Showing posts with label No Crossover:The Trial of Allen Iverson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label No Crossover:The Trial of Allen Iverson. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
This One's On Me
After a series of podcasts and two more polished posts yesterday, I want to do a bit of a mixture of comments and thoughts, some links and then a little more of From Here to the Last Mound of Dirt, which is currently being pitched to literary agents around New York City - we will see if anyone bites. Now to the random assorted thoughts:
- The picture above is courtesy of the blog jonberrydesign. This guy has a pretty entertaining blog with some good photo documentation of his life. And I mean, that picture - you don't get any more ridiculous than that.
- As if you couldn't tell, I loved the Allen Iverson documentary No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson that aired last night on ESPN as part of the 30 for 30 documentary series. I thought it was just absolutely perfectly done and was riveted for the entire sixty plus minutes. To hear some insight on the making of the documentary, you can hear a podcast that Bill Simmons conducted with the director, Steve James at his website.
- While you are there, also listen to Bill's podcast with TV critic Tim Goodman from the San Francisco Chronicle. Bill and Tim breakdown Conan's decision to choose TBS as his home over potential suitors in FOX and FX. There are some really insightful comments to listen to. Its the second best podcast on the internet after Podcast of Myself.
- Going back to No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson, I have been getting some positive feedback on the post and I just want to thank those of you who have sent your comments. Especially Adam Kalker who sent me a Facebook message out of the blue when he found the write-up via a Google search. Its good to get that kind of news, so thanks again, Adam.
- Tomorrow the next episode of Podcast of Myself will be going up and it is a discussion with my friend and artist Janelle Sing. On the podcast, Janelle mentions a few websites that you may want to check out, so I am going to plug them here. The first is her colleague and collaborator Andrew McNay who I have had the pleasure of meeting once or twice. He also has another website that you can view here. The second reference that she makes is to Poppies and Posies, which is an event planning enterprise she recently did some work with, which we discuss on the podcast. So take a look at a few of these things and then take a listen to the podcast once it is up tomorrow.
- During my podcast with Janelle Sing, I left out a discussion that we were having prior to the actual recording and I want to connect that to my post on Joanna Newsom and She and Him from yesterday. Now, prepare to indulge me here. Janelle and I had been discussing the state of an "independant woman" in today's world and when a girl/woman is indeed an "independant woman." Now, I am no feminist scholar and I have always been attracted to women who are strong and independant, but that term seems to have become lost recently. When I say lost, I mean lost in the following way: Take the Joanna Newsom song "Good Intentions Paving Company". That song ends with the following line "when I only want for you to pull over and hold me until I can't remember my own name." Now, of course, Newsom is a recording artist and she may be inhabiting different characters and speakers when she sings, but if we are to take the lyrics on face value, then it would see odd that a woman who I find to be bold, intelligent and in every way independent (though, of course I don't know her personally) is espousing losing herself in another identity. If you follow the narrative of the song, this identity is a man, which strikes one as absolutely dependent. The point is this, that in the past 20 years or so, the idea of an independent woman has become such a commodity, a good to be stocked up, a badge to wear (Destiny Child, Beyonce, etc.) that is has lost the original ability to encapsulate a tender moment that all people share - a moment of true interaction, love, a moment of rest and solace with another person. It is OK to lose yourself with someone else that you feel love for or are in love with and in doing so, you will not lose your independent woman badge. All you have to do is retain that terrific intelligence, boldness and passionate nature that so many independent women have. I'd like to think that those items are beyond becoming commodities, but then again, no sentiment, idea or theme truly is beyond objectification. In any event, that is a muddled thought for someone to get angry at or agree with.
- Sticking on the topic of podcasts, if you don't watch the Ricky Gervais Show on HBO, which is essentially an animation of his extremely popular podcast with Stephen Merchant and Karl Pilkington, you should really try to locate an HBO distributor and watch some of the episodes or track down the podcasts. The most recent episode where Stephen and Ricky read out of Karl's diary is absolutely terrific. They even make mention of a classic literary figure that gets overlooked (except in Joyce) Samuel Pepys.
- Baseball season has started. Yankees vs. Phillies World Series rematch is imminent. Who is going to beat either of them honestly?
