Bee: Worlds collide over Mobley's cap

VF21

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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/12173060p-13043131c.html

Fans hold court on skullcaps, NBA's culture clash



By Jon Ortiz -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Saturday, January 29, 2005


Two worlds collided when Cuttino Mobley wore a Kings logo skullcap for a recent TV interview: the world of older fans who can afford the average $45.28 NBA ticket and the hip-hop world embraced by many players and young fans.



The National Basketball Association this week warned Mobley about unintentionally violating a league ban on hats during TV interviews. The 29-year-old Kings guard has continued to wear a knitted skullcap for interviews, saying, "I'm a man of suits and ties, and you're worried about me wearing an NBA-logo hat?"
The league could take further action, but it's at a crucial crossroads, sports marketing experts say. The NBA's global reach has created a fan base that scrutinizes its every move from varying cultural perspectives and comes to different conclusions. Every decision could alienate some fans.

For example, 19-year-old Keenan Coleman, a student at Sacramento City College, said Mobley should be allowed to express his own style.


"They try to classify people who wear hats as gang members, but they're trying to read too much into it," said Coleman, who was wearing a black nylon cap Friday and diamond-studded gold caps on his teeth. "It's just like hip-hop; it's the fashion."

Rancho Cordova resident William Archer, 49, has a different take.

Mobley "is an employee. The employer has the right to set a dress code. That's it," the self-described Kings fanatic said. "I have to wear a uniform. He just can't wear a cap. What's the big deal?"

NBA officials said that the October hat ban ensures players' faces can be seen, crucial for a league that has built popularity by marketing individual players such as Michael Jordan, Sha quille O'Neal and LeBron James.

The league does not have specific bans on other apparel. The Kings tell players to "dress fully and appropriately" during road games and public appearances.

The NBA is at a marketing juncture caused by a generational split over culture, said USC professor Todd Boyd, author of "Young, Black, Rich and Famous: The Rise of the NBA, the Hip Hop Invasion and the Transformation of American Culture."

"Older fans and sportswriters feel disenfranchised," Boyd said Friday. "The game has changed, and they feel like they don't fit."

Older fans help fuel an estimated $265 million in annual luxury box sales, according to the United States Sports Academy. The league's average overall revenue was $207 million per team in 2002, up 15 percent from the year before, Forbes reported.

Part of the reason for the generation gap is hip-hop, Boyd said, a lifestyle criticized for music that some say glorifies violence, promiscuity and drugs.

Some hip-hop fashions - such as baggy pants and shirts and skullcaps - have their genesis in prison uniforms, hand-me-downs or clothes worn to shoplift. But today, youths - and many adults - have adopted these styles across America.

"There's a cultural ambivalence about hip-hop," said professor Susan Kaiser, chairwoman of textiles and clothing at UC Davis. "Its edge and coolness make it something that white kids from the suburbs emulate. On the other hand, there's a moral panic among parents about going too far down the road with gang and prison imagery. It's complicated because people misread the style and make a big deal out of things that don't mean anything."

Hip-hop music and the clothing associated with it crossed over into popular culture in the early 1990s, led by New York City entrepreneur Russell Simmons and his Def Jam Records music label. By 2003, hip-hop accounted for 13 percent of the $11.9 billion in CDs and downloads sold in the United States, the Recording Industry Association of America said.

"I think Mobley should warn the league," said Kevin Miles, a Sacramento entrepreneur who worked for Simmons in the early '90s on Coca-Cola ads with hip-hop themes. "They're trying to keep black athletes from expressing their culture."

When NBA players embraced hip-hop music and clothing, the league tightened its public-appearance rules, Boyd said. "There's a history of the league policing the look of its players over the last eight or nine years," he said.

In 2001, the league fined nine players $5,000 each for wearing game shorts below the knee, a style informed by hip-hop's saggy, baggy chic.

The NBA also airbrushed tattoos from a cover photo of Philadelphia 76ers star Allen Iverson on Hoop Magazine, a league publication.

And streetwise trash talking, once a specialty of the league's biggest star, Michael Jordan, can get today's players thrown out of a game.

But even as the league distances itself from hip-hop, it uses the culture to sell itself, said Robert Tuchman of TSE Sports & Entertainment, a New York sports marketing firm. He said the NBA uses hip-hop music and its stars at league events and in its advertising. It also promotes individual players, such as Iverson and O'Neal, who produce their own hip-hop CDs.

"Everything is about marketing in the NBA," Tuchman said. "Hip-hop is definitely part of the NBA culture. It's a sexy image that sells to young adults and helps make players celebrities. But the league also has a family product, so they have to toe the line. It's a difficult balancing act."

So when the league admonishes Mobley for wearing a skullcap - one with a Kings logo and NBA insignia - 13-year-old Eugene Buffington has trouble understanding the issue.

"That ain't cool because he was just wearing a beanie," said Buffington as he walked home Friday from school in Sacramento. "What's wrong with wearing a beanie?"

The California Middle School student said he takes fashion cues from magazines, clothing ads - and NBA stars such as the Kings' Mike Bibby, whose ensemble includes the jersey, shorts and matching white-and-purple headband.

The NBA will have to be more careful with its messages in the future, Tuchman said.

