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Thread: OM football players disrupt school play

  1. #1
    Senior Member slickdawg's Avatar
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    OM football players disrupt school play


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    Senior Member DawgInMemphis's Avatar
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    Not a good look. I can't say that I'm surprised at the maturity level of 18 year old "star athletes" who've been coddled and entitled their entire "adult" lives. I hope Freeze burns them.

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    Senior Member FISHDAWG's Avatar
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    wonder how many of those guys will not make it through 4 yrs

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    General Public Political Hack's Avatar
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    this should be on Out of Bounds. It's ridiculously absurd that someone can do something like this and yell gay slurs at people while they're performing and not be held accountable for it because they're football players.

    Freeze is training those boys to be good Christians.

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    Freeze had one player apologize for the entire group. Bullshit !! About normal for the preacher and his flock. They are learning well from their master.

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    Senior Member slickdawg's Avatar
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    Many members of an audience of mostly Ole Miss students, including an estimated 20 Ole Miss football players, openly disrespected and disrupted the Ole Miss theater department’s production of “The Laramie Project” Tuesday night at the Meek Auditorium.

    Cast members of the play, which is about an openly gay male who was murdered in Laramie County in Wyoming, said members of the audience became so disruptive at times that they struggled completing the play.

    According to the play’s director and theater faculty member Rory Ledbetter, some audience members used derogatory slurs like “***” and heckled both cast members and the characters they were portraying for their body types and sexual orientations. Ledbetter said the audience’s reactions included “borderline hate speech.”

    “I am the only gay person on the cast,” junior theater major Garrison Gibbons said. “I played a gay character in the show, and to be ridiculed like that was something that really made me realize that some people at Ole Miss and in Mississippi still can’t accept me for who I am.”

    According to several accounts, the football players attended the play because they are enrolled in a freshman-level theater course that requires the students to attend a specific number of plays throughout the semester.

    The play’s House Director Lyda Phillips, who is a theater major and an athletics ambassador, became aware of the reactions of the football players and called a coach, who then called department of athletics Associate Director of Academic Support Drew Clinton to come to the auditorium, according to the theater department’s performance report.

    “The football players were certainly not the only audience members that were being offensive last night,” Ledbetter said. “But they were definitely the ones who seemed to initiate others in the audience to say things, too. It seemed like they didn’t know that they were representing the university when they were doing these things.”

    After the second act of the play and after Clinton arrived, cast members were told backstage that the football players wished to apologize to the cast after the play for their actions, which included “taking pictures of cast members while making fun of them, talking on their cell phones, hollering at the females in the cast and talking to other audience members during the acts,” according to the performance report.

    “The football players were asked by the athletics department to apologize to the cast,” Ole Miss Theatre Department Chair Rene Pulliam said. “However, I’m not sure the players truly understood what they were apologizing for.”

    The football players’ apology, which was given by one undisclosed football player on behalf of the entire group, caused two cast members to cry.

    “I have been acting for seven or eight years, and a lot of that has been in front of young children,” sophomore theater major Rachel Staton said. “That was by far the worst audience I’ve ever performed in front of. It wasn’t all football players, but they seemed to be the leaders. If I can go support and respect the football team in their stadium, I feel like they should be able to support and respect me and my fellow cast members when we are doing a show.”

    The Ole Miss Athletics Department issued no comment, but Ledbetter said he received an emailed apology from a member of the athletics department that expressed that they knew about the incident and would handle it accordingly.

    Ole Miss Dean of Students Sparky Reardon was made aware of the incident Wednesday morning.

    “I am extremely sorry to hear that this happened,” he said. “We are still looking into the specifics to determine what happened.”

    This incident occurred just two weeks after the inaugural UM Creed Week, which honored the University Creed that begins with the words, “I believe in respect for the dignity of each person.”

    “It’s ironic in a way. In (“The Laramie Project’) we address these topics of hate against homosexuals,” Ledbetter said. “What happened in the audience (Tuesday night) was the very thing we were trying to portray in the show. (The incident) suggests we have a long way to go.”

