sportsandpolitics

New Film ‘No Look Pass’ Follows Gay Asian American Basketball Star

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There’s a scene in the documentary “No Look Pass” that should ring true to many Asian Americans, and any child of a Tiger Mother.

Emily Tay, a star basketball player for Harvard in her senior year who has yet to figure out what she’s going to with her life even with graduation day quickly approaching, has had the game of her life. It also happens to be Senior Day, and her parents, strict and traditional Burmese immigrants, have made it out from Los Angeles to watch her play. It turns out to be totally worth the trip; Tay scores a stunning 34 points in the triumphant game, which includes her usual mix of stunning basketball acrobatics and her signature move, the no look pass. After a great shot, Tay’s mother stands up quietly to applaud. After the game is over Tay’s teammates chant, “MVP! MVP!” around her, and the camera eventually finds her parents.

Her father says, stoically, “She played okay.” Her mom adds flatly, “Not shoot enough.”

It’s a classic moment in a film full of them as Tay negotiates her relationship with basketball, her family and ultimately with herself.

“No Look Pass” isn’t just about basketball though, or even solely about American-born Tay chafing against the demands of her immigrant parents. It’s a coming of age story that follows Tay as she asks the big questions: How do we deal with our tough 20s, when us young people lucky enough to have choices must balance big dreams with hard real world realities? What happens when we fall in love with the wrong people? What happens when what we want most for ourselves is exactly everything our parents have cautioned us against?

Tay dreams of playing basketball professionally abroad. While her coach chides Tay for not being a more forceful leader on the court, she’s still just the 13th player in the school’s history to reach a 1000 points in her tenure, and ranked in the top 25 nationally for assists.

“What would you do if I just spent my life being involved in basketball?” Tay asks her parents around their kitchen table in the opening scenes of the film. “Girl have to be stay home and taking care of your house,” Tay’s mom says. “Girls or women, they don’t play sports in Burma. They support their brother,” Tay’s father says.

“She wants to find me a rich husband,” Tay says, half-jokingly, but her mother stays quiet, her face unsmiling, and her head nodding with such sincerity, you know that it’s not funny to her at all.

But Tay’s also gay and not yet out to her parents, and after being recruited to a pro team in Germany and meeting a woman in the U.S. military stationed there in the waning days of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” is forced to live life with more secrets piling up around her. We see Emily hide girlfriends from her parents and walk around with the heavy burden of not being out to them. There comes a moment when it’s not a matter of whether or not she’ll come out to her parents, it’s just about shoring up the courage to handle their inevitable frustration and anger.

As difficult as it is negotiating the cultural and generational divide, Tay’s still protective of her parents. “I don’t want people seeing the film or reading about it to think that my parents were unloving at any moment in my life,” Tay said.

“I think it’s great to have structure and this tradition and culture behind you and those pressures are good sometimes, but ultimately it’s your life and it’s your decision and sometimes you have to go against everything you’ve known since you were little to make yourself happy for the rest of your life.”

Still, her parents have yet to see the film. Tay said she wants them to watch it one day, when they’re ready.

“I think, Emily really represents this paradox,” Melissa Johnson, the director of “No Look Pass,” told Colorlines. “I can say on the one hand, she’s the only Burmese gay basketball player from Harvard who’s gone on to play pro who’s nationally ranked. She’s one of a kind–she’s got it on lock.”

“On the other hand, you don’t need to be gay or Burmese or a basketball player to understand: my parents don’t get me, but I love them and I’m scared about what I’m going to do with my life.”

These days, Tay’s relationship with basketball is evolving. Tay’s about to start her third season in Germany, but after this one she’s coming back to the U.S., with her girlfriend. Working everything out with her family is an ongoing process.

“My greatest hope is people can watch this film, and see someone who’s in a tough place in her life and digs deep and finds the courage to live the life she imagines,” Johnson said. “I hope other people will watch Emily, and whatever it is they’re struggling with, think, ‘Maybe I can take this on too.’”

The White World of Sports Journalism

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The White World of Sports Journalism

January is a month of sports news. From college bowl games to NFL playoffs, we hide from the cold and indulge our inner fanatics. As someone who’s made a career of chronicling sports, it’s both an exciting and troubling time, because it reminds me that sports media remains a bastion of white privilege in journalism.

