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In reply to the discussion: White Male Privilege Is Why We Laugh At Lochte And Vilify Douglas [View all]LovingA2andMI
(7,006 posts)61. There was PLENTY of Harassment of Gabby.....
Obviously, you missed that....
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) The hope for one last trip to the Olympic medal podium gone when she stalled early in her routine during the uneven bars final on Sunday, Gabby Douglas decided to take a stand of a different kind.
Against the online criticism that's dogged the 2012 Olympic champion seemingly from the moment the gold medal was draped around her neck four years ago. Against the backlash on everything from her hair to her attitude. Against the bullying on social media that's left her staring down at her phone in disbelief too many times to count.
Douglas is over it. All of it.
Yes, her comeback didn't end quite the way she envisioned. Yet Douglas isn't second-guessing her decision even though she'll leave Rio with "only" a team gold, pushing her total to three spanning two games.
"In my head I pictured it a little bit differently," she said after finishing seventh in the uneven bars final. "You want to picture yourself being on top and doing amazing gymnastics."
At times Douglas did. She was second to teammate Simone Biles at the 2015 world championships and validated national team coordinator Martha Karolyi's choice to bring her to Rio by putting up the third-highest score in the all-around during qualifying before helping send Karolyi into retirement with a dominant performance in the team final.
The trouble with Douglas, however, is that gymnastics is typically only part of the story.
A small but vocal portion of Twitter lashed out when she was the only member of the "Final Five" to not place her hand over her heart during the playing of "The Star Spangled Banner." It grew louder during the all-around final when cameras caught her quietly sitting while the rest of Team USA cheered on Biles and Aly Raisman to a one-two finish.
"I apologize if that made me seem to be really mad in the stands," Douglas said. "I was supporting Aly. I will always will support them and respect them. I don't want anyone to take it as jealous or I wanted attention. Never. I support them and I'm sorry I wasn't showing it."
It followed a familiar pattern that's followed Douglas around since London, when she oddly found herself having to defend her hair minutes after becoming the first African-American woman to win the Olympic title.
"When they talk about my hair or not putting my hand over my heart or being very salty in the stands, really criticizing me ... for me it was really hurtful," Douglas said.
She later added: "Did I choose my hair texture? No. I'm grateful for having this hair on my head. When you read that hurtful stuff you're like 'OK, wow.'"
While Douglas tried to block it out, it hasn't been easy. She became a sensation in 2012, had her life story made into a TV movie, switched coaches three times and became the focal part of "Douglas Family Gold," a reality TV series executive produced in part by herself and her mother that focused on Douglas' bid to become the first repeat Olympic champion in nearly 50 years.
In a way, her final performance on the Olympic stage mimicked the last few years. She lost momentum early in her set and could have bailed. Instead she powered through it and nailed her dismount. Her score of 15.066 wasn't near the top three but she walked off the podium with a hug from coach Christian Gallardo and a smile.
"I wanted to finish on a stronger note," she said. "But fighting through that routine, you know what I was like, 'I'm just fighting through.'"
Perhaps for the last time as a competitor. Douglas will be a fixture on the post-Olympic barnstorming tour but is in no hurry to discuss her long-term future. She'll move from Columbus, Ohio where she's been training the last two years to be with her family in Los Angeles. It's been a long and occasionally bumpy ride. She's fine if it stops.
"When you go through a lot and you have so many difficulties and people against you sometimes, it kind of just determines your character," she said. "Are you going to stand or are you going to crumble? I have no regrets coming back for a second Olympic team. It's been an amazing experience. It's been teaching me a lot.
http://www.nbc26.com/sports/olympics/rio-2016/gabby-douglas-hurt-by-twitter-harassment"
Against the online criticism that's dogged the 2012 Olympic champion seemingly from the moment the gold medal was draped around her neck four years ago. Against the backlash on everything from her hair to her attitude. Against the bullying on social media that's left her staring down at her phone in disbelief too many times to count.
Douglas is over it. All of it.
Yes, her comeback didn't end quite the way she envisioned. Yet Douglas isn't second-guessing her decision even though she'll leave Rio with "only" a team gold, pushing her total to three spanning two games.
"In my head I pictured it a little bit differently," she said after finishing seventh in the uneven bars final. "You want to picture yourself being on top and doing amazing gymnastics."
At times Douglas did. She was second to teammate Simone Biles at the 2015 world championships and validated national team coordinator Martha Karolyi's choice to bring her to Rio by putting up the third-highest score in the all-around during qualifying before helping send Karolyi into retirement with a dominant performance in the team final.
The trouble with Douglas, however, is that gymnastics is typically only part of the story.
A small but vocal portion of Twitter lashed out when she was the only member of the "Final Five" to not place her hand over her heart during the playing of "The Star Spangled Banner." It grew louder during the all-around final when cameras caught her quietly sitting while the rest of Team USA cheered on Biles and Aly Raisman to a one-two finish.
