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Essay on The Importance of Good Role Models

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The Importance of Good Role Models

Charles Barkley stands in a dimly lit gym with a basketball squeezed between his beefy hands. He is only filming a commercial. Or is he? As he looks squarely into the camera, he declares, " I am not a role model...I am paid to wreak havoc on the basketball court" (Smith 1). After he says this, a question begins to form in the minds of the viewers. Who, then Charles, should be a role model? Now, just because this is a commercial for a basketball shoe does not mean Charles Barkley does not have a reply floating around in that shiny bald head of his. He retorts, "Parents should be role models. Just because I dunk a basketball, doesn't mean I should raise your kids" (1). Whether many people care …show more content…

That is why it is time for a change. That is why it is time for qualified people and people who want to be role models to be given a chance to be role models. Athletes such as Charles Barkley have recognized this need for a change. Dave Winfield, a former major- league baseball player with such teams as the New York Yankees and the former California Angels, recognizes this need for a change. He believes that athletes should not be the primary role models in a child's life. Instead parents, not athletes, entertainers or politicians, should claim the position of being a role model (Berlow 31). This statement not only speaks for itself, but it also poses an interesting question. If athletes themselves continue to declare themselves ineligible to be a role model, then why do people continually allow their children to admire these athletes for more than his/her sports abilities? At this point in time, the parents should know better. Parents would not allow their kids to admire some hoodlum on the street, but because sports are in a controlled atmosphere, they do not see the dangers in athletes being role models. As Charles Barkley puts it, "There are a million guys in jail who can play ball. Should they be role models? Of course not" (Berlow 35). Yet, many parents do not realize or do not want to admit that many athletes have a good amount of time on the "other" side of the law. The big message here is that being a

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