I covered my first World Series in St. Petersburg, Fla., in 2008 at Tropicana Field, when the Tampa Bay Rays squared off against the Philadelphia Phillies. As I walked into the stadium, it was packed with fans and full of energy, and I was reminded of my love for the beat I work. But when I made my way to the press box, I suddenly realized the real story wasn’t on the field. As I entered press row, I was first shocked by how many journalists were there–nearly 1,000–and then more stunned by how few of them looked like me, a person of color.

So while most of the writers on hand for Game 1 were watching the play with a keen eye, I spent my time researching the industry pioneers who set the table for African-American writers like myself today. I had nine innings to identify just how lily white the sports media has always been, and to chronicle how little has changed in terms of diversity over time.

It’s clear African Americans, and people of color broadly, have made strides as athletes. Jackie Robinson’s signing with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 sparked even greater African-American participation in the National Football League and, later, the National Basketball Association. Notably, Robinson’s entry into Major League Baseball not only helped begin the methodical task of integrating professional sports, it helped tear down the color bar for the entire country as well.

American Newsrooms in the 1940s were as segregated as the society they reported on. Unable to be hired by white-owned newspapers, African-American journalists instead worked largely for predominately black-owned newspapers. But a handful of African-American writers like Wendell Smith, Joe Bostic and Sam Lacy still wielded their pens to push baseball toward integration.

In the 1940′s, writers like Lacy, who wrote for 60 years for the Baltimore Sun, were granted media credentials to cover Major League games, but were sometimes denied entry into the press box. On other occasions, whites allowed Lacy to cover games from the dugout–sitting on top of it.

Today, the number of African-American journalists writing at mainstream outlets remains appallingly low. According to the Institute of Diversity and Ethics in Sports, whites account for 94 percent of sports editors, 89 percent of assistant sports editors, 88 percent of columnists, 87 percent of reporters and 89 percent of copy editors.

As a result, the vast majority of what we digest about professional sports–which are dominated by black athletes–is written, edited and reported by white journalists. The NBA’s players are 80 percent black. In the NFL, African Americans are 68 percent of players, and they are 10 percent in Major League Baseball. Meanwhile, according to the Associated Press Sports Editors, African Americans make up just 10.6 percent of all sports positions at mainstream newspapers.

This lack of diversity often contributes to inaccurate and flawed reporting on African-American athletes. The largest sports story of 2010 was NBA star LeBron James’ much-maligned decision to move from the Cleveland Cavaliers to the Miami Heat. Seemingly endless hours of airtime have been filled by chronicling fans’ outrage at James abandoning Cleveland, but very little coverage has explored the racially tinged nature of that uproar.

It took CNN’s Soledad O’Brien, who identifies as biracial and is not a sports journalist, to ask James about race. O’Brien asked James if he thought race was a factor in the tone fans were taking about his business decision. “I think so, at times. There’s always, you know, a race factor,” James responded. His manager Maverick Carter put a finer point on it: “It definitely played a role in some of the stuff coming out of the media, things that were written for sure.”

Later, James revealed Twitter messages backing up his claim. One of the Tweets characterized James as a “”a big nosed big lipped bug eyed (racial slur). Ur greedy, u try to hide ur ghettoness,” according to ESPN.

Few sports reporters followed up on the story with questions about if and how race plays a role in the way in which fans react to the overwhelmingly black athletes they watch on television. Nor has anyone explored why white athletes like, say, NFL quarterback Brett Farve maintain enormous popularity and good-guy reputations despite well-documented off-the-field bad behavior, while black athletes like James become synonymous with bad sportsmanship.

Amid the James story last year, a Q Score poll came out ranking public opinion about athletes. The six most-hated were all black: Michael Vick, Tiger Woods, Terrell Owens, Chad Ochocinco, Kobe Bryant and LeBron James. Where are the likes of Ben Roethlisberger, Roger Clemens, Lance Armstrong and Mark McGwire, all of whom have been in trouble with the law, had doping scandals or otherwise shown bad behavior on or off the field in recent years? Where are the white guys? Sports reporters and editors showed no curiosity about this question.

