Last night I watched the latest episode of The
Apprentice: Celebrity Edition. I have been
pulled into the series this year largely because of the
compelling finishes where The Donald lectures
celebrities about their work habits and managerial
ineptness. Dennis Rodman has been a draw because of his
incredibly bad behavior.
This was Dennis’ week. His teammates chose him to be the
project manager because they hoped he would rise to the challenge
if he was running things. It worked, for a short while,
then he drank enough to go past caring. First, he got
angry. Then, he absented himself from the project he was
supposed to direct.
The men’s team lost, which gave rise to the beautiful
moment. Motorcycle entrepeneur and reality star Jesse James
confronted Dennis Rodman with his drinking problem. The
others readily agreed with the diagnosis. Rodman got angry
and defensive, mostly offering support of his own worthiness by
adverting to his NBA career which has been over for some time
now. Finally, getting nowhere, Rodman said in frustration,
“I . . . I could kick all y’all’s asses. Everyone one
here.”
Now, I’m not sure that is actually true. Jesse James, for
example, was a professional bodyguard at one point. But
James didn’t respond to Rodman’s provocation with a physical
challenge. His actual reply was devastating:
“Then why don’t you kick our asses at being a good
person?”
Rodman sat silent.
I called this a beautiful moment for the natural law because
Jesse James put the idea out there for millions of people whether
he or they realized it. We know what a good person
is. We expect people to aspire to that AND to achieve it.
At a minimum, we expect people to be honest, to keep their
promises, to be reliable, and to moderate their own behavior out
of respect for others. These are things Thomas Aquinas
would say we can reason to from the premise of the social nature
of man. Rodman did none of that. And he was kicked
out.
topics:
Television