The most fascinating sports figure of my life is someone I
never remembered seeing live.
Over the next few years, Jimmy the Greek was used mostly as
a punchline, parodied later in shows I watched like The Simpsons.
When ESPN launched its 30 for 30 series, a documentary on Jimmy the Greek was one of my favorites because of how insane it seemed that
someone could get so famous talking about gambling on television. For my entire
life until a few years ago, talking about gambling and sports seemed forbidden.
Of course, the racism is what ended his career. I’m not sure
I actually saw his comments in full until that documentary aired. It was pretty
horrifying, even if his friends tried to defend him by saying he was more
stupid than racist. Not a good defense in 1988, and still not a good one today.
Several years ago, I wrote a piece here about how I didn’t think Jimmy the Greek would be shunned from society in the Trump era. If
anything, he would’ve found a second life somewhere – either in the right wing
disinfo sphere and rehabilitated after time off in the sports world.
Jimmy the Greek has been on my mind a lot lately as the
phrase “cancel culture” gets repeated ad nauseum by a bunch of people who never
actually get canceled.
The latest entry into this tiresome narrative was Gina
Carano, who was openly bigoted on social media for years until Disney finally pulled the plug on her Star Wars career. Within hours of being dropped by
Disney, she had secured a new deal with right wing agitator and white supremacist
Ben Shapiro, which certainly validated Disney’s decision. Yes, Carano’s career
has hit rock bottom. But you can’t say she was canceled on the scale of Jimmy
the Greek since, you know, she just signed a new deal.
Carano is far from the only high-profile person to rail
against cancel culture while obviously not being canceled. Ted Cruz and Josh
Hawley helped lead an insurrection against the United States, yet their big
complaint is they’ve lost book deals. What is going on here?
The real truth is that the people complaining about “cancel
culture” are only telling on themselves.
There is no such thing as cancel culture, and there never
has been. There have always been consequences for racists and bigots. The only
difference from 1988 to 2021 is that those being held accountable have a place
to go and complain – very loudly to millions – about being held accountable.
In 1988, Jimmy the Greek didn’t have Fox News to interview
him on primetime to millions of Americans, which would be amplified by millions
more on social media. He was completely shunned from society until his death.
In retrospect, you could argue that his fate was too severe for his racism,
without even a chance at redemption.
In one way, you’d have to think race relations have improved
in the past 30-plus years, right? We’ve had our first Black President. Georgia
just elected a Black U.S. Senator. We have more representation from non-whites
at all levels of government and in popular culture.
The Bachelor, as per usual these days, is going through
another racism controversy as the first Black lead in series history appears to
be headed toward proposing to a girl who went to a racist antebellum party
three years ago. Chris Harrison, its only host, had the nerve to actually
defend her. A disaster in every sense of the word that has the future of ABC’s
most popular franchise on the ropes. Will it get canceled? Doubtful.
The lack of movement in race relations recently hit me in
the strangest way. On my day off for President’s Day, I watched a bit of House
Party. The 1990 movie featuring Kid and Play had a scene where one of their
Dads was looking for them, when he was stopped by the cops for being Black. The
scene plays out almost comical, where the cops are “just” stopping him because
he looked suspicious. They let him go after giving him a hard time.
Watching this in 2021, I’ve seen that footage play out on
social media far too much in the past few years. I was waiting for the cops to
shoot him on sight. It was a gross feeling. We’ve gone backwards in three
decades.
Indeed, we have. We need to be better. But I know we won’t,
especially with the loudest and most obnoxious racists and bigots of them all
complaining about cancel culture.
This is my plea to remember that when someone complains
about cancel culture, they’re really complaining about their inability to be
publicly racist. Please, do not fall for their bullshit.
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