Login
ForgotPassword?
Sign Up
Search this Topic:
Forum Jump
Posts: 7315
01/24/12 10:50 PM
scshift wrote:All I know is Kobe is an absolute GOD off the court. He isn't even my favorite player Monta Ellis anyone? but this dude is a winner, A-List guy everywhere he goes.He had people going crazy for him in Asia, everyone wanted to see him, people around the world who don't even speak English as their first language. Say what you want about him, hate him if you want, but you can't deny he has legend status in society.
Houston Texans Seattle Seahawks Houston RocketsSpurs Supersonics@MegaWuBanga RIDING WITH LEINART
Interact
Posts: 3139
01/24/12 11:04 PM
chezzer10 wrote: Chris -"What is on Kobe's mind? Going to Colorado, around all these white people, and not bringing Johnnie Cochran? Well then they say, "well if you hire Jonnie Cochran, you're going to look guilty." Yeah, but you going home! You want to look innocent in jail? I'd rather look guilty at the mall."
Luffy&Zoro&Nami&Usopp&Sanji&Chopper&Robin&Franky&Brook
Posts: 690
01/24/12 11:05 PM
Posts: 398
01/24/12 11:06 PM
scshift wrote:cap1229 wrote:Legend status? hmmmNo exaggeration. He's arguable the most well-known athlete in the world, and one of the most talked about, whether it's good or bad.Everyone knows who he is, whether or not they like basketball or anything. He's that guy.
cap1229 wrote:Legend status? hmmm
Posts: 1206
01/24/12 11:07 PM
Save ↓ More
One of the great curiosities in modern sports is the Chinese people’s lavish affection for Kobe Bryant. During last year’s Beijing Olympics, he was greeted with a rapturous reception and mobbed everywhere he went. He appears in commercials and on billboards, has a popular Web site and had a reality show on Chinese television. He sells more NBA jerseys there than Yao Ming.
On Tuesday in Los Angeles, the love affair will reach a new level. Not only is Mr. Bryant accepting an award from the Asia Society for his work as a “cultural ambassador,” the ceremony will be attended by Liu Peng, China’s “Minister of Sport” and a member of China’s Communist Party Central Committee.
Enlarge Image
Kobe Bryant, at the Beijing Olympics last year, where the Chinese greeted the basketball star with enthusiasm.
China’s embrace is largely an appreciation of Mr. Bryant’s basketball talent—he won his fourth NBA title earlier this month with the Los Angeles Lakers. “He reminds everyone of Michael Jordan,” says Shen Zhiyu, a senior basketball writer for Titan Sports, China’s largest sports daily.
But it is also a reflection of a deliberate campaign by Mr. Bryant to make inroads in the world’s most-populous country. In addition to his frequent visits to China (a planned trip in late July will be his fourth in as many years) and his considerable work on behalf of sponsor Nike, he’s assuming another identity: philanthropist.
In an attempt to tap into the Chinese government’s growing interest in promoting charity, Mr. Bryant is establishing the Kobe Bryant China Fund. The organization will partner with the Soong Ching Ling Foundation, a charity backed by the Chinese government, to raise money within China earmarked for education and health programs. Mr. Bryant’s existing fund, the Kobe Bryant Family Foundation, will also work to strengthen ties between the two countries by teaching middle-school students in the U.S. about Chinese language and culture. Mr. Bryant declined to say how much he is donating to the fund.
“At the elite level, China and the U.S. have already connected, but there is no grass-roots connection,” says Donald Tang, who is the founder and CEO of financial advisory firm CITIC Securities International Partners. Mr. Tang, who will help guide Mr. Bryant’s China fund, says the athlete’s popularity can help forge that connection. “I think he can be a one-man State Department, reaching directly to the people.”
On Tuesday, Mr. Bryant will accept an award from the Asia Society for his work in building cultural bridges to the country.
