give me a steak with nothing on it, served medium to medium rare. Give me a beer. Give me a 1968 Camaro or a 1977 Silverado pick-up truck.
And for crying out loud, just give me a ball game with Vin Scully.
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Dennis Miller, ESPN, Neal Kumar Katyal, President Barack Obama, Reality TV, Stuart Scott, The Kardashians

Enough Already

To borrow heavily from Dennis Miller’s schtick, I don’t mean to get off on a rant here, but…
Enough.
Enough with the political nonsense.
Enough with the cell phone pics of places no one but your spouse or mistress wants to see. What on earth possesses anyone famous or in the public eye to take pictures of themselves naked is beyond me. The interest our society shows in these little sagas and scandals proves how nosy we really are.
Enough with reality shows.
There is literally a reality show for everything.
A husband and a wife with eight kids. Then, just the ex-wife and eight kids.
A show about pre-teen beauty pageant participants and their crazy mothers.
Cooking shows – and genres of cooking have their own shows, let us not forget the subtle and intricate differences between soufflés and crème brulees.
Reality shows about tattoos, motorcycle shops, people who cannot throw anything away (I believe they are called hoarders), athletes wives, desperate housewives (and the apparent multiple cities where desperate rich housewives reside).
Shows about bachelors and bachelorettes, many of whom shocking cannot get a relationship right while being filmed and thus return to said show for another crack at it. There’s also celebrity versions of this same concept with washed up 80s rockers and rappers.
Shows about people with talent and all categories of talent: singing mainly, then off the wall talent. It’s like a seventh grade lunchroom: “Dude, I can totally roll my eyes in a complete 360, then stick a spoon on my nose for 15 hours.” Someone get that kid from my middle school an agent!
There are also shows about people with no talent (eg, the Kardashians) who show us how tiring it is to do nothing all day.
There are shows about what to wear and what not to wear, makeup, hair, how to pimp your ride, how celebrities get punked, swapping wives and getting in shape, undercover bosses, high school football teams and high schools in rich areas of California.
Sadly, we’re only scratching the surface. Yet none of these reality shows is about the reality a majority of us see in our day to day lives. Why not make a reality show about politicians and what they do day-to-day.
Scratch that, it would be just like the Kardashians show, only somehow less entertaining.
Enough with President Obama’s solicitor general telling Americans who disagree with Obamacare to make less money as a way to get out of it. “Someone doesn’t need that much income,” Neal Kumar Katyal said. Americans who cannot afford rising gas prices and general inflation (while salary increases stay around 1-3 percent) might disagree with that notion.
By the way, polls show the majority of the country’s population disagree with Obamacare in its current state. Excellent pandering to constituents on Katyal’s part.
Enough of pretending to care about the national deficit. No one in office seems to actually do anything about it. Everyone running for office says they will.
Enough of the rhetoric. The national debt was $14,352,131,100,710.65 as of June 9, 2011 at 3:00PM. It will be billions more tomorrow.
That’s not a joke – the national debt has risen $3.96 billion a day since September 28, 2007. Your share, as of 3:00PM on June 9, 2011: $46,189.48.
Someone make a reality show about that: a person going to a bank or Washington and asking who to make the check out to for their share of the national debt.
Enough of the NFL lockout and the hypocrisy of it really mattering. It kills my fantasy football league and our message board, but we will all be OK until all the extremely rich and pampered stop fighting over how to split up $9 billion.
Enough of President Obama threatening to hold back funds on states that passed legislation to defund certain programs. Is this not the same as the argument that you cannot defund Obamacare, since elected officials passed it? Elected officials in states are just as important as those at the federal level. Stop making everything government owned and operated. Spend a little less time congratulating yourself on your correct ESPN bracketology picks. We would prefer a President who nails a solution to the national debt and unemployment while boosting the economy, not one who got 97 percent of his first and second round NCAA men’s basketball tournament picks right.
Enough pretending the royals in England matter. Two people got married. Happens all the time. They should have televised my wedding if you wanted entertainment. One of my groomsmen demanded a make-out session from nearly everyone in attendance. And yes, it was an open bar.
By the way, her name is Kate. Not Catherine. People quit changing your names in the middle of the game. You know what, let’s do that. I’d like to go by Vladimir The Impaler for the next five years. You can call me Vlad for short.
Enough of rich celebrities pretending care about fur. Enough of rich celebrities getting naked for magazine ads to promote caring about fur. You can just admit you want to be naked in front of a camera that isn’t a cell phone.
