General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'It's a New World': The Super Bowl Becomes a Platform for LGBT Equality
Super Bowl XLVII is being billed as the Harbaugh Bowl: the battle between Jim and John Harbaugh, head coaches, respectively, of the San Francisco 49ers and the Baltimore Ravens. It also pits two NFL teams connected directly and indirectly to the struggles for LGBT rights. Read that last sentence again, and appreciate for a moment how far fighters for LGBT equality have traveled.
In August, the 49ers became the first NFL franchise to film an It Gets Better video to combat anti-LGBT bullying in schools. The team was compelled to produce the public service announcement when a diehard Bay Area fan named Sean Chapin initiated a Change.org petition asking the 49ers to break the NFLs conspicuous silence. He received 16,000 online signatures and the team responded. Several players were featured with the most stirring comments coming from hard-hitting safety Donte Whitner who said, The San Francisco 49ers are proud to join ItGetsBetter.org, to let all LGBT teens know that it gets better. On behalf of the entire 49ers organization, we are on your side, and we promise it gets better.
As for the Ravens, they are the team of linebacker Brendon Ayanbadejo, who is part of a new wave of outspoken athletes for LGBT rights. Ayanbadejo aided the successful referendum for marriage equality in the state of Maryland in November while braving disagreements from teammates, criticism on sports radio and even a Maryland state delegate requesting that team chief executive Steve Biscotti take the necessary action, as a National Football League owner, to inhibit such expressions from your employees. But the Ravens took no such action and Ayanbadejo hasnt stopped expressing himself, and wont stop this coming week.
After Baltimore beat the New England Patriots to go to the Super Bowl, the Ravens linebacker typed out what he is calling his Jerry Maguire e-mail at 3:40 am. He wrote to the founder of New Yorkers for Marriage Equality, Brian Ellner, and the political director for media mogul Russell Simmons, Michael Skolnik. Ayanbadejos message was that the Super Bowl, the shiniest, most watched event in all of North American sports, could be a remarkable podium to make the case against homophobia. He wrote, Is there anything I can do for marriage equality or anti-bullying over the next couple of weeks to harness this Super Bowl media?
http://www.thenation.com/blog/172449/its-new-world-super-bowl-becomes-platform-lgbt-equality#
fishwax
(29,146 posts)It was very cool that, in the wee morning hours after a career moment, he was directing all the excitement of that moment to something bigger than football.
William769
(55,124 posts)I am having a new outlook on a old pastime.
dsc
(52,129 posts)almost but not quite.
rocktivity
(44,555 posts)after he head-butted his wife:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1204&pid=18232
rocktivity
William769
(55,124 posts)But what does that have to do with the topic at hand?
No one sport or organization for that matter is immune to people like this.
My motto is praise the good & take out the bad with the trash.
rocktivity
(44,555 posts)Last edited Sun Jan 27, 2013, 04:54 PM - Edit history (1)
on issues it has previously felt free to ignore.
rocktivity
William769
(55,124 posts)rocktivity
(44,555 posts)Last edited Fri Nov 24, 2023, 03:50 PM - Edit history (4)
and he's STILL so haunted by the domestic violence he grew up with that he decided to participate in the commercial. That makes him the big winner in my book.
And there's a pro athlete who was so worried about "RE-cycling" the domestic violence he grew up with, he started seeing a psychiatrist the minute he found out he was going to be a father.
rocktivity