Posts Tagged ‘Gabby Douglas’

Gabby Douglas: I almost quit gymnastics to work at Chick-fil-A (+video)

(National Monitor) Olympic champion Gabby Douglas almost quit gymnastics to work at Chick-fil-A, according to the New York Daily News. Ms. Douglas and her teammates, McKayla Maroney, Kyla Ross, Aly Raisman and Jordyn Wieber, won the gold at this summer’s 2012 London Olympic Games.

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“I can get a job at Chick-Fil-A in Virginia Beach and live off the 14-grand I just won at World Championships,” Ms. Douglas wrote in her new memoir, “Grace, Gold & Glory.” “I just want to be a normal teenage kid.”

Ms. Douglas’ journey to the 2012 London Olympic Games was not an easy one. In addition to the grueling workout schedule and training sessions, the gold medal-winning gymnast also had to deal with resentment against her father.

According to her memoir, Ms. Douglas had not seen her father for two years when she happened to spot him up in the stands at a meet before the Olympics. The gymnast said that the sight of her father put her on edge before the competition.

“Dad began telling the media how he always supported me in my gymnastics career,” Ms. Douglas wrote. “The truth is that he didn’t.”

Ms. Douglas said that her father texted her later that day asking that she autograph a few items for her.

Ms. Douglas and her teammates recently visited the White House and met with President Barack Obama. According to The Associated Press, the gymnasts, known as the “Fierce Five,” missed a White House visit earlier this year because of their national tour schedule.

The Fierce Five’s Olympic success has thrust the gymnasts into the national spotlight, giving them the opportunity to ring the New York Stock Exchange closing bell, help Al Roker with the weather on NBC’s “Today” show and appear with David Letterman on CBS’ “Late Show.”

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Ms. Douglas’ teammate, McKayla Maroney, showed Mr. Letterman her now infamous “not impressed” expression.

Ms. Douglas and First Lady Michele Obama appeared together on the “Tonight Show with Jay Leno.” During the appearance, Mrs. Obama teased the gymnast for “splurging on a McDonald’s Egg Mcmuffin” after winning the gold medal.

“‘Yea, Gabby, don’t encourage that! But I’m sure it was on a whole wheat muffin.” Mrs. Obama said in response.

In her memoir, Ms. Douglas also discusses her struggles with insults at the Virginia gym where she began her training. She notes that when she was 12 years old one of her coaches told her that she needed a nose job. The gymnast’s rivals piggybacked on the coach’s suggestions and taunted Gabby about her nose.

Later, Ms. Douglas said, she asked her mom if she was pretty. Her mom said yes.

Ms. Douglas was the first African American to win the title of best all-around gymnast at the 2012 London Olympic Games.

“Oh, my gosh, I forgot about that,” Ms. Douglas said after winning the gold medal, according to SI.com. “It’s definitely an amazing feeling and great honor to be the first African-American to win. I hope I can inspire people. My mother told me that I can inspire a nation.”

News Source:

National Monitor

 

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Gabby Douglas Tosses First Pitch at Mets Game

Gold-medal winning Olympic gymnast Gabby Douglas threw out the first pitch at Citi Field before Thursday’s Mets-Rockies game.

“I’m a little more nervous, Douglas said before the big pitch. Everyone just tells me to throw the ball hard, so I’m going to throw it hard.”

The gymnast made a strong throw to Robert Carson and received a loud ovation from the crowd.

Getty Images - Olympic games gold medalist Gabby Douglas, left, poses for a picture with New York Mets third baseman David Wright.

The appearance was part of a post-Olympic publicity tour for Douglas, who also recently sat down with Oprah Winfrey, Jay Leno and David Letterman.

“I wanted everyone to know my story, know where I came from, know my background  because it was not easy,” Douglas said, according to the New York Daily News. “I had to face a lot coming through this journey, a lot of sacrifices, difficulties, challenges, and injuries. I wanted everyone to know it’s still possible for anyone really. I wanted to make them know to never give up and always keep fighting, because though times may be tough, the sacrifices do pay off, so just keep pushing towards your dream and just love it at the same time and enjoy it,” Douglas said.