- Finally, the NBA playoffs start this Sunday. I am going to try to give a comprehensive rundown and some picks either by Sunday or soon after before the series really start to dig in and take shape. However, my initial impressions are that the Celtics look terrible; the Thunder are going to give the Lakers more of a run than people are letting on; Orlando may just upset Cleveland again because the offseason speculation is going to build and build to a fever pitch as the playoffs go on; the Spurs and Mavericks are poised to make a run with the Mavericks possibly coming out of the West. The Lakers may pull it all together, but they are going to have a tougher run this year than the past two years. Every series is going to be entertaining as hell, though. Watch it.
Now, the next installment of From Here to the Last Mound of Dirt:
The traffic slowed up again at the turning light onto Nicolls Road. Mr Kosciuzko looked at the Domino’s Pizza out of his window. He focused on the logo and realized that it had been changed to Papa John’s – he’d passed it so many times. He leaned back in his driver’s seat and pushed his cap up as they idled. He caught Maggie O’Donnell’s red hair once more, it was almost unavoidable, just as was thinking of his daughter. The fact that they did not speak, did not stop him from thinking of her.
He rememered the phone call. She called him in the middle of the night.
“Dad?”
“What’s up, honey?” He pictured her in some sparsely furnished San Franciscan apartment with a red spiral staircase.
“I’m at the train station.”
“Where? Stony Brook?”
“No, Dad. Here.”
“What’re you doing there?” He’d felt the dryness of his throat. He padded to get a drink of water.
“I don’t really know, Dad.”
The electric green light on the stove shone 2:14. That meant 11:14 there.
“Are you alright?”
“I think so,” she’d sounded tired. He heard the station noise behind. The sound of people talking in a large room with a high ceiling. The sound of ongoing sound.
“You sound tired.”
“Dad.”
“Is Lee alright?” He held a glass under the faucet. It had nutcrackers on it. Ellen brought them out when the weather turned and the holidays approached.
“That’s the first time you’ve asked that,” she’d sounded impressed.
He took a drink and pressed his hand on the counter. His feet were cold.
“Well, you don’t call me at two that often.”
“I’m pregnant, Dad.”
Peter cradled his glass against the armpit seam of his t-shirt. He hadn’t known how to react. He looked at his water in the dark. He felt a great joy fill him – the same joy he felt when reading an eloquent sentence or seeing white blossoms on a tree in mid-April. It was the feeling he had always though of as the melancholy of creation. That same feeling Little Chandler had considered the melancholy of the poet’s soul or the artist’s soul as they stood before the easel or page. He himself had never created anything but his children and he had not felt a melancholy at those moments – it was more duty and the heat of his loins. But then, maybe the creation of a child was a prolonged melancholy – a melancholy of creation and of life. Perhaps the throbbing he felt with the blossoms, the refined language and his children were all in fact that melancholy that is life. Peter had sipped his water. He felt the moment he was in fill around him – his wife’s choice of glassware, the small window above the sink, the draft on his feet. He remembered to speak.
“Oh, honey.”
“Don’t worry, Dad. I’m going to take care of it.” Her voice had an edge. She was attempting to assume responsibility, but it didn’t fit.
“What does that mean?”
“Dad.”
“Does Lee know?”
She was quiet and the noise of the station returned to fill the space. “Now you’re so interested in Lee.”
The wind rattled the windows. He’d heard the sound of branches brushing each other. The last remaining wind chimes struck and sounded like a ghost. He walked away from the window.
“Honey, I can’t say I approve of this.”
More station noise had filled the receiver; he thought he heard a woman announce a train going to Los Angeles.
“I can’t stay here. I can’t have this.”
“Why? Why can’t you?” He sat on the floor with the glass of water between his legs. It hurt his knees and his lower back to sit on the floor.
“Because I’ve got to go. This is who I am. My train is here."
“Sonya,” no response. “Sonya.”
Mr. Kosciuzko picked up speed as the light showed a left turn signal. He followed the slow sloping turns of the drivers ahead of him as they merged onto Nicolls Road under the train trestle and past the North Entrance to the university. There were white flowers spelling out “SBU” by the North Entrance sign. Peter pushed the limo up to sixty. He imagined his daughter driving from the cornfields of Iowa across the Missippi, through the long blue grass of Kentucky and the mountains of Virginia before she landed snug in the nation’s capital. She was like one of those wandering men from Old America, from the Depression or earlier, that he’d admired in old movies. He imagined her, with her brown hair in a bun with hairpins, innocent, and a satchel over her shoulder. The difference was that she was his daughter and she wasn’t innocent and he didn’t want her to wander. She had to wander and that was what he had wanted to encourage in her, albeit simply intellectually. She wandered in her action and her decision and Mr. Kosciuzko saw that as a fundamental reaction to her pregnancy. Sonya had loved Lee – maybe – but when she knew the child was inside of her, instead of life she saw the nails being driven in, the force of circumstance and responsibility.
