Sunday, October 17, 2010

Mitch Albom's Article

According to this article, Albom is saying that he doesn't think that race should be brought up in situations like this. He believes that the race of someone doesn't always influence what they do or what other people think. Albom is saying that LeBron's real issue is his "boundless ego" and his thinking that "he can't possibly be at fault for anything."

When people bring up the race matter, they miss looking at who he is as a person, which influences what he decides to do, like create an hour long TV special as a "celebration of his legend". So Albom is basically saying that LeBron has a huge ego and is only concerned with his popularity and money. Race has nothing to do with it.

I have to say I definitely agree with Albom. Sure LeBron is a great basketball player, but he does tend to let his ego get in the way...and being black has nothing to do with it. Apparently, the general public also agrees that he let his ego get out of hand. He became the "sixth-most-disliked athlete, according to the latest Q Score". While he was adored by everyone, it wasn't just black people that liked him, just like now it's not just white people that dislike him. His ego, his selfishness, and greed finally turned people away.

I think it's about time. I was always disgusted with him on the court. Yeah, he plays great ball, but he just looks so full of himself. You know he thinks he's all that, which, to me at least, is not a good quality in anyone. Like Albom says, "ego knows no color". Albom doesn't see LeBron as a black person. He sees him as a sports star who let his stardom get to his head, which is how I currently view him.

To me, Albom's most effective point is probably when he says,
"But LeBron didn't become internationally famous with only black fans liking him, and he didn't reach this sudden infamy with only white fans bailing out." and "LeBron now has a boundless ego, he has surrounded himself with people who tell him his feet don't touch the ground, and he can't possibly be at fault for anything."
These stand out because he's saying exactly what he means to say throughout this article: race doesn't necessarily have to be the solution to everything...LeBron's big ego is what triggered all of this commotion.

Mitch Albom: It's not race, LeBron James, but it might be you

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