Enough of celebrities begging for middle class and lower class Americans to give to other low and middle class Americans who’ve just gone through a horrific natural disaster. I’d rather hear directly from those affected and have them tell me about their hardship than you.
By the way, let’s institute a celebrity-to-normal person ratio for donations. For every million they give, we’ll give $5.
Enough of Kevin James making not so vaguely similar movies compared to that of Ben Stiller and Adam Sandler.
Enough of cross-promotion. ESPN’s NBA Finals coverage being sponsored by “The Green Lantern” while Stuart Scott sneaks in his third “BOO-YEAH” in 45 seconds of highlights makes both my ears and eyes bleed.
Enough. Enough. Enough.
Of course, that’s just my opinion, I could be wrong.
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Baltimore Ravens, Crime, ESPN, Michael Wilbon, NFL, NFL Lockout, Ray Lewis, Sal Palantonio

CSI: NFL

Well, the jig is up.
And I would have gotten away with it too, if it weren’t for those meddling football players.
Namely, Ray Lewis.
I had already planned out no less than four bank heists for this fall, you know, since there will be nothing to do on Sunday afternoons without the NFL, but then Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis had to go and expose my plan – along with thousands of others plans for crime – when he exposed our evil ways in an interview with ESPN’s Sal Palantonio earlier this week.
“Do this research if we don’t have a season – watch how much evil…which we call crime…watch how much crime picks up if you take away our game,” Lewis said.
Ever the dramatist, when Lewis was asked by Palantonio why he thought that, he sadly, yet passionately replied: “There’s nothing else to do, Sal.”
How did he read my mind? Does Ray Lewis have me on surveillance? Is Ray Lewis a part-time psychic? Does he know about those Algebra II assignments I didn’t complete all by myself in high school? I am freaking out a little.
In all seriousness (or not), let’s take a look at his claim.
Is it possible that we’re so obsessed with the NFL that in its absence, average Americans will run amok? Riots. Looting. Smashing windows. I’m picturing another “Pirates of the Caribbean” sequel. Or perhaps a new spinoff for the CSI series.
Well, if it were true, then wouldn’t crime therefore increase each year when the NFL season ends and decrease each fall?
(Hint: it doesn’t.)
There is one demographic where in fact the NFL season does serve as a potential deterrent to crime: among NFL players themselves. According to John Mitchell of Grio.com, arrests among NFL players have spiked during the lockout.
And if crime is bound to increase somewhere due to football or lack thereof, it is actually the opposite of Lewis’ take.
Justin Wolfers, a contributor to Freakonomics, reported recently on a study showing that crime rates increase during college football game days. Assaults, vandalism and general disorderly conduct increased on game days in cities of home teams, but were basically non-existent in the cities of the visitors.
Huh.
So, when people go to football games and get drunk tailgating or by having many $8 beers from the overpriced concession stands (only in the NFL, since college football bans alcohol sales inside the stadium), you are telling me that would cause them to act out after leaving the stadium? Total mind-blower.
Now, let us get back to Lewis.
Lewis thinks the NFL lockout affects “way more than us” – the owners and the players, because “there’s too many people that live through us, people live through us.”
Moments later, when discussing the root cause of the lockout, Lewis replied that it is all because of ego.
Um, hey Ray, do you think there is a little bit of super-sized ego going on when you claim that all fans live through you and they will turn to crime in the absence of being able to see you tackle someone?
Lewis has always been a bit dramatic and preachy, and it’s obvious that many players around the league look up to him. All that has served to boost his ego and put him in a place where he feels comfortable expressing his opinions.
All of his opinions.
ESPN’s Michael Wilbon made a great point on yesterday’s Pardon The Interruption, when he said that in the current media age of Twitter and Facebook, we are taking every sound bite and dissecting it like a dead frog in freshman biology. Wilbon said it is not worth it and we should not feel the need to find every angle to every little thing an athlete says.
He is absolutely right, we should not, mainly because it causes other athletes to feel like their voice is powerful and effective and worst of all, should be heard.
This blog rips and dissects all the time, but with good reason. For decades, leading up to around 2000, we blindly worshiped our sports heroes, as well as politicians, without knowing anything about them.
But we are learning more and more about who they truly are, not only because the media is 24/7 and won’t stop until it gets the quote, but also because athletes are now readily offering up opinions on their own. Sometimes it is funny, sometimes it is sad. Sometimes it is just plain nonsensical.
