First there was
Bryant Gumbel.
But has one of our own Olympic athletes also politicized this
installment of the Winter Games? In an NBC profile of U.S. champion
figure skater
Johnny Weir this past week, the flamboyant athlete is shown
lying on a couch wearing a red sweatjacket with the decoration of
CCCP, the Cyrillic Russian initials of the old USSR [link
to video at gawker.com, see note below]. Yes, we have now seen the
day when an Olympic athlete, representing the United States, is
seen casually wearing a sweatjacket symbolizing the old Soviet Union.
Can it get worse than this? Well,
Weir
performed at practices in Italy wearing the CCCP jacket.
Yikes. I understand "eccentric," but this?
Weir has
responded to remarks about his CCCP jacket by saying he's an admirer
of "Russian culture" and wearing the jacket is "the same as someone
wearing a Madonna T-shirt."
Libertarian blogger KipEsquire has responded (emphasis mine), "Good
grief, was the Cold War really so long ago? Do we really need to
have a remedial history and geography lesson? ... To wear 'CCCP' is not
a celebration of 'Russian culture,' but an endorsement of the most
brutal, most murderous regime ever to reign on Earth."
In addition, the taped piece also captured Weir saying the following:
"I know that a lot of people, especially the more
Republican-style people, are very afraid of what I mean to the sport
and what I’m going to say, what kind of revolutionary, crazy
things are going to come out of my mouth. And good for them.
They should be scared."
When Weir says "revolutionary," I hope he doesn't mean something
along the lines of Fidel Castro or Vladamir Lenin. In that case, count
me among those who might be "afraid" and "scared."
I might also become "afraid" if I walk down the aisle of my local
grocery store some day and find this guy on the cover of a Wheaties
box with the letters CCCP staring at me.
HT: Larry
Elder, the "Sage from South Central"!
[Note on the
video at gawker.com: The video contains a few on-screen "Pop-up"
commentaries in pink writing. These did not air on NBC.]