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Boyd
also served as writer-producer for the feature film "The
Wood." Writing in a style that he calls "the fusion of
the formal and the vernacular," Boyd has emerged as a unique
voice. As the title of his forthcoming book
"Young,
Black, Rich and Famous: The Rise of the NBA,the Hip Hop Invasion, and the Transformation of American Culture"
(Doubleday) - suggests, Boyd mines the landscape located somewhere
between basketball, hip hop, and race. "In Young, Black,
Rich and Famous," Boyd chronicles the recent history
of the NBA, beginning in the early 1970s, or about the time
that African-American players began to dominate the league.
This transition period is rich with material, including such
topics as the image of basketball players as overpaid drug
addicts and the aesthetics of Julius Erving. In writing about
the contemporary NBA, Boyd delves into such subjects as Michael
Jordan's cross-over ascension, the deeper meaning of Allen
Iverson's "gangsta" image, and the hip-hop stylings of saggin'
shorts, tattoos, and cornrows. SportsLetter recently caught
up with Boyd on his summer vacation. He was putting the finishing
touches on the manuscript as the Kobe Bryant arrest became
known. Boyd lives in Los Angeles, but still roots for his
beloved Pistons.
David
Davis
SportsLetter: Is it getting easier for academic types
to admit they study the culture of sports?
Todd Boyd: I write about what I want to, so I don't know.
It's never been hard for me. I guess it depends on what discipline
you're affiliated with and the structures of that discipline.
Older and more traditional disciplines tend to be more dismissive
of sports. But I don't think it's possible to talk about American
culture without talking about sports. It's one of the most
significant forms of entertainment within our culture. Whoever's
serious about defining American culture can't hesitate to
study sports.
SL: The number of African-Americans playing baseball has
plummeted
to about 10 percent in the Majors. In the book, you write
that "Baseball, as America's national pastime, is just that,
past time." What happened to baseball? Why has basketball
replaced it as the sport of choice among African-American
youth?
TB: I think if you look at the three major sports
football, baseball and basketball
basketball has always been the most urban sport. Baseball,
in its origin, was pastoral. Football is more popular in southern
and mid-western states. You need a lot of space for football,
and it requires a great deal of equipment. Same with baseball.
Basketball courts are plentiful, and someone always has a
basketball. These conditions make basketball the perfect sport
for urban America.
Baseball is a sport that was conceived
and reached its zenith
before television was around. There was a time when watching
this slow, tedious game unfold was popular, but people don't
live that way now. Today, the game's not suited for the way
people live their lives. The other thing is, baseball is very
Republican. It's so invested in tradition to the point where
tradition hinders the game from growing.
Basketball is more contemporary, more suited to the aspirations
of contemporary African-American youth. An individual player
can make a huge difference for his team and elevate himself
in society as a whole. Look at Larry Bird: Boston had nobody
before he came along. Michael Jordan by himself made the Bulls
a playoff team.
SL: You connect elements of basketball with jazz and with
hip hop. How is basketball like jazz and how is it like hip
hop?
TB: I talk about the one-ness of the art form: A hip hop
m.c. in a room with his headphones and notebook. It's a singular
process
he comes up with the style and lyrics in isolation. Like basketball,
it can be one man doing his thing.
I think the soundtrack for the contemporary NBA is clearly
hip-hop. The players and the hip hop world are shaped by similar
forces, and you see a lot of guys who represent that hip hop
energy. Recently, I was at an NBA party given by one of the
agents. Every player from the league had cornrows and was
wearing the throwback jerseys. I thought, this could be a
hip hop video.
When you talk about jazz, it's an older form. Fewer and fewer
of today's players are connected to jazz. But, the fluid motion
of the game
and the improvisational moves within the action
that is evocative of jazz.
Someone like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was evocative of jazz aesthetics.
One of the reasons Kareem didn't smile and get involved in
extra preening
he just went out and played his game
was that he was molded in Miles Davis' image. Miles didn't
play to the audience: he played it cool, without affect.
SL: In the book, you call the Magic Johnson-Larry Bird
rivalry a "race war." How did their rivalry galvanize the
league?
TB: I think they saved the NBA from itself and put it on
the path to becoming the global phenomenon it is now. Let's
face it: black-white conflict is embedded in America's history.
Over time, it's taken on different forms. This was one of
the last real black-white sports conflicts in the 20th century.
Remember, this was the early '80s, when Ronald Reagan was
elected president and racial tensions were high. This was
part of the transition from the 1960s and 1970s; America was
a different place. Here's Bird in Boston, a town with a dubious
racial history, playing for the Celtics and their traditional,
Irish working-class fan base. And Bird is the great white
hope. He represents the return to glory for the white athlete
at that time. The Lakers, on the other hand, epitomized the
continuing influence of street ball in the NBA. Magic, as
fundamentally sound and as smart as he was, brought razzle-dazzle
to the court every night. He was exciting to watch, and he
was part of a star-studded team with a photogenic coach
just the opposite of Boston.
