Heat Wave Washes Away American Ideals

LeBron James, the Media, and the American Soul

Millions of Americans had pleaded with basketball superstar, LeBron James, to leave the Cleveland Cavaliers and come to their city when he became a free agent. Bloggers, media pundits, and reporters of every kind seemed to devote much of their lives to figuring out what team James would be a part of for the 2011 season. 

The speculation ended, Thursday, July 8, when ESPN opened a full hour of prime time for some pretend-journalism and an interview with James, who 28 minutes into the infomercial announced he was leaving Cleveland and going to the Miami Heat.  Floridians were ecstatic. With multimillionaire James joining multimillionaires Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh, they were sure the Heat would once again win an NBA championship, something that had eluded James in Cleveland.

The day after the ESPN show, the man known in Cleveland as “King James” held court with Wade and Bosh in Miami’s American Airlines arena, surrounded by 13,000 screaming fans, all of whom watched South Beach and Miami city officials give the three superstars keys to their cities. Two days after the announcement, Miami Heat fans began buying replicas of James jerseys, with his new number, 6, stitched across the back. Most NBA jerseys sell for about $50; these were priced up to $150.
 
In other basketball franchise cities, millions of fans who thought their team would have a chance to sign the man who wears a tattoo, “Chosen 1” across his back, wailed incessantly, as if their high school’s Prom Queen had just rejected their mournful bid to go steady. On the day of the “decision,” ABC-TV, a sister company to ESPN, devoted two segments on its nightly news to the forthcoming spectacular. The other networks settled for one segment. Following the “decision,” the TV networks and local stations ran “breaking news” crawls beneath scheduled shows. The next morning, newspapers gave the announcement front page coverage, with extensive commentary inside. The New York Daily News devoted almost its entire front page to a picture of a scowling James, and the whining headline, “Hey, New York, we’re the greatest city in the world, so …WHO CARES!” The New York Post front page headline was a bold “LeBum.”

But, it was Cleveland where hatred unified a city of about 450,000, part of a metropolitan area of about 2.2 million. Within minutes after James announced his decision, the Cleveland fans threw his cardboard images into trash cans and burned jersey replicas, the same ones they had proudly worn for seven years. Within two days, they began tearing down a Nike-sponsored 10-story mural that featured LeBron James, his head thrown back, his oversized arms spread out, saviour-like. This city would not have any graven image of the traitor they once worshipped as a “hometown hero.”

Thousands even proclaimed they would boycott all companies —including Allstate, Nike, and McDonald’s — that have endorsement contracts with James. Between tears and rage, Cleveland fans, aided by numerous sports commentators, claimed that the James defection would cause the city to lose at least $20 million in revenue and, for all we know, doom it to be a third world country.

A bitter Cavaliers owner, Dan Gilbert, who had not received the courtesy of even a pre-announcement phone call from James, lashed out in a letter to his fans, calling the decision, a “shameful display of selfishness and betrayal,” and that the hometown Cavaliers, unlike James, “have not betrayed you nor NEVER will betray you.” But, Gilbert’s most important statement might have been his observation of the entire process. Although Gilbert would have praised James and the TV coverage had he remained in Cleveland, the Cavaliers’ owner pointed to an underlying truth. The decision, said Gilbert, “was announced with a several day, narcissistic, self-promotional build-up culminating with a national TV special of his ‘decision’ unlike anything ever ‘witnessed’ in the history of sports and probably the history of entertainment.”

Even when the hyperbole is stripped away, a truth remains. For at least a week, it didn’t seem there was any other news. But there was.

On the day that LeBron James announced he was going to Miami, and the media and a couple of hundred million Americans sat in anticipation of the “Decision,” another heat wave washed over America. In this one, three people died from the heat wave that gripped the northeast; hundreds more, mostly senior citizens and the homeless, had to be treated for heat stroke or heat exhaustion.

On the day that LeBron James announced he was going to Miami, and the media and a couple of hundred million Americans sat in anticipation of the “Decision,” about 15 million Americans were unemployed, and 46 million Americans had no health insurance.

On the day that LeBron James announced he was going to Miami, and the media and a couple of hundred million Americans sat in anticipation of the “Decision,” the BP oil spill in the Gulf was in its 79th day. On that day, 2.5 million gallons of oil polluted the Gulf. As much as 160 million gallons have now leaked into the Gulf, destroying wildlife, plants, and the livelihoods of several hundred thousands residents.

On the day that LeBron James announced he was going to Miami, and the media and a couple of hundred million Americans sat in anticipation of the “Decision,” three British and two American soldiers and two UN workers were killed. American deaths in Afghanistan since the war began now total 1,171; about 6,700 have been wounded.

