NBA Owner Makes Ackward Comments on Race: Here We Go Again

<p>Managing Partner Bruce Levenson of the Atlanta Hawks is conferring with NBA executives about selling his share of the team after disclosing comments he made a couple of years ago about Black fans, the perceived fears of white NBA fans, and why the Hawks don’t have more concessions revenue. One more thing bothered Levenson; at times they play Gospel music on the PA system at the Hawks arena. Go figure. And this guy voted to dump Donald Sterling.</p>

<p><a href=“No Longer Available”>http://www.wyff4.com/national/hawks-owner-to-sell-team-after-racist-email/27923690&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

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<p>Read the story earlier. Yea, that’s the point I don’t get. Am wondering if someone threatened to bring these emails forward for public viewing and he made a pre-emptive strike. He will disappear much more quickly than Donald Sterling ever did by going about it in this manner. </p>

<p>He is trying to raise revenue by attracting more affluent fans to come to the games. His motive is a good one but how he expressed it was not so good. I don’t think his email was as bad as Sterling’s comments.</p>

<p>I haven’t been able to read the actual email. The description said it discussed why the Hawks don’t have a ton of white fans at games. There were some references to music but the main point seemed to be that he was looking for more affluent fans and those happen to be white. I’m not sure this is racist. It’s racial, meaning it looks at race, but my first reaction is that analyzing your business’ customers so you can get the most money from them is what every business does. And every business that has data, looks at the racial, socio-economic, etc. breakdowns of customers. That’s how they choose where to locate stores: they pull demographics from a service (and the landlord markets with demographics) and see what they have. This effectively rules many stores out of minority areas because The Body Shoppe or x company has an income requirement. Family Dollar knows who their customers are and stocks their stores to fit. If they didn’t, stores wouldn’t cater to local tastes, which are sometimes racially based. </p>

<p>Perhaps Lergnom, but I scratch my head wondering if Levenson truly knew anything about his customers, potential customers and the metro Atlanta market in general? Atlanta, particularly suburban DeKalb County, is home to one of the most affluent African-American communities in the nation, usually running neck and neck for top honors with suburban Washington DC. It’s just odd that Levenson seemed to believe that his Black customers couldn’t afford to purchase tickets for the games, yet in the same breath he said most of the fans were Black. I’m just inclined to believe that Levenson isn’t as smart a businessman that he believes himself to be. Also important is that Georgia is a state that absolutely loves FOOTBALL, from high school on up. I know an African-American gentleman, a small business owner, whom has been an Atlanta Falcons season ticket-holder since day 1. That’s over 40 Years!!! Obviously he has the money but basketball is way down the list of his interests. There are numerous persons like him in the Black community in Metro Atlanta. The dimwit Levenson just couldn’t figure out a way to sell his product to them, if we can understand his bumbling rationalizations. Levenson is not necessarily a bigot, but in my opinion he’s certainly a dope. Remember, this guy and his partners failed to make NHL hockey a successful attraction in Atlanta. Gee, what a surprise.</p>

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<p><a href=“Bruce Levenson will sell Atlanta Hawks after releasing racist e-mail”>http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nba/hawks/2014/09/07/bruce-levenson-racist-email-atlanta-owner-sell-team/15241591/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>"…a lot of blacks dont seem to go as crazy cheering (another one of my theories) as whites."</p>

<p>OK, I’ll admit that I am stumped. What the hell is he talking about? So, he complains that his Black fans aren’t berserk? Why would fans fill their closets with Hawks jerseys etc. when the team has NEVER even been to a championship series, let alone won anything? How about the fact that only three truly great players in 40 years doesn’t create overwhelming fan interest. Lou Hudson, Pete Maravich and Dom Wilkins have been out of the NBA for 20 years or more. About the only thing this guy said that I can even begin to grasp is “I am rambling.”</p>

<p>To reiterate; the guy isn’t a wizard at the local klavern. He’s a dope.</p>

<p>From his actual e-mail, he doesn’t sound like a dope at all.</p>

<p>Well the Sterling contingent walked away with billions from the sale, so maybe he’s hoping for a comparable pay day. I could be wrong, but my understanding was that Shelly Sterling agreed to a sale before the scheduled vote, so the owners were off the hook in terms of going on record. Silver said that they would vote to force a sale, but that was part of his posture. We don’t know who actually would have.</p>

<p>I think this letter is of a very different nature than Sterling’s comments as well. This guy is looking at marketing strategies and demographics . . . something that I imagine anyone who has a product to sell would do. He actually points out that complaints that he’s heard from potential white fans are “racist garbage”. The issue may be that he’s identified “southern whites” as the problem. I don’t know Atlanta, but it sounds like there just isn’t a basketball culture and that the product on the floor isn’t compelling enough to sustain one.</p>

