Post#5 » by milesfides » Tue Jun 3, 2008 6:43 pm
I think the most compelling aspect of Kobe Bryant is that he is a human being, flaws and all. He's a 3-Dimensional person, not a sanitized, packaged product like Jordan. Jordan is like the Cleavers, a 1950s nuclear family, a protected ideal of what perfection should be "back in the day."
But Kobe's mistakes have always been analyzed, over-analyzed, under extreme public pressure. From his job to his private life, everything has been open to scrutiny from the lowest common denominator.
If his failures and his flaws make him "hated", it'll just be that much more inspiring when he does succeed. As Scoop presents it, Kobe's motivation arises from a place much deeper than a desire to be good at his job or a commonplace sense of competition. It's an addiction, an obsession, with his craft, like a Mozart, a Beethoven, in order to validate his past, present, and future, his existence itself.
I think it's nice to have idealized heroes, protected ideals. Whether it's MJ's deification or FDR's hidden polio, it's nice.
But all the thorns and thistles in Kobe's life irrevocably, and necessarily contribute to his unique story. Pride, Fall, Redemption, Grace, those are aspects of Kobe's journey that couch his story in reality while appealing to our imagination.
The fact that he's living it, that we're witnessing it, makes him all the more compelling to watch.
“OH! Caruso parachutes in! You cannot stop him - you can only hope to contain him!” -Kevin Harlan, LAL-GSW 4/4/19