    According to Ledbetter, while the majority of the audience was being disrespectful, not all members of the audience caused problems. He said that a few people even approached the cast after the show and showed their appreciation to the actors and actresses.

    Ledbetter believes that more needs to be done on campus concerning discrimination against homosexuality.

    “The unfortunate part of all of this is that I don’t think that the audience members that caused these problems really understood what they were doing,” he said. “Further education on all of this needs to be brought to light.”

    The play ran Thursday through Sunday last week, and no incident like Tuesday’s occurred. The production will run Wednesday through Sunday this week at the Meek Auditorium.

  7. #7
    General Public Political Hack's Avatar
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    y'all tweet this, facebook it, etc... they need to be taught a lesson and held responsible for this. I'm offended that this happened in MS.

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    Senior Member Bubb Rubb's Avatar
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    Even if you don't agree with a lifestyle or a political belief, or whatever, why would anyone be disruptive and disrespectful. They've got a lot of real solid individuals up there. This is what happens when you sell your soul on the recruiting trail - you get undesirables on your campus.

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    Senior Member smootness's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bubb Rubb View Post
    Even if you don't agree with a lifestyle or a political belief, or whatever, why would anyone be disruptive and disrespectful. They've got a lot of real solid individuals up there. This is what happens when you sell your soul on the recruiting trail - you get undesirables on your campus.
    Obviously the slurs are absurd, and that clearly isn't the setting to be yelling anything, but it is a little funny that football players are lambasted for yelling things at people trying to act, but if the actors went to a football game and booed or yelled just about anything, nobody would really care.

    Again, different settings, but a little strange when you think about it. I think both are wrong, btw.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Political Hack View Post
    y'all tweet this, facebook it, etc... they need to be taught a lesson and held responsible for this. I'm offended that this happened in MS.
    I've already noticed a few media guys tweet about it.

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    Senior Member DawgInMemphis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by C222 View Post
    I've already noticed a few media guys tweet about it.
    Geoff Calkins is talking about it on his radio show in Memphis right now.

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    Quote Originally Posted by DawgInMemphis View Post
    Geoff Calkins is talking about it on his radio show in Memphis right now.
    Someone get it to Deadspin or Clay Travis.

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    This thing could blow up huge if some of those very aggressive gay and lesbian rights activists got word of this. Very bad press for Ole Miss. Wonder if any of ESPN's favorite freshmen were involved?

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    Senior Member Jack Lambert's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Political Hack View Post
    this should be on Out of Bounds. It's ridiculously absurd that someone can do something like this and yell gay slurs at people while they're performing and not be held accountable for it because they're football players.

    Freeze is training those boys to be good Christians.
    It all depend on what kind of Christians he is training them to be, the ones who accepts all as gods children or the ones who condemn anyone who does not believe as they do.
    I don’t which kind Freeze is.

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    Quote Originally Posted by C222 View Post
    Someone get it to Deadspin or Clay Travis.
    Nevermind....Deadspin just tweeted about it. That was fast.

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    Senior Member BulldogDX55's Avatar
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    What I noticed about it is that 20ish freshman football players are all in a 1000 level theater class. I know that football players are put into easy classes, but damn.

    I do suppose it is so that they can lie more convincingly when questioned by the NCAA about impermissible benefits.

  17. #17
    Senior Member Jack Lambert's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Entodawg View Post
    This thing could blow up huge if some of those very aggressive gay and lesbian rights activists got word of this. Very bad press for Ole Miss. Wonder if any of ESPN's favorite freshmen were involved?
    If so I hope he wasn't wearing the rediculous bow tie.

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    Seems like their server isn't responding now.

  19. #19
    Senior Member engie's Avatar
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    Everyone needs to read the thread on SECrant. Some solid gold in that one...

  20. #20
    Senior Member BulldogDX55's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by engie View Post
    Everyone needs to read the thread on SECrant. Some solid gold in that one...
    Gotta love people rationalizing that it's okay for a kid to be beaten to death because one person wrote a book that says that drugs might have been involved, which is contrary to the widely accepted actual story.

    Pricks, all of them.

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