So it's not controversial to say that the Lakers were perceived
as the black team, and the Celtics as the white team. When
they played, you were choosing sides. If you were a Lakers
fan, you were making a statement about your politics.
It was great for league to be invested in this healthy competition
at a time when the NBA was really struggling. It drew attention
to the game. The next thing you know, here's Jordan, and now
people are attracted for the art of the game.
SL: You compare Magic's persona in the 1980s and early
1990s to both Bill Cosby and Michael Jackson. How was he Cosby
and how was he Jackson?
TB: I guess what I meant was that he was very likeable. In
the 1980s, when not every black icon was likeable, here were
guys who cut across racial lines and were at the top of their
games. You're talking about a realignment of superstardom
that transcended race. That was really profound when you consider
that you're talking about the number-one pop music star, the
number-one basketball star, and the number-one television
star being black. That's a substantial accomplishment.
What happens is, black culture is starting to be accessible
in places it hadn't been before. It's a precursor of what
is happening now. You have a culture where people aren't making
the distinction between black and white stars, between, say,
Eminem and Jay-Z. So what you've got in those three figures
is an early indication of the ubiquitous-ness of blackness.
SL: How does Michael Jordan fit into all of this?
TB: Jordan as a basketball player was amazing. We know this.
He took the league by storm because of his skills. If he was
a Brad Sellars, he would not have become a race-transcendent
figure.
His timing was perfect. He comes along in the late 1980s,
after Magic and those guys opened things up. Over time, he
drew fans to himself in a way that, for a long period of time,
he was arguably the most popular American.
Let's face it: Popular culture is maybe America's biggest
export. That happened from the 1980s
and Jordan's ascension is tied to that moment. He rode the
wave of American culture becoming more accessible. He's the
guy who took the game to where it is now, because of his basketball
skills and the commercials he was in. You can look at the
NBA now as this huge global phenomenon because MJ penetrated
into areas that hadn't been approached before.
He was thought to be perfect. And then the gambling allegations
come out. Over time, people look at him less in the perfect
mold and see him for the great athlete and cultural figure
he was.
SL: You write that you wear Allen Iverson's jersey and
that you "love the fact that he has become the nigga you love
to hate on the basketball court." Why do you revel so in his
game?
TB: Short answer: I'm a contrarian (laughs). First, Allen
Iverson is a great basketball player. I think people under-estimate
his ability. He's 6-foot-tall
maybe
and weighs 150 pounds soaking wet with a brick in his back
pocket, and single-handedly has made his team into a contender.
How can he win a championship with those players around him?
The fact that Philly made the finals and won a game was impressive.
And yet all I hear is, he's selfish.
Iverson is an authentic product of hip hop culture. Because
of the way he does things, he gets under a lot of people's
skins, black and white. He has never tried to be anyone else,
and he has never listened to those who say he should get rid
of his cornrows or get rid of his buddies. He doesn't want
to be your loveable mascot. He's not interested in conforming.
He doesn't think, "Let me grin and see if I can get on 'SportsCenter.'"
He says, "I don't give a f***. And I have the money to do
what I want." AI represents the quintessential black man's
disposition: No mater how much you f*** with me, I'm not going
to change. Bottom line, his approach and his persona are pure
hip-hop. He gives the game drama.
SL: You write that, in the post-Jordan NBA, Iverson and
Kobe Bryant have emerged as the most interesting, promising
superstars. What's the difference between the two?
TB: Iverson and Kobe are the modern-day version of Magic
and Bird, where class becomes more relevant than race. For
all intents Kobe is a white man in the NBA. The spot that
he fits
and this may all change [due to the recent rape allegations]
is the spot reserved for white players. The energy that was
directed to Larry Bird is now directed to guys like Kobe and
Tim [Duncan]. When you compare them with Rasheed Wallace and
Iverson
or the other players who fit the mainstream definition of
'thugs in the NBA'
then the contrast is intensified.
Since this incident with Kobe happened, it's real clear that
when I talk to black male friends of mine that they dislike
Kobe . . . He just violates all the unspoken codes of black
masculinity. You do not get on stage, crying and begging.
Just like you don't walk off the court after [losing to] San
Antonio and start crying. It's like, c'mon dawg, you ain't
representin'. You look like a punk.
SL: LeBron James enters the NBA as the most heralded rookie
since, maybe, Wilt Chamberlain. Is he capable of taking on
the mantle of "the next Michael Jordan"? Should he be asked
to take on that load?
TB: The problem has always been, who will carry the mantle
as the next Jordan. We can name guys who were supposed to
fill that role - from Grant Hill to Vince Carter to Penny
Hardaway to Harold Miner. Any guy who was 6-7 and athletic.