We can either ignore what we learn or accept it. We can still idolize them, but they become more human. We realize they do and say stupid things, just like we do. Just because someone is not a good person or has clear moral flaws has very little to do with how good they are at their respective sport. Likewise, just because someone is good at their respective sport doesn’t make them an authority on issues such as politics or race.
Or crime.
It’s not like because Ray Lewis is a Super Bowl champion and future Hall of Famer he is suddenly a renowned expert on the mind of criminals, right?
Maybe if the lockout drags on and the NFL misses games, Ray can take his two talents, one for delivering violent hits with force and the other for sniffing out evil and work for the Baltimore police department. He would not even need a gun or taser, really.
Guess I should cancel the grand theft auto I had planned for late September in Maryland.
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Charlie Sheen, Dave Anderson, ESPN, Josh Hamilton, Major League Baseball, Major League II, Texas Rangers, Tim Kurkjian

Them’s The Breaks

Sometimes, things just happen and it’s no one’s fault.
While we can blame certain people for certain things – like, say, Charlie Sheen for brining “warlock” and “tiger blood” into the American lexicon – it’s not quite so easy to place responsibility at any one person’s feet.
It’s important to remember this when the topic turns to Texas Rangers star outfielder and 2010 MVP Josh Hamilton’s recent injury.
In the first inning of the Rangers Tuesday game against the Detroit Tigers, Rangers third base coach Dave Anderson told Hamilton no one was covering home on a foul-ball pop-up that both the Tigers third baseman Brandon Inge and catcher Victor Martinez moved over to catch.
Detroit pitcher Brad Penny just stood on the mound – never really even moving towards home. That left the base wide open.
Anderson repeated the fact twice. Suddenly, Hamilton tagged up and began making the 90-foot journey to home – which prompted Martinez, who was about 50 feet away, to break towards home as well.
As you might guess, the guy with the 40-foot head start got there first.
Hamilton went in all Pete Rose-ish (headfirst) and Martinez applied the tag.
And then Hamilton felt a bit of pain. Turns out, he had a small fracture develop in the humerus bone in his upper arm because of the play.
Now, Hamilton’s on the shelf for six to eight weeks. He can’t touch a bat for a month.
Then Hamilton went all crazy ex-girlfriend on Anderson after the game, calling the play “stupid” and “dumb” in the past few days and in not so many words, blaming Anderson for his injury.
He also kinda, sorta implied that he was an innocent bystander just doing his job by listening to his coach.
“I listened to my third-base coach,” Hamilton said at the time. “That’s a little too aggressive. The whole time I was watching the play I was listening. [He said] ‘Nobody’s at home, nobody’s at home.’ I was like, ‘Dude, I don’t want to do this. Something’s going to happen.’ But I listened to my coach. And how do you avoid a tag the best? By going in headfirst and get out of the way and get in there. That’s what I did.”
Come on, Josh. That’s comical in and of itself.
We all know that no one is the pros really listens to their coaches.
Apparently Hamilton is clairvoyant. He just knew that something was going to happen.
Well, if you feel that strongly about something, if you just know you’re going to get hurt, then don’t run.
And maybe don’t go in head first.
How quickly Hamilton forgets that last year he scored from second base on an infield hit. As ESPN’s Tim Kurkjian pointed out, Hamilton called it his proudest moment at the time.
Anderson referenced that as well yesterday.
“You think about in the past what we’ve done,” he said. “He’s scored from second on a groundout to the infield twice. He’s scored from first on a long single. We’ve done double steals with him. That’s a part of our game is being aggressive and taking advantage of situations. The unfortunate part is that he got hurt. But if you go out and play the game and play hard, those things are going to happen.”
So if you are Josh Hamilton, what you can do is show two sides of a coin: you’re either aggressive and hungry enough to want to score on weird plays like that, or you’re more of the cautious type. But you can’t be both.
This whole saga got blown a little out of proportion on Wednesday, with sports radio dials everywhere dissecting the play 30 different ways.
Headfirst or feet first? Was it important to even try in the first inning of a game in mid-April? Was it Anderson’s fault because he kept repeating it like he wanted Hamilton to go? Was Hamilton just a good soldier? What does this say about the future of baseball, in youth ball or the pros – will players start thinking more for themselves on the basepaths?
Seriously, fellas? I know it’s a little slow these days – NFL lockout dragging on, NBA playoffs not yet started, no real attention grabbing headlines – but to spend nearly two hours of your show on subplots in this one play that really don’t exist is a bit much, even for a guy like me.
I shudder to think what the current media would have done with Roger Dorn when he was told to get out there and take one for the team in “Major League II.” We would have heard Dorn was a company line-toeing stooge, or that Jake Taylor’s old-school ways had gone too far this time.
We ruin so many moments in sports and life by over analyzing them.
Just let it be.
Hamilton tried to score – and if he would have, people would be talking about what an amazing, gutsy, heads-up play he made. That plays like that are the difference between great and good.
So he got hurt, so what? Yes, he’s out six-to-eight weeks. Yes, he can’t even swing a bat until mid-May. But let’s look at Hamilton’s track record for injuries:
April 2011         Fractured arm
Sept. 2010        Fractured ribs
June 2010         Hamstring tightness
May 2010          Knee
Sept. 2009        Pinched nerve (neck)
June 2009         Torn abdominal muscle
April 2009         Strained ribs
Face it, the guy was going to miss some games at some point. Since getting into the majors full-time in 2007, Hamilton has played in 133 games or more only once in a season (2008).
“I can understand that if I was pulling things like hamstrings or quads and it was not actual high-intensity things like hitting walls,” Hamilton said. “I’m making plays that the game calls me to make and I’m getting injured that way. That proves to me that I can get hurt anytime doing anything. I’m tired of talking about it, to be honest with you.”
But he said he wouldn’t change the way he plays.
“How else would I play?” Hamilton said. “You can get hurt by doing anything.”
Bingo, kid. Them’s the breaks, as they used to say.
It took him a few days, but at least he understands what most of us already did. You can’t prevent the Sports Gods bringing the pain. Ricky Henderson once got frostbite from falling asleep with an ice bag on. People fall down stairs, throw out their backs bending over to pick up their kids’ toys.
Um, how shall we say, “stuff” happens.
Thankfully, Hamilton did apologize to Anderson publically and privately yesterday.
“I let my emotions get ahead of thinking things through,” Hamilton said. “The more I think about it, the more I understand that I take responsibility for what happened because I had the choice not to go or the choice to go. I just appreciate Dave having confidence in my ability to think I could make that play.”
Hamilton also added, “The object is to score and if you go feet first, that gives them all this up here to tag. It is what it is. It’s over. It sucks it happened, but it happened. We’ll deal with it.”
Exactly.
And hopefully you’ll deal with it better next time.
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Charlie Sheen, ESPN, Jason Whitlock, Lawrence Taylor, NFL, Pete Rose

Crime and (Lack of) Punishment

Buried in the sports pages and difficult to find within hours of being posted on the ESPN, Fox Sports and SI websites, there is a story out there that no one wants to address.
Former New York Giants star Lawrence Taylor is now a registered sex offender.
No one, not even Jason Whitlock, seems willing to tackle this nasty news and offer an opinion on Taylor or the seedy underbelly of humanity in which Taylor has long dwelled.
While I am disappointed in the current voices of sports media for not touching this story with a 10-foot pole, I get it. I understand why. Who wants to go there?
The whole situation is disgusting, impure and just plain gross. Just reading Taylor’s comments on the matter leave you in dire need of a shower. You’d need turpentine for your eyes.
But if we don’t discuss this, if it’s not addressed, then we’re doing a great disservice.
Or maybe I just need to get it off my chest.
Life and sports aren’t always happy. Every day is not a video montage of “One Shining Moment.” It’s not always feel good stories.
I get it. During a time of optimism, with baseball on the brink of another season, the beginning of spring and the NCAA Tournament providing smiles and buzzer beaters (as well as a distraction from this silly NFL labor dispute), the last thing we want to talk about is a washed up, former pro athlete who has been given probation for the use of an underage prostitute.
But it must be said: Lawrence Taylor is sick, depraved and should be in jail.
It’s widely known that Taylor used narcotics throughout his career and was suspended several times by the NFL for drug use. It’s also widely know that Taylor really ramped up this activity after his playing career was over, spending thousands of dollars a day on cocaine and basically living in seclusion surrounded by other drug users.
Taylor has admitted to using prostitutes before, mainly between 1994-2001, but last year he was indicted on charges of third degree statutory rape, sexual misconduct and patronizing a 16-year-old prostitute. He recently pled guilty and avoided jail time, receiving six years’ probation.
