Posted on 23 July 2020
In its third episode of The Arena, TNT again hits viewers with Black Lives Matter, "no justice no peace," "I can't breathe" protest anger, right out of the starting gate. 'The Arena' also strikes positive tones with a feature on NBA arena workers who lost their jobs because of the COVID19 shutdown and another on a woman who brought people together in peace in the streets of Philadelphia. The subject of black-on-black crime surprisingly emerged during the broadcast.
The curtain opens to Carvens Lissaint, a cast member of Hamilton, reciting "Embers in the Dark.":
"Watch how we rise together, how we ascend past the fear, take flight past the hate. Our love for the game intact, alive, and true. Our swag is fly as ever, still powerful, strong, and new ... We keep marching and moving, break down these institutions, so pass the rock so we can slam dunk this revolution. Can you hear it, the anthem of our youth?"
The myth that police tear-gassed peaceful protesters for President Trump to walk over to a church is perpetuated, but the tone lightens up considerably with a positive feature on Stephania Ergemlidze, a social media star and entrepreneur in Philadelphia, who set up a basketball hoop in the street and brought people together in peace through shooting baskets. Cops and protesters alike participated in order to "break that ice."
Video of the event includes people calling for more "positive things like this so that we can bring our city of Philadelphia community as well as our world back together" and Ergemlidze explaining that "yelling at the police officers wasn't going to create the change. We're all in this community together. It's all about just breaking that tension, creating, like, a place for people to be able to come out and just be happy and enjoy themselves."
Ergemlidze says hooping it up won't end racism, but, "We're just trying to break the tension so that maybe we can come together as a community and find the right solutions to get to a better place in our country and in our society."
Another segment focuses on the struggles of NBA arena workers who lost their income when the season was suspended in March. Some were merely told to apply for unemployment, but several NBA players donated to funds to support the workers.
Later, Barkley (seen in above file photo) says he's been stopped by the cops 100 times, but only had three bad experiences. He said that most of the time, respectful police asked him for an autograph.
Barkley, the resident knucklehead on The NBA on TNT broadcasts, actually talked sense in part 3. He said empathy is "what we're asking from white people right now. Listen, we ain't asking for no handouts -- We're not asking for revenge. We're not asking for revenge, because we can't go and change what happened 400 years ago. All I'm asking for, and all we're asking for, like, have empathy, sympathy, understand what we are going through ..."
Additionally, Draymond Green brought up the black-on-black crime, seldom discussed by those on the Left, and the recent shooting death of Michigan State University long jumper Tony Martin.:
"... We have to continue takin' care of our own, too. We're killing our own. That's a young man who had a very promising future. And as someone who made it out of that city, it's not every day that someone makes it out. You actually had a kid that made it out, and you know, he's killed at a gas station. So, we have to do better amongst each other and take care of each other, because it's hard enough already.'
Charles Barkley agreed.:
... We have to address black-on-black crime. We have to address that. We've got to start treating each other better with more respect. ... And we have to address that, because we can't ask white people to respect us if we don't respect ourselves. I've always said that. To get respect, you have to demand respect, but you have to show other people respect. And that's something we're going to have to address among ourselves."
The Arena continues Thursday and Friday nights on TNT.