Richard Lapchick is the director for the Instituted of Diversity and Ethics in Sports. He suggests media diversity can enhance the overall quality of sports reporting–both in getting things right and in finding more interesting story lines than the I-hate-LeBron-James drumbeat of 2010. “The chance to make the stories more interesting and, in some cases, more accurate, should be apparent,” says Lapchick. “In addition to the writing of the stories, the assigning of the stories by a sports editor might take a different angle in coverage if there was a team more representative of our athletes and coaches making those decisions.”

So why, then, aren’t there more people of color on the sports desks of mainstream news?

“Exposure and retention are huge issues,” said ESPN’s Jemele Hill, who is black, when I asked her that question. “A lot of our kids think the only way they can be connected to the game is by playing or coaching it. We have to show them there’s another way.”

But it’s not just about choices would-be journalists of color make; it’s also about who their erstwhile employers recruit, train and promote. And on that score, history reveals white powers-that-be are slow to change unless they are either forced to do so or they spot an economic benefit from it. Integrating Major League Baseball, for instance, infused the league with new fans. When African-American players began integrating white teams, attendance dropped for Negro League games because many of the best players, like Roy Campanella and Don Newcombe, were fleeing to sign Major League contracts. African-American fans followed their favorite ballplayers, and this wider audience made Major League teams more profitable.

I also asked ESPN’s Hill if African-American writers have a responsibility to talk openly about these structural forces that keep press boxes so white. Her answer sums up why I spent that 2008 World Series writing about race rather than base hits, and why my mind is there instead of on the gridiron this January.

“We would look foolish if we maintained silence just to make ourselves or others comfortable,” Hill offered. “Our job is to speak for those who don’t have a voice and tell uncomfortable truths.”

NCAA’s First Openly Transgender Player Set to Take the Court

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NCAA's First Openly Transgender Player Set to Take the Court

The NCAA’s first openly trans player is set to take the court soon. Kye Allums, a 20-year-old basketball player at George Washington University. On November 13, he’ll take the floor at the Best Buy Classic in Minneapolis for a game against the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay and become the first publicly transgender person to play NCAA Division 1 college basketball.

Allums talked to Outsports about his process of coming out to himself, his family, and his teammates.

“I’ve always felt most comfortable dressing like a boy, but my mom would take all of my clothes from me and she’d force me to wear girl clothes,” Allums told Outsports. “I’d bring sweats and basketball shorts and put them in my backpack. I’d just change every day when I got to school, and I had to change back before I went home. It was annoying, but it was the only way I could go to school.”

allums_110210.jpgIn high school, Allums identified as a lesbian but eventually realized that title didn’t fit him either. His “aha!” moment came, perhaps ironically, in a text message from his mother during his first year at George Washington. During a fight, his mom wrote, “Who do you think you are, young lady?” And Allums soon realized that he wasn’t a young lady at all.

“I used to feel like trans anything was really weird and those people were crazy, and I wondered, ‘How can you feel like that?’” Allums said. “But I looked it up on the Internet and I thought, ‘Oh my god, I’m one of those weird people.’ And I realized they’re not weird. It’s all in your mindset and how you think.”

During his sophomore year, Allums asked his teammates to refer to him using male pronouns, and at the beginning of this year he changed his name from “Kay Kay” to “Kye” on the team’s official roster.

It hasn’t been an easy transition, but so far Allums has gotten the support of his teammates and coaches. Yet as he approaches his first season of women’s basketball as a man, there are some potential dilemmas. For instance: locker rooms. Women’s teams traditionally use the women’s locker room, but Washington D.C. law ensures the right to use gender-specific restrooms and fitting rooms that align with a person’s gender expression.

Outsports also recounts some of the hostility shown by fans, which Allums has learned to use to his advantage:

Some opposing fans will be licking their chops to hurl other names at Allums. He has already heard taunts from fans for years: With a masculine build, opposing fans regularly try to insult him, calling him a “man.” What those fans don’t know is that Allums relishes it.

“I love it,” Allums said. “I say, ‘Yeah, you’re right.’ It makes me feel better about myself to hear them call me a man.”

Read more of Allums’ story at Outsports. And to get a broader scope of trans athletes’ fights for inclusion, check out a recent report released by the National Center for Lesbian Rights called “On The Team: Equal Opportunity for Transgender Student Athletes.