"I apologize if that made me seem to be really mad in the stands," Douglas said. "I was supporting Aly. I will always will support them and respect them. I don't want anyone to take it as jealous or I wanted attention. Never. I support them and I'm sorry I wasn't showing it."
It followed a familiar pattern that's followed Douglas around since London, when she oddly found herself having to defend her hair minutes after becoming the first African-American woman to win the Olympic title.
"When they talk about my hair or not putting my hand over my heart or being very salty in the stands, really criticizing me ... for me it was really hurtful," Douglas said.
She later added: "Did I choose my hair texture? No. I'm grateful for having this hair on my head. When you read that hurtful stuff you're like 'OK, wow.'"
While Douglas tried to block it out, it hasn't been easy. She became a sensation in 2012, had her life story made into a TV movie, switched coaches three times and became the focal part of "Douglas Family Gold," a reality TV series executive produced in part by herself and her mother that focused on Douglas' bid to become the first repeat Olympic champion in nearly 50 years.
In a way, her final performance on the Olympic stage mimicked the last few years. She lost momentum early in her set and could have bailed. Instead she powered through it and nailed her dismount. Her score of 15.066 wasn't near the top three but she walked off the podium with a hug from coach Christian Gallardo and a smile.
"I wanted to finish on a stronger note," she said. "But fighting through that routine, you know what I was like, 'I'm just fighting through.'"
Perhaps for the last time as a competitor. Douglas will be a fixture on the post-Olympic barnstorming tour but is in no hurry to discuss her long-term future. She'll move from Columbus, Ohio where she's been training the last two years to be with her family in Los Angeles. It's been a long and occasionally bumpy ride. She's fine if it stops.
"When you go through a lot and you have so many difficulties and people against you sometimes, it kind of just determines your character," she said. "Are you going to stand or are you going to crumble? I have no regrets coming back for a second Olympic team. It's been an amazing experience. It's been teaching me a lot.
http://www.nbc26.com/sports/olympics/rio-2016/gabby-douglas-hurt-by-twitter-harassment"
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White Male Privilege Is Why We Laugh At Lochte And Vilify Douglas [View all]
mercuryblues
Aug 2016
OP
I'm seeing more people making excuses for Lochte right now than I saw attacking Gabby D.
Liberal_Stalwart71
Aug 2016
#65
She's also written at least one book, possibly two - I can't remember. She was on the winning
Squinch
Aug 2016
#123
+1000000. Plus all these excuse for a 30 year old man - what does this say to the world ?
Person 2713
Aug 2016
#6
Probably at least 1/2 of MSM would take that tack if not those words. RW press certainly would.
Ford_Prefect
Aug 2016
#192
Can you show us the media that are referring to this as a "youthful prank"?
Ace Rothstein
Aug 2016
#31
They are only ripping him after they found out he and his companions lied.
BumRushDaShow
Aug 2016
#73
Well, yeah. Nobody is going to rip someone who claimed to have just been robbed.
Ace Rothstein
Aug 2016
#76
Nah, they can keep their medals. What they did had nothing to do with their events.
Ace Rothstein
Aug 2016
#121
Again, 99.9% of the responses regarding Lochte are that he is a lying asshole.
Ace Rothstein
Aug 2016
#155
It could simply be a recognition of a disproportional response rather than hate.
LanternWaste
Aug 2016
#39
The majority think Lochte is a moron for his actions and that the Douglas incident was nothing.
Ace Rothstein
Aug 2016
#69
YES!! White guys behaving badly = "kids"; innocent 12-year old black kid playing with a toy gun...
Liberal_Stalwart71
Aug 2016
#17
NO! If you're over 18, you are an adult, not a kid. You know the difference between right and
Liberal_Stalwart71
Aug 2016
#137
Just who is this "we"? I have a TON of issue with Lochte and NONE with Gabby (or the Shot Putters).
jmg257
Aug 2016
#18
There is at least one of every kind of asshole on twitter (yes, that includes me)
jack_krass
Aug 2016
#185
I've been overseas 8 times and nobody has ever treated me like an asshole.
Ace Rothstein
Aug 2016
#32
Rachel Maddow broke into her show to basically say these clowns....
ProudToBeBlueInRhody
Aug 2016
#46
There was a huge outpouring of support and love directed at her in response to the Twitter/FB trolls
oberliner
Aug 2016
#71
Yes, I missed it... I don't know why athletes pay attention to such assholes
Fast Walker 52
Aug 2016
#124
You do know, I did not know your race or gender. I just read the article you posted.
Rilgin
Aug 2016
#215
I see no evidence that Lochte is getting treated well by the media or social media.
Vattel
Aug 2016
#53
No "left site" should call discussion of perceptions of racial disparity "identity politics".
BumRushDaShow
Aug 2016
#133
One would think the liberal position would be judging people individually on their own merits
NuclearDem
Aug 2016
#139
Nothing like cherry picking events to portray your own version of reality....
jack_krass
Aug 2016
#97