Article about black USA gymnast Gabby Douglas and the criticism she is getting

Mr210

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In Defense of Gabby Douglas' Hair | Team Mom - Yahoo! Shine

Gabby Douglas is proudly representing her country in the Olympics. She's poised under pressure, performing gravity-defying athletic feats in front of an international audience. She's 16 and the second female African American U.S. gymnast to ever make the team. But instead of lauding her achievements, some people are slamming her for... not getting her hair done.

Related: Raising an Olympian: Gabby Douglas

Photo: TwitterPhoto: Twitter

Seriously? Douglas is an incredible athlete. When you're doing something like this on a 3.9-inch wide wooden beam set four feet above the ground, the last thing you're worrying about is your hair.

Gabby Douglas dominates on the balance beam, Thursday, Aug. 2. (Photo: Getty Images/Streeter Lecka)Gabby Douglas dominates on the balance beam, Thursday, Aug. 2. (Photo: Getty Images/Streeter Lecka)

Some critics insist that Douglas needs to properly represent the African American community, and how her hair looks is part of that. And yet, most of the negative comments about her hair are coming from other African Americans.
Photo: TwitterPhoto: Twitter

"I find it sad that I have seen more Black women post criticizing comments about Gabby's hair than I have comments of praise about her athleticism or adding color to USA Gymnastics since Dominique Dawes," writes Monisha Randolph at SportyAfros.com.
Photo: TwitterPhoto: Twitter
Many African American women choose not to work out in order to protect their hairstyle, Randolph points out. "The last time I checked when you play a sport, you sweat. I know I do. And when a Black woman who has chosen to wear her hair straight begins to sweat, her hair will (not might) begin to revert back to its natural coily, curly, or kinky state," she writes. "Some of us are sitting up right now with our hair done but suffering from high blood pressure, borderline diabetes, obesity, and/or a lack of energy. Oh, but the hair is on point."

Hair has always held a special significance in the African American community. Emmy Award-winning comedian Chris Rock was so struck by his daughter's obsession with her friend's hair that he made a documentary about it; in "Good Hair," he goes on a quest to better understand why hair is so important to so many black women.

"There's always this sort of pressure within the black community like, if you have good hair, you're prettier or better than the brown-skinned girl that wears the Afro or the dreads or the natural hairstyle," actress Nia Long told him when he interviewed her for his film.

"They say it's for the men, but it's really for the women. Because guys don't care" about a woman's hair, he points out. His theory is born out in the stream of tweets about Douglas's hair -- the most critical comments are by women. (Thankfully, some of the most supportive ones since have been by African American women as well.)

Instead of worrying about whether her hair is perfect, Douglas is focused on making history and winning Olympic gold. She is representing all Americans, not just one single group. She's achieved more by age 16 than most of us do in a lifetime. Shouldn't we be cheering her on instead of tearing her down?
 

froggle

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In Defense of Gabby Douglas' Hair | Team Mom - Yahoo! Shine

Gabby Douglas is proudly representing her country in the Olympics. She's poised under pressure, performing gravity-defying athletic feats in front of an international audience. She's 16 and the second female African American U.S. gymnast to ever make the team. But instead of lauding her achievements, some people are slamming her for... not getting her hair done.

Related: Raising an Olympian: Gabby Douglas

Photo: TwitterPhoto: Twitter

Seriously? Douglas is an incredible athlete. When you're doing something like this on a 3.9-inch wide wooden beam set four feet above the ground, the last thing you're worrying about is your hair.

Gabby Douglas dominates on the balance beam, Thursday, Aug. 2. (Photo: Getty Images/Streeter Lecka)Gabby Douglas dominates on the balance beam, Thursday, Aug. 2. (Photo: Getty Images/Streeter Lecka)

Some critics insist that Douglas needs to properly represent the African American community, and how her hair looks is part of that. And yet, most of the negative comments about her hair are coming from other African Americans.
Photo: TwitterPhoto: Twitter

"I find it sad that I have seen more Black women post criticizing comments about Gabby's hair than I have comments of praise about her athleticism or adding color to USA Gymnastics since Dominique Dawes," writes Monisha Randolph at SportyAfros.com.
Photo: TwitterPhoto: Twitter
Many African American women choose not to work out in order to protect their hairstyle, Randolph points out. "The last time I checked when you play a sport, you sweat. I know I do. And when a Black woman who has chosen to wear her hair straight begins to sweat, her hair will (not might) begin to revert back to its natural coily, curly, or kinky state," she writes. "Some of us are sitting up right now with our hair done but suffering from high blood pressure, borderline diabetes, obesity, and/or a lack of energy. Oh, but the hair is on point."

Hair has always held a special significance in the African American community. Emmy Award-winning comedian Chris Rock was so struck by his daughter's obsession with her friend's hair that he made a documentary about it; in "Good Hair," he goes on a quest to better understand why hair is so important to so many black women.

"There's always this sort of pressure within the black community like, if you have good hair, you're prettier or better than the brown-skinned girl that wears the Afro or the dreads or the natural hairstyle," actress Nia Long told him when he interviewed her for his film.

"They say it's for the men, but it's really for the women. Because guys don't care" about a woman's hair, he points out. His theory is born out in the stream of tweets about Douglas's hair -- the most critical comments are by women. (Thankfully, some of the most supportive ones since have been by African American women as well.)

Instead of worrying about whether her hair is perfect, Douglas is focused on making history and winning Olympic gold. She is representing all Americans, not just one single group. She's achieved more by age 16 than most of us do in a lifetime. Shouldn't we be cheering her on instead of tearing her down?

:russ::heh:
 

Turenne

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Yet another Gawd-bothering loon. What the fukk is it with the youth of America and their 'praise the Lord' nonsense? :snoop:
 

ZILFIN

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I don't think...scratch that, I KNOW I'm not going to read that sh*t
 

swimmingpools

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Some of us worry about the wrong things. The girl is 16 winning gold medals and theyre fixated on some hair?

And no its not just black women making fun of her hair, its men too.
 
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it looked like she was transitioning and sometimes transitioning hair does look weird especially if you don't alter the kinky hair or curl the straight portion. she's a kid though, so i didn't say anything when i saw it

of course the criticism will be mostly from black people. i don't notice intricate things about other races and their features, but there are much bigger things to worry about than hair.
 
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Who gives a fukk... :comeon:

you, you replied.

i was not one of the gossipers, but people gossip about athlete's hair even on this forum. lebron has incredible talent, but that doesn't stop the jokes about his hairline :leon: do you respond "who gives a fukk" to those guys?
 
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