From 2/8/2011:
Of the 225 countries that
watched the Super Bowl, nearly none play American football. Not familiar
with the rules of the game, they merely stared at a spectacle. Of all
American sports, football is one that has not spread overseas. It
doesn’t translate well. The amount of equipment required excludes poor
countries, which are most of the world, but there is perhaps much in its
nature that precludes universal attraction. It is extremely violent. On
every play, someone is knocked down, but he doesn’t writhe and grimace,
as in soccer, but gets right back up. With his padded shoulders and
helmeted head, a football player appears more than human. He is a
machine. A robot. A mascot for NFL broadcasts is a hulking, dancing
robot. With his thick neck and imperviousness to pain, a football player
is the opposite of your weepy feely, pencil-necked intellectual. He is
no wuss.
The objective of every football play is to gain real
estate. For tactical reasons, a soccer player often passes a ball
backward, sometimes even to his own goalie, but in football, there is
only the forward thrust. In fact, a backward pass is illegal. Gaining
yards is so important that it defines the success of every play, and of
every player who touches the ball. A running back had a successful day
if he gained 100 yards, even if he never scored and his team lost. In no
other sports are statistics kept of yards gained. A soccer or
basketball player can dribble the length of the field or court without
tallying anything, but in American football, each yard must be counted.
This
nearly continent-sized country has always defined itself by rapidly
expanding, by gaining yards and miles. Settle the coast, then foray
inland. Move the natives out of the way. Get rid of them. Kill them.
Half of Mexico was swallowed up, then Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Guam, the
Philippines, on and on, until now, America has at least 700 military
bases in 130 countries. That’s a lot of yards gained. Granted, there are
no people that have not engaged in territorial warfare with their
neighbors, but the relentless reach of the United States is
unprecedented.
Much more than land, America invades minds. There
is scarcely a brain alive that’s not constantly titillated and harassed
by American culture. Worldwide, people wear hats and shirts with
American words and slogans they don’t understand. They listen to
American lyrics and babble English words, even to themselves. In Vietnam
not too long ago, a woman asked if I liked the song, “Aleet Beeper.”
What she meant was “Careless Whisper.” Whatever its title and whatever
it meant, she liked that song. Also in Vietnam, I saw “POLO” stickered
onto a Japanese motorbike. This man had Americanized his modest rice
cooker, since America is glamorous and cool, much more so than Japan or
anywhere else, for that matter.
Humans are warm but machines are
cool. Notice the ubiquity of “cool” to denote anything positive in
American English. Americans aspire to become hard, tough, and efficient
machines that feel no pain. More specifically, they identify with their
car, that carapace that enwraps them daily and gives them personality
and status. Spending more time with his car than anything or anyone
else, the American’s best friend is his automobile. Nowadays, it can
even speak and tell him where to go. Year in and year out, car
commercials dominate the Super Bowl. Becoming anthropomorphic, they can
drive themselves and chat to each other. One can say that the main
objective of each Super Bowl is to sell more wheels.
Clueless of
the rules, foreigners still tune in to the Super Bowl, since empire
exudes not just power, but a kind of sexual allure. The alpha male also
demands vigilant attention. He is dangerous and you can’t hide from him.
By his cold-blooded calculations or whims, a person in the remotest
place may just die in his sleep, killed by a plane or drone, even
without knowing why. A recent report revealed that only eight percent of
Afghan men had even heard of the attacks on 9/11 of 2001, America’s
pretext for invading their country.
Even more than usual, war
lurked behind this Super Bowl. Before Christina Aguilera botched “The
Star-Spangled Banner,” Lea Michele sang “America the Beautiful,” so
there were two national anthems, so to speak. Troops with flags were
arrayed behind these singers. As Aguilera fluffed and mumbled, we caught
a glimpse of a grinning George W. Bush. Our war-criminal-in-chief would
appear again later, as would Condi Rice. After Aguilera’s last note,
military jets roared overhead. During the game, we were suddenly
introduced to Sergeant Salvatore Giunta, a decorated veteran of our
invasion of Afghanistan. He stood with other soldiers beyond the end
zone, waving. As has become customary, the announcers thanked all of
“our troops” worldwide “for all that they do.” Earlier, there was a shot
of American soldiers watching the Super Bowl in Afghanistan.
America
is beautiful, but so is every other country. None can match her in mass
media allure, however, in collective hypnosis. In a 1997 article for
the US Army War College, Major Ralph Peters sums up America’s cultural
edge, “Hollywood goes where Harvard never penetrated, and the foreigner,
unable to touch the reality of America, is touched by America's
irresponsible fantasies of itself; he sees a devilishly enchanting,
bluntly sexual, terrifying world from which he is excluded, a world of
wealth he can judge only in terms of his own poverty.” And, “The films
most despised by the intellectual elite--those that feature extreme
violence and to-the-victors-the-spoils sex--are our most popular
cultural weapon, bought or bootlegged nearly everywhere. American action
films, often in dreadful copies, are available from the Upper Amazon to
Mandalay. They are even more popular than our music, because they are
easier to understand.”
America is seductive. In fact, the
further one is from America, geographically, culturally or economically,
the more alluring she can become. Without an actual experience of her,
America is pure fantasy, a fabulous rumor.
One of history’s
oddest ironies is the name Mỹ Lai, which means “half-American” in
Vietnamese. Mỹ is “American.” Lai is “of mixed race.” If a person is “Mỹ
lai,” he is half-American. Further, Mỹ in Vietnamese also means
beautiful. In colloquial Vietnamese, America is the beautiful country,
and Americans, beautiful people. In the half-American village, of a
country that called America “beautiful,” American troops killed around
500 unarmed civilians on March 16th of 1968. Nearly all were women,
children and the elderly. America seduced, then killed. During one of
Israel’s episodic massacres of Arabs—there have been so many, I can no
longer remember which one—I saw a photo of a dead child wrapped in a
Mickey Mouse blanket. Murdered by an American bomb, she would be buried
with her beloved American icon. An American talking rat accompanied her
to eternity.
Watching the Super Bowl, Americans and foreigners
alike can come away with these clear messages: Fun is not free. We must
kill constantly so cars can be sold. We are a virile and vital nation,
at least on television. The seats at this spectacle are way out of reach
to you, even those who dwell right here, in the cartoony belly of the
beast, but your seats at home are free, as long as they haven’t been
bombed. Lastly, you can never be like us, the beautiful creatures you
see on our shows and movies, but you’re free to stare, stare and stare.
5 comments:
“During one of Israel’s episodic massacres of Arabs—there have been so many, I can no longer remember which one—l
Sabra and Shatila?
No, more recent, maybe around 2009?
Image is of T-shirt seen in Busan, South Korea in 2020, by the way.
Which team you rooting for this Super Bowl, Linh?
Neither. I've always been a Seahawks fan, but not so fervent as I get older. Plus, they've gone downhill lately. Russell Wilson is pure class, though.
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