But he made no apologies.
Taylor told Fox News’ Shepard Smith that he blamed the institution of prostitution for ending up with an underage girl, but never took responsibility for himself.
“I’m not the cause of prostitution,” Taylor said. “And sometimes I make mistakes and I may go out there. And I didn’t pick her up on no playground. She wasn’t hiding behind the school bus or getting off a school bus. This was a working girl that came to my room.”
Just the fact he had to distinguish her as someone who wasn’t getting off a school bus gives me the willies. But a working girl? Yeah, LT, she’s a real 9-5er with deadlines and a briefcase.
Need that turpentine yet?
Whether directly or indirectly, Taylor is one of the causes of prostitution. As long as there are people like Taylor willing to pay for sex, then there will be prostitution.
Taylor said, “I’m not looking for a relationship. Hey, sometimes I look for some company. It’s all clean. I don’t have to worry about your feelings. It’s all clean.”
Actually, Mr. Taylor – it’s anything but clean.
It’s sick and seedy and disgusting.
Regardless of age – 16 or 19 – Taylor has something wrong with him.
This isn’t Charlie Sheen crazy funny, with cute little catch phrases.
It’s just sick and twisted.
The fact that Taylor is indifferent to the whole thing is perhaps most frightening.
“I guess you call it a crime,” he said on Tuesday. “It’s one of those crimes you don’t think about. You never think you’re gonna get busted because everyone does it until you get busted, and then it’s more embarrassing than anything else.”
A crime you don’t think about? No, it’s a crime we don’t think about because most of us don’t engage in that kind of reprehensible activity.
Taylor’s in some different, alternate reality – probably brought on by years of drug use and an out of control, narcissistic and toxic personality that thinks he’s somehow on another level.
He once said, “For me, crazy as it sounds, there is a real relationship between wild, reckless abandon off the field and being that way on the field.”
No, LT, there’s not a relationship. At all.
Taylor created one in his own mind to justify his actions. People do that all the time, some sort of reasoning mechanism to try and convince themselves their actions are not misguided.
Prostitution is a serious crime. Everyone, contrary to his belief, doesn’t do it. And it should be more than embarrassing, it’s should be shameful.
It should be a harsher sentence that six years’ probation.
Taylor is an empty man with an empty soul. Perhaps he’s always been that way.
After the Giants won the Super Bowl in January of 1987, he said, “Everyone was so excited, but by then I felt deflated. I’d won every award, had my best season, finally won the Super Bowl. I was on top of the world, right? So what could be next? Nothing. The thrill is the chase to get to the top. Every week the excitement builds and builds and builds, and then when you’re finally there and the game is over…nothing.”
For people like Taylor, empty people, there is nothing. No joy, no sense of contentment, even during a peak accomplishment.
And so he has continually chased “The Chase” all his life. He’s filled it with prostitution and drugs, searching for the big build, the thrill of the chase.
What he should feel now is the cold bars of prison shutting on his face.
How can you plead guilty to third degree statutory rape and not be in jail? How is it we honor and even remotely respect people like this? How is this man in the Hall of Fame?
He should be first ballot Hall of Shame.
We mock and despise Pete Rose for betting on baseball, but allow Taylor into his sport’s ultimate honor with open arms?
Taylor talks about feeling empty and clearly tries to fill that void by less than noble or honorable means. Thanks to his actions,  we’re the ones left feeling empty and sad. Empty and sad that this emotionless, shell of a man could make millions of dollars in the NFL, in endorsements and movies to feed his actions and his own hubris while hard working people strive just to make it to the next day.
While innocent people die of starvation, of natural disasters – like the tsunami we just saw destroy a part of the globe – Taylor somehow avoids jail time so he can continue to do his best to erase human decency and morality, all while increasing its depravity.
He’s been found guilty of tax evasion, been arrested numerous times for narcotics and prostitution, and now has agreed to a plea bargain of two misdemeanors: sexual misconduct and underage prostitution.
Misdemeanors? Are you kidding me?
It’s safe to say we might have figured out what Taylor has really been chasing all these years: Prison.
It’s only right we fulfill that desire for him, to fill that need that burns deep in his empty heart.
Taylor’s earned it, right? He’s worked hard to achieve it, so I say we give him the same feeling he had after the Super Bowl – that empty feeling of nothing but hard time alone in a prison cell.
There’s no crime in wanting that for you, is there Mr. Taylor?
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