Baseball Playoffs Unwitting Host to Police Accountability Feud

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Baseball Playoffs Unwitting Host to Police Accountability Feud

Baseball fans are generally unaccustomed to getting their playoff games with a side of debate over police brutality, but this season supporters of convicted ex-BART cop Johannes Mehserle are giving them just that.

San Francisco’s AT&T Park boasts a waterfront promenade named McCovey Cove that opens onto China Basin where, for the last few weeks, Mehserle’s father Todd has been flying a banner that says: “Free Johannes Mehserle,” and occasionally “Justice4Johannes.com.” Mehserle was convicted of involuntary manslaughter this summer for shooting the unarmed Oscar Grant in the back and killing him. 

His father’s small protest wouldn’t be much of a big deal, but for the fact that the games have been aired nationally on Fox, which often pans to the Mehserle boat during the national anthem and during the league’s post-Sept.11 ritual of singing “God Bless America” at post-season games. At nearly every post-season game, the Mehserle banner has been seen flying in the wind with a large American flag attached to the top.

At a recent playoff game, Oscar Grant supporters arrived with their own banner, one large enough to obscure the boat it was hanging from.

“I thought the sign was inappropriate, but I have no problem with Mr. Mehserle supporting his son,” the Grant family attorney Roland Burris told the San Francisco Chronicle‘s Chip Johnson. “In my view, it doesn’t mean anything more than that.”

This weekend Grant’s supporters, led by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, shut down ports in the East Bay to join a statewide day of action against police brutality.

Mehserle was convicted of involuntary manslaughter, the least serious of the charges against him, in June. The jury also attached a gun enhancement to his conviction. He faces anywhere from five to 14 years in prison, or as little as simple probation. Mehserle is set to appear in court for his sentencing on Nov. 5. At that time, Judge Robert Perry is set to decide on Mehserle’s other post-trial motions. Mehserle’s defense has requested a new trial for the cop.

The battle of the flags, meanwhile, will not likely abate soon. This weekend the Giants won the National League Championships and are headed to the World Series. The Texas Rangers will be in San Francisco this week for Game 1. Chances are, so will the banners.

LeBron James: Racist "Hater" Tweets Won’t Stop My Dreams

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LeBron James: Racist

Seems like the whole world has been following basketball player LeBron James’ every move since he joined the Miami Heat.

In July, he joined twitter so he could bypass the media and connect with his fans. “I think Twitter is definitely somewhere you can reach out to your fans
who don’t get an opportunity to see you on an everyday basis,” James told the Baltimore Sun. And reach out he did: James joined Twitter on a Tuesday and had more than 200,000 followers by the following day. He’s up to about 924,000 now. 

James keeps it positive–tweets basketball related items, how he hates going to the dentist and even talks about how he’s a “proud daddy” and shared video of his sons first day at school.

lebronjames-twitter1.gifBut the “haters,” as James calls them, followed also. “Don’t
think for one min that I haven’t been taking mental notes of everyone
taking shots at me this summer. And I mean everyone!” he tweeted in August. 

It turns out many of those “haters” are also racists. On Tuesday, James declared it  was “Hater Day” and shared nasty and sometimes racists tweets that were directed at him. (Twitter has since removed the racist tweets.)

haterday-lebron.gif“I just want you guys to see it also,” James told ESPN after the Heat’s
practice Wednesday afternoon.
“To see what type of words that are said
toward me and towards us as professional athletes. Everybody thinks it
is a bed of roses and it’s not.”

In one message a person wrote that James is “a big nosed big lipped
bug eyed (racial slur). Ur greedy, u try to hide ur ghettoness,” according to ESPN.

Another user tweeted, “hey good game last night, too bad you’re a fraud, B–CH.” Another writer wrote “why don’t u speak by
laying ur head under a moving car.”

Last month, CNN’s Soledad O’Brien asked James if he thought race was a factor in some of the criticism he receives, “I think so,
at times. There’s always, you know, a race factor,” he responded.