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“Olympic Champion” Gabby Douglas’s hair sets off Twitter debate

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Black women’s hair has always been a hot button topic even before Gabby Douglas stepped onto the world stage. Recently viewers complained on Twitter that the young champions hair looked unkempt, social media and bloggers then erupted with incredulous condemnation of those shallow enough to focus on the 16-year-old’s natural hair.

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And Douglas’s gold medal-winning performance Thursday in the gymnastics individual all-around did not silence the haters, who were still atwitter on Twitter.

“This little girl just won a gold medal and is representing her country, and people are talking about her edges? Really?” said Demetria L. Lucas in an interview Friday. Lucas’s memoir, “A Belle in Brooklyn,” chronicles the fun and frustration of life as a single black woman.

Earlier in the week, right after the cyber-heckling began with Douglas’s first performance, Lucas came to her defense on Essence.com: “You really want her sitting up in the Olympic Village thinking about a hot comb or some lye right now, with all that’s on the line?”

Apparently, some people did.

“Why hasn’t anyone tried to fix Gabby Douglas’ hair?” sniped one on Twitter.

Another huffed: “gabby douglas gotta do something with this hair! these clips and this brown gel residue aint it?”

Hair as a cultural and political statement has long been a sensitive subject of debate among black people. Thanks to social media and Douglas’s stunning achievement of becoming the first black woman to win the Olympic gymnastics women’s individual all-around competition, the family spat has spilled into a public forum, generating coverage from news organizations around the world. Some black people are shaking their heads about the focus on Douglas’s hair; some white people are scratching their heads because they don’t know why her tresses have caught the attention of the hair patrol in the first place.

In the 1960s, when African Americans were implored to be proud of their dark skin and natural hair, black women sported afros — short and sassy or big and billowy. Since the 1990s, young African Americans have rocked dreadlocks and braids, which are particularly popular among artists. Straightened hair, however, has never gone out of style and continues to draw criticism from those who say it is an attempt by black people to mimic the texture of white women’s hair. But for many black women, straight, perfectly styled hair is a shield against a society that doesn’t appreciate afro-centric features. Black women’s obsession with straight hair and weaves was the subject of the much-talked-about 2009 documentary “Good Hair” by comedian Chris Rock.

Now, black women are in the midst of another natural-hair revolution, with many abandoning chemical straighteners, or relaxers, in favor of natural hair — from simple afros to springy, gel-enhanced curls and twists. The movement is a popular subject of discussion on talk shows and has spawned several blogs and Web sites. This week, the media was abuzz over Oprah Winfrey showing off her natural tresses on the cover of the September issue of her magazine.

Sisters need to relax. It shouldn’t matter how black women wear their hair. But it does, says Tina Opie, an assistant professor of management at Babson College in Wellesley, Mass., because “hair is identity.” For black women who “see hair as a signifier of identity — of class, ethnicity, of gender — it matters. So when these black women see Gabby Douglas wearing her hair in a way they see as sub-par, they view it as a threat, something that will negatively impact how others view them as well. She’s a representative of the collective,” Opie said.

Opie says this undermines the argument that the haters are themselves self-hating, as some observers have suggested. “If they didn’t care about being black women, they wouldn’t care about how she looks. What they’re saying is, ‘Listen, Gabby, you’re on the international stage representing us, so do it well!’ ”

But, Opie says, the women who cringe at the sight of Douglas’s frizzy edges and kinky kitchen (translation: the tight, curled hair at the nape of the neck) need to ask themselves: “Does her hair trump her performance? She’s won two gold medals and for the discussion to be about her hair as opposed to the great honor she’s bestowing on African Americans and the United States, I think we really have to ask ourselves: Why?”

One of the best retorts to those who seem to have gotten themselves all tangled up over Douglas’s hair was this gem on Twitter from @AmandaMarcotte: “If you want to ride Gabby Douglas for her hair, you should be open to her coming over to critique your muscle tone.”

News Source:

Washington Post

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Gabrielle Douglas delights as US dominance continues

Published by EOTM News Editor on August 2nd, 2012 - in Breaking News, Olympics 2012, Sports, Sports News, World News


Douglas delights as US dominance continues (via AFP)

Gabrielle Douglas boldly triumphed in the women’s individual gymnastics final on Thursday to give the United States their third consecutive Olympic female champion. The 16-year-old from Virginia known as “The Flying Squirrel” also became the first black woman in history to lift the Olympics’ most prestigious…

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