On the day that LeBron James announced he was going to Miami, and the media and a couple of hundred million Americans sat in anticipation of the “Decision,” at least 60 civilians died from bombs in Iraq; about 360 were wounded. Since the beginning of the American-led invasion of Iraq, 4,412 American soldiers have died; almost 32,000 have been wounded, according to Defense Department records. Civilian casualties are estimated at 110,000, according to the Associated Press. Other reliable sources place the totals well over a half-million civilian deaths from hostile action.

On the day of the “Decision,” if you added up the yearly salaries of only the American soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan since the wars began, they would not equal the money that LeBron James makes in just one year. And, that, more than anything else, says a lot about America.

Walter Brasch, during a 40-year work career in mass communications, has been a member of several unions, in both the private and public sectors. He is a syndicated newspaper columnist and the author of 16 books, including With Just Cause: Unionization of the American Journalist, Before the First Snow: Stories from the Revolution, and his latest Fracking Pennsylvania. He can be contacted at: walterbrasch@gmail.com. Read other articles by Walter, or visit Walter's website.

8 comments on this article so far ...

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  1. BartFargo said on July 12th, 2010 at 12:48pm #

    More and more, it seems the only enlightened response to modern culture is pure, unbridled nihilism.

  2. Don Hawkins said on July 12th, 2010 at 1:24pm #

    Nihilism

    1. Philosophy
    a. An extreme form of skepticism that denies all existence.
    b. A doctrine holding that all values are baseless and that nothing can be known or communicated.
    2. Rejection of all distinctions in moral or religious value and a willingness to repudiate all previous theories of morality or religious belief.
    3. The belief that destruction of existing political or social institutions is necessary for future improvement.

    Fargo I don’t know where you would get that idea the world has Wal Mart now and flat screen TV’s the rest is just little stuff that the best minds in human history are this very day probably on the 18th hole thinking about. Calm at peace mate all under control. That little leak in the Gulf BP is now pleased on there progress and in 30 years it will all be back to normal. Remember we all need to set an example for the kid’s future generations Nihilism you can’t make this kind of stuff up. Glenn Beck has a new book out start there.

  3. BartFargo said on July 12th, 2010 at 3:12pm #

    Nihilism isn’t necessarily a wholly pessimistic view of human existence. Of course, referencing a trite and simplistic dictionary definition would lead you to think so.

    It does hold that conventional, conditioned values, knowledge, and modes of interaction are philosophically baseless and tend to a state of chaos and brutality. One can simply stop at this realization and sulk, or one can try to construct his own values and own understanding of the universe, starting from square one. This dramatically overcomes the initially pessimistic nihilistic state. Read up on Nietzsche’s concept of the Uebermensch.

  4. Don Hawkins said on July 12th, 2010 at 3:36pm #

    one can try to construct his own values and own understanding of the universe, starting from square one.

    Just maybe trying to construct his own values and own understanding of the universe and to not use known knowledge not the knowledge seen on Fox new’s raise the bar a bit like from about an inch to say about 4.5 billion might be a good start. Probably not a good idea bad for consumer confidence and the visions of a few. By November we human’s may see a few visions no not the elections the state of the Earth.

  5. Don Hawkins said on July 12th, 2010 at 3:46pm #

    It’s a bird it’s a plane no it’s superman and welcome to the twenty first century and what a century it will be.

  6. Deadbeat said on July 12th, 2010 at 5:09pm #

    Walter Brasch writes …

    On the day of the “Decision,” if you added up the yearly salaries of only the American soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan since the wars began, they would not equal the money that LeBron James makes in just one year. And, that, more than anything else, says a lot about America.

    I’ve seen these comparison made of sports stars to soldiers and IMO they are insulting if not downright idiotic. At least James can argue that he is not killing anyone and is getting paid directly for his performance. He is an entertainer and yet you have movie celebrities getting paid huge amounts as well.

    I’ve only seen this debased military pay comparison made against African American (Barry Bonds, now LeBron James) athletes and never against say a Jack Nicholson or Michael Douglas or even CEO’s like Bill Gates and Warren Buffet or even Zionist producer/director Steven Spielberg or wealthy lefty Zionist personalities like Amy Goodman ($1,000,000.00/year) and Noam Chomsky. That says a lot about the writer.

    In fact what James is doing is much more practical and justified because the life of a basketball player is extremely short compared to the DECADES of deceit by “left-wing” writers.

  7. teafoe2 said on July 12th, 2010 at 6:43pm #

    Ah yes, the Jack Johnson syndrome: Them, uh, darkies maken too dam much money these days. Outa be a law, dammit.

  8. Deadbeat said on July 13th, 2010 at 4:40am #

    I agree tf2. Brasch wrote this article like a typical out of touched Liberal elitist who appears to be clearly oblivious of his outright racist commentary. I hope the editors here understand the racist undertones of Brasch’s comments and possible reactionary consequences. Why criticize the Tea Party when you can find such racist commentary coming from the Liberal-Left.