James brought the conversation full circle at the end of the day by letting his followers know he takes this in stride. “No one can stop your dreams from becoming reality!” he says.

youseeworld_lebron.gif


LeBron James Almost Tackles "The Race Issue"

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The sports world is still reeling in populist rage over NBA superstar LeBron James’ decision to leave his hometown Cleveland Cavaliers for the Miami Heat. And in an interview on CNN this week, James tentatively conceded to Soledad O’Brien that at least some of the backlash was racially motivated. (See the video above.)

Asked by Soledad O’Brien if race was a factor in the fallout, which say Cleveland fans burn jerseys in the street, James said, “I think so, at times. There’s always — you know, a race factor.”

The star reiterated his comments when pressed by reporters after a Heat practice on Thursday.

“I’m not going to go back on my words,” he said. “I answered the question. I think people are looking too far into it. But, at the same time, sometimes it does play a part in it.

“But I’ve said what I have to say and I continue to move on.”

The Los Angeles Times points out that James’ teammates agreed. Chris Bosh noted that race is “embedded” and “hopefully, we’ve moved past it.” Dwayne Wade was similarly evasive, noting that the backlash was “unfortunate.”

It’s not a candid discussion on race, and certainly nothing to the furor that was ignited by Jesse Jackson over the summer. Upset at Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert’s nasty letter about James to Cleveland fans, Jackson said that Gilbert “sees LeBron as a runaway slave.”

After Jackson’s comments back in July, ColorLines readers went at it. How about this time?

MLB Still Refuses to Move Arizona All-Star Game

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MLB Still Refuses to Move Arizona All-Star Game

Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig remains steadfast in his refusal to move the 2011 All-Star game from Phoenix. Groups protesting Arizona’s anti-immigrant law SB1070 have been protesting the state’s baseball team and demanding that Selig make a statement by moving the game elsewhere. When pushed on the issue, Selig had a predictably arrogant answer: he’s done more for players of color than anyone else. Ever.

Dave Zirin wrote this week in The Nation that in July three prominent Milwaukee activists, Christine Neumann-Ortiz, the executive director of Voces de la Frontera, Michael D. Rosen, president of the American Federation of Teachers Local 212, and former Wisconsin Secretary of State Vel Phillips addressed a letter to Selig, arguing that the MLB had a moral obligation to take a stand against Arizona’s new law. An excerpt of the letter reads:

We believe that MLB plays a special role in the United States. Our ‘national past time’ has been instrumental in promoting the American ideals of justice, fair play and equality for all. In the words of former Commissioner Faye Vincent “MLB is a moral force.”

[snip]

Many of these athletes, like Hank Greenberg and Hank Aaron during their pursuits of Babe Ruth’s home run record in vastly different eras, were subject to racist abuse from fans and even other players, abuse that MLB championed against and which you personally found abhorrent. ….Throughout your life you have demonstrated a commitment to justice and fair play. You have the opportunity, in your capacity as Commissioner of Major League Baseball, to help heal America and ensure that Latino and other people, fans and players included, are not victimized because of how they look, their accents or what they wear.

And the commissioner’s response, via Carl Mueller from Mueller Communications, Inc., an organization that specializes in “Crisis & Corporate Communications”:

It’s hard to imagine a Milwaukeean more committed to social justice, fair play, and equal protection under the law who believes that Major League Baseball plays a special role in the United States and who has been instrumental in promoting the American ideals of justice, fair play, and equality for all. He is a hero in Milwaukee, in baseball, in America, and amongst those who believe in social unity and corporate responsibility.

[snip]

Your energies would best be spent tackling the issue at its core–it’s a political issue to be resolved by politicians. Thank you again for your letter. Sincerely,
W CARL MUELLER.”

Read more over at The Nation.

Whether or not the MLB decides to cooperate, players, fans, musicians and others say they’ll continue to boycott Arizona until the law is repealed.

John Amaechi: Outing Pro Athletes Won’t Win Political Power

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John Amaechi: Outing Pro Athletes Won't Win Political Power

In an interview with Towleroad, John Amaechi, the first professional NBA player to come out as an openly gay man, talks about closeted professional athletes’ responsibility to the LBGTQ community, his experience being openly gay and the Gay Games. Amaechi also offers some great insight on how honing in on closeted high-profiled individuals to publicize their sexual orientation does little to sway public opinion:

I think there are probably 5,000 mainstream professional athletes in the US, maybe 500 of them are LGBT, I just don’t think that is a key demographic in the quest for change. Some are “stunted” as I mentioned – not as many as I made out in that article in fairness – but I think it is a just a plot device we like to have in our mind that if a big enough star came out the fans would stop being homophobic, the family research council would rethink it’s policies and all would be well.

