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Imus and Other Big, Fat Idiots
Back in the 1990s, when I was coaching high school girls in track and cross-country, a book came out called The Stronger Women Get The More Men Love Football, by Mariah Burton Nelson, a former pro women's basketball player. It was about the backlash against women's sports and the increasingly defensive posture of men whose egos depend on being bigger, better, faster, and stronger than women. The news about Don Imus's suspension, after calling the Rutgers women's basketball team "nappy-headed ho's," reminded me of that great title.
Dinosaurs like Imus are constantly putting women down to reinforce their feeling of membership in a superior boys' club.
Title IX revolutionized women's sports. It changed a generation of girls and boys forever, busting old stereotypes and getting girls onto the courts and fields, where they can experience the joy of their own strength and agility alongside boys. This is even more true today than it was a decade ago. The "gee-whiz" factor is gone from women's sports. It made my heart swell recently to take my young daughters to a University of Wisconsin women's basketball game. For them, the female players, coaches, and refs are as natural as the co-ed cheerleaders and Bucky Badger. I'm thrilled that they can look up at all those big, strong young women and imagine themselves in those size twelve shoes.
But, as Mariah Burton Nelson argued in her book, these cultural changes still make some men very nervous. Dinosaurs like Imus are straight out of Burton Nelson's text: constantly putting women down to reinforce their feeling of membership in a superior boys' club. The racism of Imus's comments made them particularly toxic, as Imus himself conceded in his apology on Al Sharpton's radio show.
The Imus story came on the heels of another misogyny-in-the-media brouhaha--the online threats and sexual slurs against technology blogger Kathy Sierra. Sierra, who endured actual death threats in addition to a lot of gross sexual put-downs, cancelled a public appearance because she said she feared for her life. The incident shone a spotlight on the ugly, trash-talking shut-ins whose voices are amplified and courage stoked by the anonymity of the blogosphere.
"Is the Internet safe for women?" the host of To the Contrary, a women's pundit show, asked me recently. Of course it is, I wanted to shout. Most Internet users are women. And bloggers from the left and right agree that one of the great values of the Internet is free speech. Death threats are a separate, criminal matter.
Beyond the issues of free speech and the ugliness of loudmouths like misogynist bloggers and Imus, there is the matter of who sets the tone of our national cultural conversations. If terrific athletes and accomplished female journalists are overshadowed and silenced by schoolyard bullies and socially stunted nerds, it's no good for anyone.
The hubbub around Imus focuses on the wrong thing: Don Imus. Does this man need any more attention, even if it is for telling Al Sharpton he's been "humiliated"?
The Rutgers Scarlet Knights are a great team who came one game short of winning the NCAA championship this year. The players, and their impressive head coach, C. Vivian Stringer, were robbed of the limelight at the end of an incredible season by one bozo shooting his mouth off. Imus has made a career of being nasty to public figures on the air. But, as Stringer pointed out in a press conference on the incident, "these aren't political figures, nor are they professionals. These are 18, 19-year-old young women who came here to get an education."
My favorite commentary on the subject was the New York Times op-ed by Gwen Ifill, the senior correspondent for the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. Ifill started her piece by naming the Scarlet Knights players--"the young women with musical names. Kia and Epiphanny and Matee and Essence. Katie and Dee Dee and Rashidat and Myia and Brittany and Heather."
After giving the players back their identities, Ifill talked about their storybook season. Only then did she get to Don Imus. It turns out Imus made loathsome comments about Ifill, too. When she was a White House correspondent he praised the New York Times because they "let the cleaning lady cover the White House."
The immensely classy Ifill didn't even know about the insult until years later, she writes--she doesn't listen to Imus. Nor does she think much of her colleagues' eagerness to go on his show.
That's just the right attitude. Gwen Ifill, who speaks movingly of her feeling of responsibility to the shy, young black women who approach her and look up to her, is a role model, someone who speaks to the best in us, who makes the world a better place. She is exactly what Imus is not. We'd be a better nation if we turned up the volume on voices like hers, and tuned the Imuses out.
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20 Comments so far
Show AllWhat scares me is this whole thing might turn around and make " Idiotmus" the poster boy for the "Wave the Constitution and American flag" (when it serves thier purpose) crowd !...-
Right. As if name-calling ever, ever solved anything, Ruth Conniff. Please, please don't dilute your important message by resorting to words like "idiot." That's what the Republicans do. Can we not rise above that?
"Ima-NappyAss In the Morning", doesn't deserve the attention being focused on him. Beware! When ever you see a crowd gathering, look the other way to see what is really happening!
Peace, Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
This week the Karl Rove "What's that over there?" award is given jointly to Anna Nicole Simpson (posthumously) and Don Imus (prehumously).
Recent issues making news about African-Americans include not only the Imus incident, but also the recent Cherokee Nation vote about black "freedmen" of the tribe.
Voters of the Oklahoma Cherokee Nation chose to "disenroll" the freedmen from official tribal membership.
The factors involved provide insight about American history and current events involving blacks as well as other racial dynamics in America. See:
"Who is a Cherokee? Many Americans have Indians in the family tree"
PopulistAmerica.com
March 14, 2007
http://www.populistamerica.com/who_is_a_cherokee
Idiots are real people, too. Lumping them with Imus is an insult. Fat people, are people, too. Is fat an insult? Is idiot. I demand your job, you horrible moron! The Progressive MUST fire this bird or else they are anti-fat, anti-idiot hate mongers!
