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Nebraska Cornhusker Fans Chop-Block Pipeline
Nebraska Cornhusker Fans Chop-Block Pipeline

September 19, 2011
I'm returning from Nebraska, where the state university's Cornhusker football team is treated as something akin to religion. In Lincoln, Nebraska football is truly the only game in town and the Cornhuskers football program has rewarded this devotion with a long record of success. The team has certainly brought championships, but not necessarily politics. Until now.

Where was the Pat Tillman Story on NFL Sunday?
Where was the Pat Tillman Story on NFL Sunday?

September 13, 2011
The late Pat Tillman, former NFL player and Army Ranger, was hardly mentioned on the NFL's 9/11 Sunday. The reasons are sadly apparent.

The NFL will remember 9/11 in all the wrong ways
The NFL will remember 9/11 in all the wrong ways

September 7, 2011
Ten years ago, on the first Sunday after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the NFL did something truly heroic and generous: nothing. The league willingly ate millions of dollars and cancelled the games out of respect for the unfolding tragedy. As 9/11 morphed into a decade-long “Global War on Terror”, the league has, to put it mildly, failed to show similar restraint.

What if Michael Vick Was Clumsy?
What if Michael Vick Was Clumsy?

September 1, 2011
When did Michael Vick become a Horatio Alger story? The player who was vilified after spending nearly two years in federal prison for being part of a dog-fighting ring, is now our latest feel-good comeback story: a symbol of this country's remarkable capacity for empathy and forgiveness. Vick signed a head-spinning six-year, 100 million dollar contract with the Philadelphia Eagles on Tuesday and the narrative has centered on the way he’s been embraced by franchise and fans after falling so low. Mentioned often in an offhand manner, is that three years ago Vick was making 11 cents an hour as a janitor in Leavenworth. No doubt the Vick journey is perhaps unrivaled in the history of sports. But take a moment to consider that 11 cents an hour wage. Michael Vick’s janitorial job was just a sub atomic particle of a prison labor industrial complex intimately interwoven with the highest levels of corporate America. 

Jerry Richardson, Cam Newton and the Color of Change
Jerry Richardson, Cam Newton and the Color of Change

August 29, 2011
There's something particularly ugly about the public way Jerry Richardson is bragging about his control over number 1 draft pick, Cam Newton.

Look Who's Standing for LGBT Rights: Tim Hardaway
Look Who's Standing for LGBT Rights: Tim Hardaway

August 23, 2011
The lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community has a new ally and his name is Tim Hardaway. Yes, Tim Hardaway.

DON’T Give the Miami Hurricanes the Death Penalty: Give it to the NCAA
DON’T Give the Miami Hurricanes the Death Penalty: Give it to the NCAA

August 18, 2011
Thursday morning’s cover of USA Today blared the two words on everyone's lips: “the death penalty.” No, this isn’t because Texas Governor Rick Perry – who just loves executin’ innocent and guilty alike - is now running for President.  It’s the fate that most people believe awaits the storied football team at the University of Miami.

GQ’s '25 Coolest Athletes of All Time' has a Slight Omission: An Entire Gender
GQ’s '25 Coolest Athletes of All Time' has a Slight Omission: An Entire Gender

August 16, 2011
I know it’s GQ. I know it’s a magazine written for barbershops, cigar bars, and massage parlors. I know it assumes that men are men and women are scenery. But the magazine’s list of “25 coolest athletes of all time” truly sets a new standard for phallocentric panic. Gentleman’s Quarterly has given us 25 athletes they see as the coolest of cool, and not one woman makes the cut.

The London Olympics and the London Riots
The London Olympics and the London Riots

August 12, 2011
Opening Ceremonies for the London Olympics are in less than a year and this week’s explosion of bottled fury has the International Olympic Committee on edge.  Even worse for Tory Prime Minister David Cameron, the riots took place as representatives from 200 Olympic Committees across the globe visited the city, just in time for the days of rage. Can you imagine the scene? It would be like Michele Bachman and her 197 children visiting New York City and walking straight into the Gay Pride Parade.

Bud, Bruno and Baseball's Bigotry
Bud, Bruno and Baseball's Bigotry

August 9, 2011
In the confederate confines of sports radio, casual bigotry is about as common as traffic updates. Far less common, even unprecedented, is for a manager or coach to look this in the eye and call out a member of the media's comments as  “racist.” That's what SF Giants skipper Bruce Bochy did. But the problem in MLB runs deeper than one sports jock.