http://www.thenation.com/blog/171630/bob-costas-i-stand-what-i-said?rel=emai
lNation#
 

Bob  <http://www.thenation.com/blog/171630/bob-costas-i-stand-what-i-said>
Costas: 'I Stand by What I Said'

Dave  <http://www.thenation.com/authors/dave-zirin> Zirin on December 6,
2012 - 11:50 AM ET

When Kansas City Chiefs Jovan Belcher killed the mother of his child
Kasandra Perkins and then committed suicide in front of his coach on
Saturday, most of Sunday's NFL coverage avoided direct commentary. Bob
Costas did not. The veteran NBC sports broadcaster used
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/03/bob-costas-gun-control-jovan-belch
er_n_2229496.html> ninety seconds at halftime of NBC's top rated Sunday
Night Football program to talk about "perspective" and, quoting a
<http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/jovan-belcher-kansas-city-chiefs-murder-
suicide-tragedy-girlfriend-self-leave-orphan-daughter-why-still-playing-sund
ay-120112> column by Fox Sports columnist Jason Whitlock, the problems with
the "gun culture" in the United States. This ignited the fury of
right-wingers, some of whom have called for his job. Then after appearances
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2012/12/04/bob-costas-ba
cktracks-on-gun-remarks/> on The
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2012/12/04/bob-costas-ba
cktracks-on-gun-remarks/> Dan Patrick Show and The
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2012/12/06/dear-bob-cost
as-you-cannot-have-it-both-ways/> O'Reilly Factor, there are now liberals
who believe Costas is backtracking from his earlier remarks. I spoke to Bob
Costas this morning to set the record straight.

Dave Zirin: Do you have any regrets about your halftime commentary?

Bob Costas: Only that in this instance I had even less time than I usually
do and it's a complex issue that definitely involves domestic violence,
possibly involves the football culture, possibly involves drugs and alcohol,
and also obviously involves guns. I'm mystified by those who say that
pointing out that the easy access to handguns and the existence of a gun
culture makes tragedies like this more likely, somehow means you are
shifting the blame from Jovan Belcher to the gun. That's crazy. Belcher is
100 percent responsible and I have said that I was appalled that in the
early stages of coverage of this tragedy many played it as if there were two
victims and Belcher was one of them. No. He is the perpetrator and nothing
diminishes that. But his having the gun made it more likely that something
like this would occur. The fact that I didn't have enough time to cite all
of these factors-from the culture of football to Belcher's personal
responsibility-allows some people to claim that I was saying guns are the
only issue. I emphatically do not think that. If I'd had even forty-five
seconds to a minute more, I could have dotted more I's and crossed more Ts.

What many are saying is that it "wasn't the right forum" for this
discussion. Do you feel it was the right forum?

I'd say close to 100 percent of those who feel that way do so simply because
they disagree and didn't want to hear the particular thing I had to say. If
I said something they agreed with, then they wouldn't have any problems. All
day, with varying degrees of insight, all four networks that carried
football covered this story at some length. The preceding five minutes on
our air was on this story and this story only. The only time anyone seems to
think that was inappropriate was when I pushed this particular hot button. I
would point out the obvious: that it was halftime. Not a single play was
missed. Had this murder suicide not involved an NFL player, then it would
not have been an appropriate topic for any of us to discuss in a football
broadcast. But since it did, it became an appropriate topic. Look at it this
way: I felt it was appropriate for me to discuss the Munich massacre of
Israeli athletes in 1972 during the Olympic opening ceremonies. There was an
issue there about the IOC's refusal to officially recognize the fortieth
anniversary. Therefore whether other broadcasters would have done it or not,
I felt that I should. On the other hand, if I had brought it up on the air
in a different context, it would have made no sense and would have been
inappropriate. If next week out of the blue, I start talking about gays in
sports at halftime of the football game, that's inappropriate even if the
comments are insightful. But if and when an NFL player comes out as gay,
then there is a story there that provides a jumping-off point. Then it would
be entirely appropriate.

Erik Wemple of The Washington Post wrote
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2012/12/06/dear-bob-cost
as-you-cannot-have-it-both-ways/>  that now you are backtracking from your
comments. Are you?

No, I am not backtracking at all. I stand by what I said. To expand upon
your thoughts when you have more time to do so or to clarify if you feel you
have been misunderstood is not the same as backtracking.

Why did you choose to speak about guns and gun culture and not about the NFL
itself, perhaps about the wisdom of even playing the Chiefs-Panthers game
just twenty-four hours after the murder suicide or to speak about the
linkage between concussions and the four suicides among current and former
players that have taken place in the last year?

As for the NFL and the Chiefs' decision to go ahead with the game, I was all
right with that because I assumed it was based on the stated preference of
the coaches and the majority of their players to go ahead. In this case, I
think they would be the best judges. As for other aspects of football that
may have played a role here, I have spoken often, including at halftime of
Sunday night games, about the violent nature of the NFL, about the
concussion issue, and about other problems the NFL faces. I have no
reluctance to do that and will do it again when appropriate. In this case,
just thirty-six hours after the shootings, not enough was known about
Belcher's background to assume that this could be attributed to head trauma,
drug abuse etc., so the best I could do there was to say as I did that in
the days ahead, questions will be raised about his actions and their
possible connections to football. I felt that I indicated given the brief
time I had that as the story developed it was entirely possible that there
could be a linkage to football and some aspects of the football culture as
we have seen with others but at that point it wasn't possible to make that
leap. What Whitlock wrote about the gun culture, especially among young
athletes, seemed credible to me and an issue worth raising. As I said to you
earlier, I only wish I hadn't raised it in isolation. I believe it's true. I
believe it's important but I do not believe it's the only important aspect
of the story.

Like this article? Support this  <https://donate.thenation.com/sitelink>
journalism with a $5 donation now.

You appeared last night on The O'Reilly Factor on Fox News. There are people
on Fox and in that right-wing noise machine who have compared you to Don
Imus or Hank Williams Jr. and said you should lose your job. How do you
respond to this?

Don Imus called the women on the Rutgers basketball team "nappy-headed
hos."Hank Williams Jr. compared President Obama to Adolf Hitler. I said that
there is a gun culture in America that leads to tragedy. Anybody who thinks
that the third comment falls in the same category as the first two doesn't
want to have a serious discussion about any of this. Sometimes, the best
affirmation of your decisions and beliefs is the quality of thinking of
those who oppose you. I'm not dismissing everyone who disagrees with what I
have said, and I certainly respect those who have reasoned disagreements.
But one question I would pose is this: Even if obtained legally, can't
people see what a volatile mix guns, in some cases medications, in some
cases head trauma, and certainly a culture that romanticizes and to some
extent legitimizes guns and violence can be when mixed together? These are
questions that should be raised. And I plan to continue raising them.

For more on the Jovan Belcher murder-suicide, read Dave
<http://www.thenation.com/blog/171559/how-can-they-play-murder-suicide-and-n
ational-football-league> Zirin's last post on the NFL's senseless decision
to continue play the next day.

Related Topics: Sports <http://www.thenation.com/section/sports>  | Guns and
Gun  <http://www.thenation.com/section/guns-and-gun-control> Control |
Journalists  <http://www.thenation.com/section/journalists-and-journalism>
and Journalism
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