Instead, Amaechi, who’s British, suggests that the real reason why America isn’t hopping on the acceptance-train is its unique taste for discriminatory legislation. When asked about a UK’s willingness to accept LBGT soccer players he says:

That being said, I do agree that the open-mindedness and general acceptance of difference (especially LGBT) in the UK is better than ever before, even amongst fans. I think that many fans in the US already feel that way, and are simply “waiting” to be explicitly told it’s ok to lose the machismo, bullshit, “no homo” attitude, by enough people in authority, including current straight players, owners, etc. However, America is different from the UK in that you still suffer from people actively creating and maintaining anti-LGBT laws, and that informs the attitudes of fans: “if gays are banned from adopting in my state there must be something wrong with them, right?”

Read Amaechi’s full interview here at Towlroad.

As long as discriminatory laws continue to pervade our judicial systems, like Prop 8 and SB1070, they will continue to foster prejudicial attitudes. But Amaechi’s interview does bring up an important question: Has outing anyone ever changed anything in the long run? 

SB 1070 Protestors Take a Swing at Major League Baseball

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Since SB 1070 became law in Arizona, dozens of cities and musicians have joined a boycott against the state. The Arizona Diamondback baseball team has also become a target since the team’s owner, Ken Kilpatrick, is a well-known donor to the state’s Republican party, which has backed some of SB 1070′s most fervent supporters. Protestors are boycotting the team until MLB commissioner Bud Selig moves the 2011 All Star game out of Phoenix.

The boycott’s brought to a life an interesting question: Are sports a legitimate site of political struggle?

Valeria Fernandez reports for New America Media that while the MLB boycott has struck out with some fans, the message is becoming clear to others.

“I think it makes no sense. Sports have nothing to do with political discussions,” said Simon, a Latino who lives in Tucson. “It’s fun and it’s supposed to be fun. There shouldn’t be any type of political involvement.”

Many of his friends agree with that assessment, including his father-in-law, who is Mexican and often travels from the city of Hermosillo in the Mexican state of Sonora to watch baseball games with him.

[snip]

Some fans who are in favor of repealing the law frankly just don’t see the benefits of boycotts:

Fred Michaels and his wife, Sherry, said they were in favor of repealing the law, calling it “a dry fascism” and “redundant” in trying to take on the job of the federal government. Yet, Michaels believes the effort to boycott the team is “foolish, because there are so many companies that supported SB 1070″ that it’s difficult to know which ones were more involved.

But as chairman of the Somos America boycott committee explains in the article, boycotts can force companies to reevaluate who they chose to do business with, and see the connection between how profits affect people and policy:

“The intent of the business boycott is not to punish companies by asking our supporters to not purchase their products. It is to get Arizona business to realize that their support of these individuals for even ‘strictly business’ purposes is creating conditions of hate, fear, and violence against Latinos and immigrants in Arizona,” said former Arizona Senator Alfredo Gutierrez, chairman of the Somos America boycott committee.

In a clever video posted on Presente.org, there are clips spliced together that show Selig saying, “baseball is a social institution.” As reported in ColorLines last month, the commissioner’s also said that the major league baseball would only “do things when baseball can influence decisions.”

Though Selig refuses to move the game, there is already a long list of Latino players who have said they will boycott the All Star game if it stays in Arizona. And history may be on the protestor’s side. When Arizona rejected adding Martin Luther King, Jr. Day to its calendar, the move cost the state the 1993 Super Bowl along with a ton of revenue when the game was moved from Tempe to Pasadena.

Black Women Don’t Swim?

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Black Women Don't Swim?

The summer heat tends to stir up peculiar media obsessions. On public radio, we’ve been hearing a lot about how Black people and water don’t mix. Or more precisely, why so many Black people don’t swim. Fear of water? Fear of bad hair? Or something else lurking beneath the surface?