<p>I just don’t understand how that disqualifies him for ownership. As I don’t understand a 500K fine to some NFL owner for a DUI. Is it a requirement now that captains of industry be our moral leadership? Americans are so lazy we can’t be bothered to find better moral compasses? As someone said, there’s a really big difference between racial observation (hey, that looks like a style many black/white/asian/whatever kids in my school wear) and a racist observation (hey, don’t wear that, you’ll look like a black/white/asian/whatever kid). I can see his email falling in some grey areas, but it does look more like a marketing meeting than a Klan meeting. </p>

<p>If we keep insisting that nobody make any racial observation because it might be construed as a racist observation, we will never address the actual racial issues of 21st century America. And there are plenty of real issues to tackle in that area. That requires people of every demographic to not assume the worst of one another’s intentions but still exercise self-awareness of their own biases. (Which is a big ask, I know)</p>

<p>Other than a few lines, I have no problem with the content. And the “bad” lines aren’t terrible.</p>

<p>I could say something almost the opposite about some NBA teams: they play only music familiar to the white crowd, have nearly all white cheerleaders, etc. I’m sometimes put off by the contrast of black men on the court with everything set up for the mostly white guy crowd. </p>

<p>The owners here have talked about drawing more black fans. It may be just talk, but it’s ok to talk about drawing more black fans and it should be ok to talk about drawing more white fans. </p>

<p>As I see the email, it’s about season ticket revenue and concessions revenue. You go where the money is. I come from outside Detroit. We all think of the struggles of the city itself but the Metro area has one of the largest concentrations of reasonably well off to well off black surburbanites in the US. The money is still mostly white and the Pistons rely on white fans. It’s a question of numbers that happens to reflect race, not racism.</p>

<p>Sorghum, it sounds dopey to me because he apparently berates southern whites, but in the next breath he says that his company should adopt biased policies which will appeal to whites’ “racist garbage” preferences. Huh?</p>

<p>Not saying he is a compadre of Donald Sterling. Not saying he should be excommunicated. I’m just saying that he’s a walking talking contradiction. Which leaves me to believe that there’s something being left out of his story.</p>

<p>Actually, it sounds like he is honestly trying to figure it out. This has nothing much in common with an old creepy guy not wanting his racially ambiguous mistress to bring her black boyfriends to games. Nothing much at all. </p>

<p>This is the horrible e-mail? I don’t see any racism, really. It seems pretty hard-headed to me. He may be wrong about some of his observations, of course. I guess people don’t like peering behind the curtain to find out things like the fact that the owners are paying attention to the race of the cheerleaders.</p>

<p>To me the email sounds more like he was trying to figure out how to get more people to the games.We have lived in the Atlanta area for over 12 years and never been to a Hawks game. Are the Hawks even any good? Seems like there is a lot more press about the Falcons and the Braves. IMO he has tried to sell the Hawks before and he is now using this as a way out.</p>

<p>Hunt, as usual, you’re on to something. Perhaps Levenson is having an emotional crisis coming to terms with the fact that he wants to see fewer black cheerleaders etc. I agree with you, the e-mail isn’t a Klan manifesto, it’s simply odd, given the history of the Hawks and the demographics of metro Atlanta.</p>

<p>I could understand more of his rationalizations If he had elaborated on the location of the arena. Downtown Atlanta, while not particularly dangerous, is fairly ho-hum. And there are some adjacent lower social economic areas nearby. But that hasn’t stopped fans from attending the football Falcons games. And the State and City are building ANOTHER BRAND NEW stadium for the Falcons near downtown (a dumb taxpayer rip-off, but that’s another story). The immediate area seems to be good enough for the world Headquarters of Coca-Cola and for the campus of Georgia Tech. ACC basketball at Georgia Tech’s on-campus arena seems to be popular. Either there is more to Levenson’s story ($$$) or the guy is a dope. Maybe he is sore about the new stadiums for both the Falcons and the baseball Braves. Remember, Art Modell was so ticked-off about the City of Cleveland building the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame rather than a new Browns stadium, that he leaped at the opportunity to take the treasure chest offered by Baltimore. Is Levenson looking for a big payout for his share of the Hawks?</p>

<p>Look, the guy is upset because the black fans aren’t rowdy enough. It’s not what I expected to read at all.</p>

<p>LOL. All his rowdy friends are at home watching FOOTBALL.</p>

<p>This isn’t nearly as bad as the Sterling stuff. Some parts made me cringe – like alluding to the absent black father stereotype – but if he wants to put butts in seats, win more games!</p>