Mr. Bryant is the rare American star athlete with international credentials. He spent much of his childhood in Italy where his father, Joe Bryant, played professional basketball. He speaks Italian and Spanish. “I have a curiosity about other cultures and an openness to them, as a result of growing up overseas,” he says.
Mr. Bryant’s public image is not spotless. He has squabbled publicly with former teammate Shaquille O’Neal and drawn fire for his tactics in contract talks. In 2003, authorities in Colorado charged him with sexual assault. Mr. Bryant admitted having sex with his accuser but insisted it was consensual. The case was dismissed after his accuser declined to testify against him. A civil suit was settled out of court.
In China, none of that seems to matter. Terry Rhoads, the American managing director of Zou Marketing, a Shanghai sports consultancy who steered Nike’s entry into China, says Mr. Bryant seems to have a solid sense of how to navigate in the country. “Chinese fans adore Kobe on the court, but they also want to see affection for Chinese culture and people,” Mr. Rhoads says. “The more time he spends in China, the more he will endear himself to millions of basketball-loving Chinese.”
Mr. Rhoads says Mr. Bryant’s charitable initiative could have a profound impact on a nation that is just developing a culture of individual charitable efforts. After last year’s devastating earthquake in Sichuan, Mr. Yao personally donated about $293,000 and took donations from other NBA players. When Sichuan native Zheng Jie, a tennis player, made it to the semifinals of last year’s Wimbledon women’s singles draw, she donated her prize money to earthquake relief. These efforts were well received in China. The government seems to hope that philanthropy by athletes and other celebrities will encourage newly prosperous entrepreneurs to give money as well.
Mr. Bryant’s U.S.-focused Kobe Bryant Family Foundation, which has sponsored after-school programs in Los Angeles for several years. It will pay the salaries of four teachers who, beginning this fall, will teach Mandarin and Chinese culture to middle-school students.
“I want to help these kids see the possibilities of China and just understand that the world is much, much bigger than what they see around them,” Mr. Bryant says. “It helps show them that anything is possible and they should not be afraid to dream big. You’re not just locked in to one city.”
Mr. Bryant’s growing profile in China is good news for his sponsors and also for basketball, which has emerged as one of the country’s favorite sports. Nike has made significant investments in the country. With sales exceeding $1 billion, Nike says China is its second-largest market outside the U.S.
Sports have always played a large role in bridging between China and the outside world. Most famously, the “ping-pong diplomacy” of the early ’70s saw Chinese and American table-tennis teams compete against one another as a precursor to a thaw between the nations. The spectacle of the Beijing Olympics last year was China’s greatest-ever turn on the world stage. “China began promoting sports in this era because it was one of the few diplomatic channels open to it,” says Susan Brownell, an American professor who recently completed two years at Beijing Sport University’s Olympic Studies Centre.
Also, she says, a large part of Chinese public life consists of ceremonies and symbols rather than public debate. “Sports serve this function now because of their largely non-verbal character,” she says.
LOS ANGELES LAKERS
Posts: 9848
01/24/12 11:09 PM
Posts: 4660
01/24/12 11:12 PM
AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:scshift wrote:cap1229 wrote:Legend status? hmmmNo exaggeration. He's arguable the most well-known athlete in the world, and one of the most talked about, whether it's good or bad.Everyone knows who he is, whether or not they like basketball or anything. He's that guy.Ali Jordan Just to name two.Delusional.
Posts: 399
01/24/12 11:13 PM
Just bLAzed wrote:scshift wrote:cap1229 wrote:Legend status? hmmmNo exaggeration. He's arguable the most well-known athlete in the world, and one of the most talked about, whether it's good or bad.Everyone knows who he is, whether or not they like basketball or anything. He's that guy.China loves him
Posts: 400
01/24/12 11:14 PM
scshift wrote:AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:scshift wrote:No exaggeration. He's arguable the most well-known athlete in the world, and one of the most talked about, whether it's good or bad.Everyone knows who he is, whether or not they like basketball or anything. He's that guy.Ali Jordan Just to name two.Delusional.I was talking about current, active athletes.
AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:scshift wrote:No exaggeration. He's arguable the most well-known athlete in the world, and one of the most talked about, whether it's good or bad.Everyone knows who he is, whether or not they like basketball or anything. He's that guy.Ali Jordan Just to name two.Delusional.
scshift wrote:No exaggeration. He's arguable the most well-known athlete in the world, and one of the most talked about, whether it's good or bad.Everyone knows who he is, whether or not they like basketball or anything. He's that guy.
Posts: 29234
01/24/12 11:16 PM
940sicc3 wrote:
Posts: 1273
01/24/12 11:18 PM
DIOR PAINT wrote:His parents tried to warn him from day one.
Posts: 1274
01/24/12 11:20 PM
Posts: 29235
01/24/12 11:21 PM
MrDoeBoI wrote:Well Kobe will bounce back it happens to the best of them. Look at Jordan his settlement was for $168 Million
Posts: 4661
01/24/12 11:22 PM
AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:scshift wrote:AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:Ali Jordan Just to name two.Delusional.I was talking about current, active athletes.BeckhamWoodsJust to name two more.
scshift wrote:AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:Ali Jordan Just to name two.Delusional.I was talking about current, active athletes.
AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:Ali Jordan Just to name two.Delusional.
Posts: 402
01/24/12 11:39 PM
scshift wrote:AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:scshift wrote:I was talking about current, active athletes.BeckhamWoodsJust to name two more. I disagree. How many people aspire/look up to those two versus Kobe? Beckham more than Tiger Woods, I mean how many people actually know anything or follow golf?Kobe has men and women, young and old looking up to him. But regardless, the point is that he's up there.
AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:scshift wrote:I was talking about current, active athletes.BeckhamWoodsJust to name two more.
scshift wrote:I was talking about current, active athletes.
Posts: 29
01/24/12 11:45 PM
MonStar1 wrote:
Posts: 4662
AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:I don't know about all of that, especially after this really hits the fan. What has Kobe Bryant ever done, other than dribble a basketball? At least Beckham appears to be concerned with global issues, but Tiger, not so much. Vanessa's got her paper from him, so she really doesn't give a damn about what happens to him now. He didn't care about her, baggin' chicks left and right, then even raw doggin' it on random chicks. She hold the keys.......this chump is toast in the U S.In Asia, they really don't care about Women's Rights over there, so he may get a nod, but it ain't the U S.
Posts: 403
01/24/12 11:56 PM
scshift wrote:AKA LONGSTROKE wrote:I don't know about all of that, especially after this really hits the fan. What has Kobe Bryant ever done, other than dribble a basketball? At least Beckham appears to be concerned with global issues, but Tiger, not so much. Vanessa's got her paper from him, so she really doesn't give a damn about what happens to him now. He didn't care about her, baggin' chicks left and right, then even raw doggin' it on random chicks. She hold the keys.......this chump is toast in the U S.In Asia, they really don't care about Women's Rights over there, so he may get a nod, but it ain't the U S. Yeah I guess you could just chalk Kobe up to be like Tiger, both are superstar athletes, premier sponsors from Nike who cheated on their wives and got busted.I'm not sure where Kobe is going now, but all I was saying was that he really is a king off the court. That's why I don't get why people say he's "lame" or a "loser"... like how exactly is he a loser again? He can get any girl, buy any car, any house, and beat anyone in basketball (not that any of that really matters but a lot of people like to use materials as a sign of status).And come on at that last statement. Are you equating being cheated on to women's rights? Does that mean that we in America don't care about "men's rights" over here since women cheat on men too? Lame shot...
Posts: 7891
01/24/12 11:57 PM
cap1229 wrote:i would watch if she's on it just to get it confirmed that he's a lame.
Posts: 953
01/24/12 11:59 PM
chezzer10 wrote:
Share This