Violent Crime and American Football

| 2 Comments
I was looking at Google Trends the other day and something strange stood out to me: A rather unfamiliar name appeared three times in the top ten search result with two different spellings. I knew immediately that I had to do some kind of investigation to find out who this man was and why everyone was searching for information about him and the faux-celebrity known as Tila Tequila.

For a few years, the bisexual "Tila Tequila" (a strange name to give yourself -- her given name is Tila Nguyen) was extremely popular on the basis of her Myspace page and the reality shows that she was given in order to "find love." I wrote that in quotation marks because I do not believe that she ever had a hint of genuine interest in finding a spouse or partner of any sort through the program.

Clicking through Google, I found out Ms. Nguyen had been in a relationship with Mr. Shawne Merriman, an American football player for the San Diego Chargers. She had apparently attempted to leave his residence only to be choked and restrained by him.

Can one find a link between playing American football and engaging in violent behavior? Maybe it is just all of the arrests in the last few years that make it seem that way to me -- Michael Vick being just one of many. The Washington Post reported that there were 35 arrests of NFL players in 2006.

Does playing football make one more likely to engage in violent behaviors or do people who are predisposed towards the violent behaviors become attracted to football because of how inherently violent it is and therefore are more likely to engage in "extracurricular" violent behaviors because that is just their nature?

Is Plaxico Burress the NFL's gold standard or its abhorrent aberration?

I don't see so much of a hoopla being made about violent crimes being done by players of any other sport save for the occasional choking in basketball.

What are your thoughts on American Football and criminal violence by those that play it?

Related Entries

2 Comments

You pose an interesting argument, Gordon. I wonder if the sort of sport makes a difference? If the sport involves putting your hands on another player, does that lead to more violence or not: Soccer, hockey and football all rely on, at some point, one player touching another player while Baseball, Tennis and field sports don't really require touching the opponent.

Does that "touch" and "no touch" rule somehow influence off field behavior or not?

I have tried but failed to find hockey crimes. In soccer, a bigger problem lays with fans who get rowdy after the game.

I certainly have never heard of tennis criminals. :)

Leave a comment

Search BolesBlogs.com Logo
Panopticonic.com Logo
CarceralNation.com Logo
Memeingful.com Logo
DramaticMedicine.com Logo
ScientificAesthetic.com Logo
UrbanSemiotic.com Logo
RelationShaping.com Logo
David W. Boles' WordPunk Logo Small
10txt.com Logo
Boles Books Writing and Publishing Logo Small
Hardcore ASL Logo Small
David W. Boles
Script Professor Logo Small
Boles University Logo Small
David W. Boles' Celebrity Semiotic Logo Small

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Gordon Davidescu published on September 8, 2009 7:55 AM.

UPS Fails to Deliver was the previous entry in this blog.

Nuke Trucks in Your Neighborhood is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Recent Comments

  • Gordon Davidescu: I have tried but failed to find hockey crimes. In read more
  • David W. Boles: You pose an interesting argument, Gordon. I wonder if the read more