New York’s WNYC ran a long feature on the “accepted” belief that Black women just don’t swim. Peppered with references to Chris Rock’s post-racial pop-culture-freakout sensation Good Hair, the reporter Jenna Flanagan wonders whether Black women are kept from swimming by the oppressive crown of straightened locks.

NPR’s Tell me More takes a public health angle, debating whether Black women’s hair anxieties may be indirectly contributing to generalized fear of swimming in the Black community. In a bit of a speculative leap, the segment suggests that this could mean fewer children of color knowing how to swim, and by extension, more kids drowning in the neighborhood pool.

Is hair at the root of the problem? Citing a University of Memphis study on lack of swimming skills among youth of color, Tell Me More guest, Olympic medalist Cullen Jones, tells host Michelle Martin:

…the first big thing is fear. And I can completely speak to that. You know, I almost drowned at five and my mom told me it took me a while because I was very timid about getting back in the water.

Secondly, it’s parental backing. A lot of parents themselves don’t know how to swim and they feel that because they can’t save their child, God forbid anything was to happen, they treat water like fire. Stay away from it. It’s bad.

And third is definitely the physical aspect of it: dry skin, ladies with their hair, which I understand completely, my mom spends good money getting her hair done, I completely understand it.

Jones suggests it’s a complex overlap of factors that keep kids out of the pool. Still, the study itself doesn’t harp on hairstyles, though it does note that Black girls reportedly have less ability or comfort in the pool than Black boys and other females. The key findings include:

• As income increased so did respondent swimming ability/comfort, agreement with “swimming is for me”, “I have a parent/guardian that encourages me to swim”, “a majority of my family members can swim”, and fear of drowning decreased.

• Respondents from homes with highly educated parents/guardians (advanced degrees) were significantly more skilled/ comfortable swimming and inclined to receive arental/guardian support for swimming, and less inclined to express fear of drowning than children from households with less educated parent/caregivers.

• Respondents indicating that it is not easy to get to the nearest pool as well as those citing a “fear of people around pool” and reported significantly lower swimming ability/comfort and higher fear of drowning.

• Free/reduced lunch recipients reported significantly lower swimming ability, significantly less agreement with “swimming is for me”, parental/caregiver support, and greater fear of drowning.

I’m a native New Yorker of East Asian descent who never learned how to swim as a kid. When I took a beginner swimming class in college, I noticed the class was filled with other Asian women, and was incidentally taught by a Black female instructor. Maybe that has some social or cultural significance, maybe not. But does the Black hair theory shed any light on why Black boys and Latino children, and other groups tend to be less aquatically inclined? The media appears to be mixing its fixation on Black hair politics with a separate set of social issues, tied to culture, socioeconomic status and gender.

Lower down in Flanagan’s story, after explaining that a kid might not feel like getting their hair soaked in chlorine after “mom may have just paid $60 to $100 to get it done in the first place”–she touches on some issues other than Black aesthetics that might pose a barrier to water sports:

However, NYU Sociology Professor Ann Mourning says vanity isn’t to blame for the fewer numbers of black swimmers. It’s access to swimming pools and segregation.

It’s no secret that summertime activities in poor urban neighborhoods are more likely to include an open fire hydrant than aquatics.

But Mourning says when segregation was the law of the land, swimming pools were considered to be far too intimate of a place for blacks and whites to mix. Some pools even had rules that if a black person put so much as a toe in the water, the entire pool would need to be drained and scrubbed clean. To back up this exclusion and remove the burden of responsibility for it, theories were created that blacks simply weren’t geneticallly or physically suited for the water. As a result, Mourning says many African-Americans didn’t learn to swim and some even developed a phobia of it. They ended up teaching their own kids to fear the water as well.

Of course, it’s hard to prove that past racist policies are directly responsible for apparent the lack of a swimming culture in some urban communities of color. On the other hand, in segregated cities, where structural racism continues to shade into the use and perception of public recreation, it seems less outlandish to focus on the role of historical memory versus, say, Black women’s supposedly life-consuming hair neuroses. But of course, it’s more fun to just indulge public fascination with how hairstyles influence Black women’s behavior. And when that story gets old, just add water.

Photo: Splash Atlanta, USA Swimming Foundation

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