The Guardian (USA)

We need to stop talking about Antonio Brown as a football story

- Caira Conner

In the hours following Friday’s announceme­nt that wide receiver Antonio Brown was released by the New England Patriots amid mounting allegation­s of sexual misconduct only 11 days after signing with the team, the media served up a competitiv­e play-byplay on his status. TMZ reported Brown “looking sad” as he touched down in Miami. CBS pondered “why the Patriots could be in trouble if things get any worse”. Iterations of “Brown out. What now?” sprouted up innumerabl­y across the web. Brown, for his part, tweeted eight similar “thank you” messages to the Patriots for the opportunit­y and a “Just got fired on Friday” with a facepalm emoji. A sizable chunk of the thousands of comments in response to his posts invoked God and prayer for Brown’s resolve to stay strong and keep fighting. He capped off his thread with a photo sitting on the hood of a Rolls Royce in front of a private jet, with the caption: Beat the odds.

Brown will not face criminal charges for the accusation­s leading to his dismissal, including most notably one of rape in a civil lawsuit by his former trainer, Britney Taylor (Brown has denied the allegation­s). He took again to Twitter on Sunday morning to answer the headlines’ musings himself. He said he was quitting the NFL and took shots at Patriots owner Robert Kraft and his former teammate Ben Roethlisbe­rger. Earlier this week, Taylor spent 10 hours in discussion with the NFL investigat­ion team going over her lawsuit. Her social media profiles have been wiped clean.

This Friday will mark the one-year anniversar­y of Palo Alto University professor Christine Blasey Ford testifying before Congress about the sexual misconduct of then-nominee, now-sitting associate justice of the US supreme court, Brett Kavanaugh, when they were both in high school.

Much of the current related media

coverage is, like that of Brown, Kavanaugh-centered – on the fallout from the publicatio­n of The Education of Brett Kavanaugh, the New York Times’ woeful lapse in judgement when describing a second accuser, the ensuing correction, the President’s defense of Kavanaugh – the list goes on. Part of what has been lost in the swirl of this news cycle is the notion that through the act of testifying, Ford offered a platform to even have these kinds of conversati­ons. The problem is, she hasn’t been included in any of them. The conversati­ons happening now, one year after her coming forward and more than 30 years after the alleged assault, have to do with the man she accused: his actions, his character, his politics, his career.

I watched Ford’s testimony on my laptop at work. Watching her face, her movements – this wasn’t the testimony of an emboldened, empowered woman. This wasn’t a warrior, a fighter, or any of the other trite stereotype­s used to label women advocating for themselves. This was a profession­al woman, uncomforta­ble and subject to profound misinterpr­etation and condemnati­on on a very public stage, who was coming forward anyway.

One of the problems with conversati­ons around sexual misconduct, and abuse, is that we tend to oversimpli­fy the takeaways. We compress the narratives to soundbites: Did it happen or not? Can you remember every precise detail? Yes or no? It is stripped of the painfully complicate­d nuances it entails, of the deep ambivalenc­es, ambiguitie­s and contradict­ory feelings that can result when the assailant is a known acquaintan­ce. We don’t have enough of a safety net in place for these kinds of discussion­s to unfold postdisclo­sure, to cushion the aftershock of ongoing criticism and doubt. The alleged victim appears, discloses and is chased out of the public eye in a cloud of Twitter outrage. The news cycle and our attention moves on.

For now, Brown remains in limbo under ongoing NFL investigat­ion. But there is a sense of process taking place, legal formalitie­s that will help his story move forward. What is unclear is whether these events will yield a wider cultural understand­ing of how to care for victims after the disclosure, or whether the headlines will peak, fizzle and dry out. Today, it is still Brown’s future we’re waiting to hear about, not Taylor’s.

 ??  ?? Antonio Brown is the subject of a civil lawsuit. Photograph: Lynne Sladky/AP
Antonio Brown is the subject of a civil lawsuit. Photograph: Lynne Sladky/AP

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