Peter pushed the limo through stoplights until it reached the intersection of Nicolls Road and Nesconset Highway. The trees on the side of the highway were still lush wth their deep summer green and Mr. Kosciuzko’s back felt hot. He adjusted the air conditioning. Sonya was like the rest of the kids of this new generation. She was intelligent like Maggie O’Donnell sitting behind him. Sonya was full of the same ambition too. She wanted the entire experience of the world and had enough education to have a tangible view of the earth and history – the sphere of the plane graspable in ones hands, so that if you squeezed hard enough, the ruins of Rome, the pyramids of Egypt, the secrets of Confucius and Christ, the prehistoric mystery of a morning haze would all come bursting out, like the nectar of a fruit; they could drink it all. However, it did not always work that way – more often than not, it was you that was gripped and compressed to the breaking point. There were governments and taxes, financial institutions with mortgages giving you a way to buy a home and build a dream, but making you a servant to payments towards established orders. The dreams of being a philosopher or musician died with the grocery bills and a leak from the upstairs bathroom. He thought of Sonya coming home to her apartment after a day of work. What kind of kitchen table did she have? Did she have one? And if so, what bills lay waiting for her there? Would these children know the value of something simple to get them past the vicegrip, the mess of their nectar? Would they know the pleasure of a cold beer and the feel of finished wood on their forearms and wrists? The stupid things that had shape and were real and not made out of the stars and spirals of imagination and ambition?
St. Allen Iverson
This is the second time in two months that I have watched a basketball documentary that has moved me. Wheras the Magic vs. Bird documentary moved me in a strange manner that allowed me to realize how much I love basketball as a sport and how much it currently means to me as a guy in my twenties who is questioning what things in life remain pure and how we can find instances of purity or solace in the world, this second documentary actually brought my attention to the subject matter that was the focus of the movie – well somewhat.
No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson is a riveting documentary by Steve James who is responsible for what some call the best basketball movie of all time, Hoop Dreams. No Crossover covers the saga of Allen Iverson’s journey of success and struggle from the fall of 1992 through the fall of 1993. James was a resident of Hampton, Virginia, where Iverson grew up, and he chronicles Iverson’s rise to legendary status as the hero of the Bethel High School football and basketball teams. Iverson led Bethel to State Championships over the traditional powerhouse, Hampton High School in both football and basketball during his junior year. We see a young Iverson who is immensely talented and gifted athletically in both football and basketball. He is driven to win and will not accept losing. I have followed Iverson’s entire college and NBA career and it is almost startling to see how insanely athletic he was in high school compared to how athletic he was in the NBA and he was a freak of nature in the NBA. He single-handedly turns over 75 years of athletic history in the Virginia Peninsula only to find his comeuppance in a racial brawl that occurred in a bowling alley during the basketball season. A trial over what really occurred at the bowling alley ensues and the whole town of Hampton is torn apart by years of racial tension. Different community organizations both black and white try to exert their sphere of influence using Iverson as either their pillar of virtue or their guiding force of criticism. There are misjudgments in legal council; the choice of a jury trial over a non-jury trial, witness accounts and eventually Iverson is sentenced to 15 years in prison.
As we all know, Iverson did not spend 15 years in prison. With some coercing of the first-ever black Virginia governor, Iverson is pardoned after 4 months in prison, which in my opinion as an observer of the documentary was just. The narrative that James is able to construct from the perspectives of various attorneys, judges, public defenders, journalists, community leaders, religious figures, and even his own mother is astonishing. He set out to tell a story of the racial troubles of his hometown set against the backdrop of the Iverson story and he succeeded. I will not ruin the documentary or his hard work by going in depth into the work he does with the theme of race, I will merely say that you should just watch the documentary.
What I want to talk about, since he fits into the format of this blog as someone or something I am passionate about, is Allen Iverson. Back in January, when the 2010 NBA All-Star Team Lineup was announced, I wrote this on the blog:
Now, this year you might call Iverson a weak spot as well and as much as it pains me, you would be right. He is having his worst season as a pro and you can see him deteriorating each time you watch a Sixers game. To me, this has been one of the most painful aspects of this season. There was nothing like watching a young Iverson. He was the fastest player I will probably ever see and some of his off the dribble moves were just phenomenal. Plus, Iverson is listed at 6'0" - and that is a generous 6'0" - and he used to finish off alley-oops and dunks like he was 6'5" or 6'6". He was a freak of nature. Too talented and provocative to be understood by a league that was still fascinated by Jordan. Had he been embraced, they would have realized that he was made of the same stuff, except maybe he was a littler harder. But maybe that's what made him so interesting, that he wasn't loved. I'm not going to get into the psychology, but in any event, Iverson holds one of my two favorite bad ass moments in NBA history.
