Pubdate: Mon, 9 Feb 2009 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Hamilton Spectator Contact: http://www.thespec.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Lorraine Sommerfeld, The Hamilton Spectator Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Michael+Phelps LOOK, MOM IS USING A BONG Forget Michael Phelps -- You Have More Influence on Your Children Than Celebrities "Did you guys see the photo of Michael Phelps smoking a bong?" I asked. "Who?" said Ari, 14. "So?" said Christopher, 17. I have this crazy theory that the antics, good and bad, of celebrities propped up as heroes and antichrists are pretty much neither. The kerfuffle and fallout from yet another cellphone photo of a champion athlete doing something not so championlike away from the Olympic rings and media glare is a nonstarter. Granted, my kids are a little older now, but about the only thing that would have grabbed their attention is a photo of me taking a hit off a bong. That would have got the conversation going. Think about how often children ask what you did as a teenager, whether you've been drunk or smoked pot or done other drugs. That's where their interest lies, not in the 24-hour clip-a-minute news cycle that must be fed like an angry dragon, quantity over quality, meaningless tripe that is more ignored than ingested. Their first, best role model is right in front of them, day in and day out. And we think some athlete or actor has the power to mould our kids? Phelps is sponsored by, among others, Omega, Speedo, Kellogg, Subway, Visa and PureSport. Oh, and Hilton Hotels, but they surely had to give him a pass, given that a certain Hilton has defined bad behaviour for the current generation. I had to look those companies up because other than Speedo, I would have been guessing. If I saw a guy wearing a Speedo who wasn't sponsored by them, I would probably run screaming from the pool area with my eyes on fire. They are all free, of course, to give him vast amounts of money. Personally, I have a lot more respect for companies that sponsor things such as events or recreational leagues -- things that benefit thousands of the non-Michael Phelps of the world. A couple of years back, I watched a video of supermodel Kate Moss snorting lines of coke. Now, that is messed up. Yet, it cost her little. No major makeup or clothing contract that wasn't immediately replaced by a better one. Her income went up after the pretend scandal. They simply issued a kind of "tsk, tsk, Kate" admonition and went back to earning millions off her coke-weary bones. That says it all. People are commodities, and perhaps the rich and famous even more. As long as you're flying high -- literally, sometimes -- the sun will shine. But crash and burn, and you're on your own. Go too far, and nobody will even bother to hit the lights on the way out. Do we expect too much from mere mortals? Usually. Phelps is a 23-year-old kid on the ride of his life. I'm surprised that's the worst photo that's surfaced. Would I prefer he not smoke pot? I'm not his mother. I would prefer my sons didn't. You'd have to ask his parents. But Omega et al should be interested in the fact that despite that lovely media saturation of the eight gold discs around his neck, my normal sons would still be more impressed with their mother landing $5 million a year in endorsements, or, regrettably, seeing a picture of their mother smoking pot. Neither is gonna happen. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake