'Minstrel' Critique of Barkley Uncivilized

A columnist's recent takedown of the sports legend is oddly timed and, frankly, opportunistic.

'Minstrel' Critique of Barkley Uncivilized
Charles Barkley (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

In an article entitled, "Charles Barkley: A Modern-Day Minstrel Act," International Business Times writer Palash R. Ghosh takes NBA analyst and Hall of Famer Charles Barkley to task for being "a modern-day minstrel." Aside from likening Barkley to Stepin Fetchit and casually lumping rappers into the mix, Ghosh takes aim at a "boorish" Barkley. Ghosh calls Barkley's success an anomaly, just before he calls the former pro-baller an "illiterate" who "spouts idiotic, vulgar and stupid comments and generates a lot of laughs (and dollars)."

In addition to wondering why the International Business Times would run an article like this, I am also befuddled as to why, out of all the modern-day minstrels that Ghosh could target, he chose Barkley, who nowadays is pretty much not a factor in the world of celebrity.

Barkley was a great basketball player who retired from the game 12 years ago and is in the twilight of his career as a sports commentator (see Weight Watchers commercial), so why would Ghosh assail Barkley in this way at this time? I might be able to understand the existence of the article if there were some business angle to it -- for instance, how minstrelsy translates into big dollars for major media conglomerates.

Certainly, if Ghosh wanted to pick on a modern-day minstrel who is a retired NBA legend, then why not Dennis Rodman, the spectacle-driven NBA Hall of Famer who recently announced that he was starting a topless women's basketball league? Now, that's a modern-day minstrel.

"Sir Charles," on the other hand, has long moved away from the juvenile antics that marked his NBA career when he was at the height of his popularity as a basketball star and during his early days as a commentator. Barkley is known for saying pretty much what he feels, even when it is unpopular and sometimes uninformed, but he never attempted to present himself as a representative of black nobility.

In addition to the tongue-in-cheek Right Guard deodorant commercials that poked fun at Barkley's "Sir" title, he was the first modern-day celebrity who rebuffed pop culture's attempt at making him into a role model. Do you remember the "I Am Not a Role Model" Nike ad campaign in which he starred, saying that parents should be role models and not athletes? You might not remember the ad because it was so long ago, which is my point: Why Barkley and why now?

 
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