These opinions are still true. Since that was written, Iverson bowed out of the All-Star game due to the illness of his daughter and then announced that he would be on leave from the Philadelphia Seventy-Sixers for the remainder of the season. We have most likely seen the end of Allen Iverson in the NBA and I only realized it this evening. I love Allen Iverson and I will admit that any day of the week. I have absolutely nothing in common with Allen Iverson. He was raised in such a harsh and drastic environment and was able to succeed in ways that I couldn’t imagine. Did he come out of that situation with flaws? You are absolutely right. Did I come out of a privileged upbringing on the north shore of Long Island with immense flaws? You are absolutely right. So maybe I take that back, I share one thing in common with Allen Iverson and that one thing is that we are both flawed like all human beings are – and if he met me, A.I. would probably call me out on even comparing us in one way.
I will forever admire his tenacity and his ability to take control of a game. He played on some of the most underwhelming teams that I have ever followed and the fact that he even coaxed them to a modicum of success (2001 NBA Finals) was a miracle in itself. He is one of the most charismatic and handsome players that I have ever followed. The original Answer sneaker was one of the most influential sneakers on my formative years. He was said to have had a dominating personality (the documentary shows this, his interviews show this, various accounts testify to this, like the time Bill Simmons references when he saw Iverson play live and get called for a foul, only to berate the referee into reversing the call. As Simmons says, “there was real violence was in the air.”) and sometimes that dominating personality resulted in compromised situations, decisions, and arrests. Those are not necessarily attributes to strive for if you are a young man looking to make it into the NBA.
However, and maybe unfortunately and maybe not, what I will remember best is this latter day Iverson. The Iverson who was too proud to come off the bench in Memphis and who threw a tantrum and was given a chance to come back to Philadelphia. The Iverson who cried at his press conference at being welcomed back to the city that brought him into the NBA. When I first saw Iverson cry, I was moved. This was a player who was as tough as anyone I had met in real life or had seen in a movie. I got goose bumps when I saw him cry. I also got goose bumps tonight (and my eyes watered) when the documentary showed a clip of a student thanking Iverson for a scholarship that Iverson donated to him so that he could go to college. When asked to comment, underneath a black hat with its brim pulled almost entirely over his eyes, Iverson, holding back tears, said that he did not want praise, that he just wanted to try to give back to his community and to someone else. There was nothing in his voice, his eyes, and his posture that suggested even the slightest bit of contrivance. I also got goose bumps when the documentary showed archival footage of a high school Iverson, fresh out of jail, graduating from high school thanks to a local teacher/tutor (white) who helped him with private lessons while he was in prison and once he was released. You saw a genuine love in Iverson’s eyes for this woman and I feel that that moment along with the moment in front of the high school boy and then the moment at the podium in Philadelphia are all tied together into the true Allen Iverson – the Allen Iverson that I will always remember. I equate it in the best way that I can (being educated in the English canon from a liberal arts university) to a mystic. Iverson has been privy to glances of troubled human action that I will never see, he’s had to overcome things I never had to and that no one in my family will ever have to, but at the heart he has tried to do what is best for himself and what is best for his family. Was he equipped to do all those things? Maybe not? Did he try? Like anything else, he did and sometimes he failed. But when I see that teenage Iverson with his cap on, when I see him with his brim pulled down, when I see him on the podium, his eyes strange and puffed with tears, I see someone who has looked life straight in the eyes and wanted nothing more than to do the best he ever could. Sometimes he interpreted that desire the wrong way and received the just punishments for his actions.
I wasn’t there at the bowling alley on February 14, 1993 and the actual events of that night are still uncertain, but what I do know is that criminal or not, what I know of Allen Iverson, I love. When I say that I see him in his latter day form as a “medieval mystic” what I mean is that I see someone who has stared down life and death, his loves, his profession and his mistakes and still feels that passion within himself, that unexplainable thing that brings him to tears. And if Allen Iverson does that, then maybe we aren’t so far apart, and even if we are, I can live with that, because that is the kind of athlete I want to admire – that is the kind of athlete I would want my son to admire.
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