The pathology of a society is manifest in their heroes and leaders. Imus, Limbough etc. are the heroes. By and large they validate what their audiences are thinking. Imus said something that ought to have been said some other way. His audience would have understood. May be he can move to satellite and establish a whole new environment unfettered by accusations of misuse of public air waves.
Imus is a saint compared to Bush. He has been fired and held accountable. Why can we not have war crime trials for the Bush administration? Why is this criminal administration not being held accountable? To see the saintly, by comparison, Imus crucified while Bush walks makes me sick.
It's absolutely amazing how public sentiment is so easily corralled and rallied in the dethronement of smarmy talk show host, while high crimes and misdemeanors remained ignored!
ABSOLUTELY AMAZING AND ASTONISHING!
What channel is american idol on?
Peace, Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
I find DEon Imus to be less offensive than Rush Limbaugh or Louis Farrakhan.
Clyde,
Jus' curious....
What makes Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton "the two biggest Racist in America"?
....and how did they wrest control of the media away from the Rupert Murdochs of the world????
Right on Ron-Bush/Cheney are war criminal's and liars but the press gives them a free ride when they should be preaching IMPEACHMENT.What it really comes down to is Jesse Jackson and
Al Sharpton the two biggest Racist in America are in control of the AirWays. just when you think it can't get worse it does.wonder who is nest on Jesse and Al's list?Rush Limbaugh is the scum of the earth plus a dope head but that's where Dick Cheney goes to spread his lies.Another network will pick Imus up and he will have more listener's than before.
Clyde,
Neither Sharpton nor Jackson are on my "favorite people" list, but the issue isn't them (yes, they are limelighting again), the issue isn't even Don Imus - the issue is the media and what the American people are being fed by the media.
Until we (meaning WE) get a handle on the media, we won't hear the truth and we can't make informed, intelligent decisions. Don Imus is a scapegoat, and SHOULD BE! I've heard worse things from Limbaugh and O'Reilly and their ilk, but Imus got caught and should be canned. Once we start insisting on ethical behavior and integrity from the media, we will start taking back what is rightfully ours - an independent, truthful, and truly informative message over the airwaves that we STILL own.
Zeitgeist, you're right, there are other issues at hand. But it's people like Imus who promote racism and social divisiveness. It's also people like Imus who have been holding progressive thought at bay on talk radio. Yes, we have criminals in the White House. Yes, war, the environment, the economy, those are all things we need to be worried about. But we can't afford to ignore racism and sexism either.
What I don't understand about all this is what has happened to Bernard McQuirk. Imus merely responded to McQuirk, his producer, who called them hos before Imus did..... why isn't he on the hot seat?
Imus just got caught saying something like what he's probably said privately a thousand times. What are the circles that actually take that as acceptable? His mouth just got a little too far ahead of his brain (not a difficult feat) -- and ingenuousness resulted.
zeitgeist: you've done here what I unfortunately did in response to Gwen Ifill's editorial a few days ago. Ignored the subject of the piece and ranted about the bigger threat. Your concern and frustration is warranted of course, as was mine, but I must sheepishly admit that Common Dreams invites us to "discuss THIS article." I'm not bashing you; this is more of an extended apology to Gwen and the CD community.
To the piece at hand. I've aften toyed with the idea that to participate in these forums that your screen name must be your real name. I'm as good as many others at turning a clever phrase and could have chosen a telling moniker for myself, but I know myself. I use my real name to keep myself civil, and to try to ensure that I don't post something that is ill-conceived or just plain rash. I write no-holds-barred letters to my local paper, but because I have to use my real name that fact has rooted out much of the hyperbole, name-calling, and weak arguments that I am so susceptible to.
Again z I'm not poking you for this; I read most of your posts and know that we're on the same side of most issues, and you mostly are civil. Good for you, but I myself sometimes need a straightjacket.
Ok, I understand Imus made a statement that wasn't PC, and it's not the first time he's put his foot in his mouth. His ilk do it all the time. What I don't understand is why was it manifested into a MAJOR story? If anything this spotlighted the Rutgers women's basketball team, and gave them more airtime than they normally would have received if the comment was not made. Was anyone really surprised at what came from the mouth of Imus? Did MSNBC or CBS not know they employed a shock-jock before this incident took place? I also agree with blb, what about the producer? He is the one who instigated the comment from Imus...where is his apology - walking papers?
This probably is not a popular view, but I'm sorry Imus got fired. I don't listen to his program or care for his style very much, but we do live in a country where Rush Limbaugh and all kinds of offensive people are free to stand up and be jerks if they want to. We fight racism by publicly hollering about what Imus said, by embarrassing the hell out of him and by demanding a substantial apology. But we shouldn't be about putting gags on people.
If I don't have a problem with Jon Stewart being outrageous and over the top (and I don't), then I have to grant it to everybody. I don't want to live in a society where we have to walk on eggs and be too careful about what we say. Sometimes we misspeak or push it too far or hurt somebody's feelings when we were intending to be funny. Chronic hatespeak is one thing, and malicious intent is easy to spot. I don't think Imus crossed that line. If the Rutgers girls can forgive him maybe we should too.
Hi, I have to agree with a point made by odelisk8 above. Why does the title of this column include the words - big - fat - idiots. I truly resent this kind of hateful prejudice against heavy people or mentally challenged people just as much as I hate racism or sexism or any type of prejudice.
I am truly surprised, or maybe I shouldn't be surprised, that this piece was published by the Progressive. It is NOT very progressive, is it?