"You're catering to a lot of demographics when you talk about the NBA's global fan base," he said. "It's a smart organization, and they know that they'll have to cater to everyone to be successful. Besides, these things blow over. A hat company would be a perfect fit for Mobley right now. He'll probably get an endorsement deal. You watch."

The Bee's Jon Ortiz can be reached at (916) 321-1043 or jortiz@sacbee.com. Bee staff writers Sam Amick, Will Evans and Laurel Rosen contributed to this report.
 
I'm white and middle-aged and female. I'm not part of the hip-hop culture. But I LIKE the cap.

I don't think everything has to be about race.

And for the record? I don't feel alienated or disenfranchised either.

The one good thing I took from this article was at the very end:

A hat company would be a perfect fit for Mobley right now. He'll probably get an endorsement deal. You watch."

There's not a doubt in my mind that this will happen.

So now I'm torn. Do I go for the beanie OR do I hold out for the purple and black tall "cat in the hat" hat?

Hey, maybe I'll splurge and get both and really get the neighbors talking.

:D
 
Reminds mof the whole garbage the NFL went through with Jim Mc Mahon and head bands. The NBA would do well to look at what their real concerns are in terms of immage and try to find a compromise rather tahn tryto legeslate dress codes. High School teachers all across the country can tell them what a pain in the butt that can be.
 
Its not about THAT CAP. The rule was put there so idiots like Reggie Miller could not wear a hat pulled over his eyes during an interview. The reule was pur there to cirtumvent that happenong again. One a-hole can ruin it for everyone else when it comes to these things.
 
i agree with VF when she said in another thread dedicated to this topic (to paraphrase) that there are so many other things wrong with the league they should concentrate more on fixing those problems then banning little nit-picky things like hats

In my opinion...its total BS! I think the league wants the players to come to every game (home and away) dressed professionally, but they know that, that is close to impossible in happening, they know that they can't set a BIG rule like that cuz it would have so much bad backlash and they would never hear the end of it...so instead they are banning hats/headgear of any kind...IMO thats exactly why they are doing it....im sorry but banning the hats aren't gonna do much...next year there will be something else that the league doesn't approve of...the players are still gonna have these monster chains on, they are still gonna wear diamond studs as big as a marble in their ears, they are still gonna have tats all over their bodies and they're still gonna wear baggy clothes

and to go back to the "dress professionally" thing, I agree with Allen Iverson when he says (to paraphrase)...I ain't wearin a suit when i go to the playground to play ball so why should i have to wear one to play basketball here

bottomline: cultures are gonna clash...a lot of younger people aren't gonna see the problem and a lot of older people are gonna see it as one...the NBA TRYS to market themselves as this "young n' hip" league...i belive most of the NBA fanbase are people under the age of 30 to 35 so why not try to market to this crowd....and banning stupid little things like hats...although they may not think its gonna get a lot of media attention...it will and it HAS...isn't exactly making this fanbase happy

Im a 20 year black girl who is obsessed with fashion and clothing...and i like seeing the guys cleaned up lookin good in suits but at the same time i like to see their individual style....let them do what they want and be what they want to be

I hate how everyone compares the NBA to the hip hop world like its a bad thing. whats wrong with the hip hop world? I love it!

sorry to be so wordy but subjects like these REALLY REALLY pee me off
 
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I think behavior on and off the court, and a person's general demeanor, is far more important than a simple hat. How could anyone complain about Mobley? When he starts doing gangsta rap and shoots his chauffeur, then I'll say something about it. We don't even need to address the litany of NBA player-incidents for which the League should be concerned.

Mr. Mobley appears to be an articulate gentleman to me. Then again, who I am to judge?
 
kgrichwine said:
Its not about THAT CAP. The rule was put there so idiots like Reggie Miller could not wear a hat pulled over his eyes during an interview. The reule was pur there to cirtumvent that happenong again. One a-hole can ruin it for everyone else when it comes to these things.

I understand. What's sad is they pretty much threw out the baby with the bath-water on this one. Why didn't they simply say "Caps, hats, etc. must be worn in a manner that does not hide a significant part of the player's face."?

:D
 
I can't believe that a hat, and a Kings hat at that, is creating this much controversy. I'd understand more if he was wearing a hat that had gang signs on it, but come on, this is a hat that the Kings and the NBA are making money off of! It's a little weird. And, yes, I understand that the NBA wants the players face to show for the media, but as VF21 said, that can be handled without banning hats at all. The guy wore a hat to show he supports his new team, which is pretty awesome is my opinion, considering he had his whole life uprooted with no notice in the middle of the season. Give him a break!
 
VF21 said:
I understand. What's sad is they pretty much threw out the baby with the bath-water on this one. Why didn't they simply say "Caps, hats, etc. must be worn in a manner that does not hide a significant part of the player's face."?

:D

I believe you answered this question in your earlier post where you wonder about the "Cat in the Hat" tall hat. The NBA would like the NBA interviews to be about NBA related matters and NOT what hat is the guy wearing and how as well as keeping things in a professional matter. Its truely sad that there must be rules written over such triveal matters, but some players feel a need to make an *** of themselves and embarass the leauge at the same time.
 
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