No one can live up to the label. There are no more MJs. He's
one of one. That road has already been trod. LeBron is a great
basketball player. He's also joining a team that should be
fun to watch, with good young talent: D-Miles, Ricky Davis,
Carlos Boozer, Dajuan Wagner. Plus, I think they got a steal
in Paul Silas as their coach. So LeBron comes into a situation
with a team that could be competitive. He's going get his
looks.
If he sustains himself the way he seems to have so far, he's
going to be impressive. There's a lot of pressure on him.
He might not have the impact as quickly as people want. His
ability to deal with that will be telling. I mean, the guy's
18. But I'm excited. It's the way I used to feel when college
basketball was good and the draft could change a team instantly.
You don't get that anymore. LeBron's the first guy to bring
that sort of energy in a long while.
SL: NBA clubs are increasingly pursuing European prospects:
Is that a positive development for the game, or is it (as
some have noted) a subtle ruse by owners to keep the league
from becoming "too black"?
TB: Clearly, David Stern has pursued marketing the league
globally - and done an incredible job, going back to the Dream
Team in the 1992 Olympics. It's just like globalization in
any other walk of life. New formations emerge and older models
disappear. White players will now be from Croatia or Turkey
or other places. The league's gone global.
I think the league's in a great position. You bring in Yao
Ming, you have access to viewers in China. You bring in Nene
Hilario from Brazil, same thing. And Emanuel Ginobili from
Argentina.
I do think the class issue is important. The "bad guys" of
the NBA
the Ruben Pattersons, the Isaiah Riders, even Iverson
the league's uncomfortable with that. They want to stem the
tide. Stern talks about setting an age limit [for pro players].
Well, the Europeans are pros at an earlier age. That's a big
contradiction.
People around the NBA talk in code. They say the Europeans
are "coachable." That's code in that African-American players
have been perceived as being difficult to coach. They say
Europeans have "good fundamentals." That's coded language,
with the implication being that black players play street
ball.
To this point, there's been no foreign player that's had
a major impact in making a team successful. These guys are
not dominant enough. You can talk about Dirk Nowitzki. He's
a great offensive player, but if he was Dirk Nowitzki from
Cleveland, how much would he be criticized for shooting so
damn much?
It'll be interesting to see how this racial issue plays out.
I think people are too quick in making assumptions, though.
We live in a time when nationality is very important. I don't
think Americans are going to rush to embrace non-Americans,
as opposed to African-Americans. Maybe this is informed by
living in L.A., but what always fascinates me is how many
people into hip hop aren't black. They don't make those distinctions
anymore.
SL: The trend of young players entering the NBA from high
school
or after a year or two of college
doesn't seem to be abating, despite commissioner Stern's wish
to set an age limit. What's the future of college basketball?
TB: It will survive because the game appeals to a different
fan base than the NBA. People who are big college basketball
fans aren't big NBA fans and vice versa. There was a time
when the audiences were closer to each other. That's no longer
the case. But the college game will always survive because
there's so much invested in it, with alumni and traditions
and rivalries and the Final Four. People will always watch
this. College has done a good job of making the game palatable
to mainstream taste. They didn't like the overwhelming trend
of basketball becoming "blacker," and they put in measures
to stem some of these. Now, as someone who used to be a huge
college basketball fan, I have not watched college basketball
in many, many years, since just after the Fab 5. It holds
no interest for me.
SL: Finally, let's talk about what your favorite subject.
The Pistons took Darko Milicic in the draft and hired Larry
Brown to replace Rick Carlisle. Will Detroit finally be able
to beat the New Jersey Nets? Did they make a mistake in not
choosing Carmelo Anthony?
TB: I'm going to say something crazy. I think they were a
better team than the Nets even though they lost. The Nets
had been to the Finals the year before, and that experience
really helped them. Plus, [Pistons guard] Chauncey Billups
was injured in the series.
As for the draft, I like Carmelo's game
he brings some offensive punch, which the Pistons could use.
But they already have Tayshaun Prince, who has the promise
to be a Scottie Pippen. Do you bring in Carmelo with two guys
playing the same position? I trust [general manager] Joe Dumars.
He saw Milicic and raved about him. I hope he's right, because
when he picked this guy, who hasn't played that much basketball,
Dumars put a lot on potential.
I thought that Rick Carlisle was a good coach and, certainly,
to win the division and to win 50 games was impressive. As
the die-hard Detroit fan that I am
with my NBA season pass so I could watch the team all year
I didn't think he was a good situational coach or very good
at match-ups. I mean, he buried Tayshaun on the bench all
year, until the playoffs.
With Larry Brown, we have the second best coach in the league.
This is his type of team: they play good defense and don't
have any superstars. It's clearly his last stand to win a
title. My only problem is, every team's making moves this
summer, and they're standing still.
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