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Viva Las Espuelas
05-31-2007, 04:18 PM
Grateful Amaechi to lead gay pride parade in Salt Lake City

Associated Press





Updated: May 31, 2007, 4:33 PM ET




SALT LAKE CITY -- John Amaechi (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/players/profile?statsId=3063) still has fond memories of Salt Lake City despite his struggles on the basketball court.

The first former NBA player to acknowledge he is gay said his affection for the community balanced out his scant playing time and clashes with his coach. In memoirs published in February, he called Salt Lake City "the hippest, gayest place east of San Francisco."

Amaechi returns to celebrate that by serving as the grand marshal for this weekend's Utah Pride Parade. He has also accepted grand marshal honors for parades in Los Angeles and Chicago.

"I really owe Salt Lake. My time there would have been so multiply miserable had it not been for so many people -- gay, straight and otherwise -- who made my time there so special," he said.

Amaechi signed with the Jazz in 2001, feeling betrayed by his former team, the Orlando Magic (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/clubhouse?team=orl), who he claims reneged on a promise of a rich contract. His mentality that basketball was his job -- not his life -- didn't fly with Utah coach Jerry Sloan, Amaechi said.

He made several good friends in Salt Lake City and often hosted parties at his downtown loft, which is where he stayed when those friends headed to Salt Lake's gay clubs. Guarded about his sexuality while in the NBA, Amaechi was careful about going out.

He is naturally reserved: Don't expect to see Amaechi dancing on a float Sunday. He'll leave that to some friends joining him in the parade.

"I'm not as dynamic and sexy," he said. "I'm much better at giving a few words."

Giving a few words is what Amaechi does these days with his company, Animus Consulting. He works as a motivational speaker, addressing organizations and corporations in his native Britain and the United States, usually on the importance of diversity and communication. He also runs the Amaechi Basketball Centres Foundation in England, which uses the sport to teach life skills to children.





Coming out has resulted in many book signings and invitations to speak, mostly to gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered groups.

"Now it seems in America I'm just 'that gay guy,'" he said.

That fixation probably needs to change before a professional male athlete will come out while still playing, Amaechi said. He said he hasn't heard from any former teammates currently in the NBA since his admission. Former Penn State teammates and retired Jazz star Karl Malone (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/players/profile?statsId=213) and his wife have reached out to him.

"Essentially, they e-mailed and called to express that they fully supported me, and they knew the content of my character and it doesn't change what they think about me," Amaechi said.

He jokes that he and Malone couldn't have less in common, but somehow the two got along -- perhaps because of their differences. Amaechi expressed great respect for his conservative former teammate.

A city known for its conservatism, Salt Lake has been identified as a gay-friendly travel destination in recent years. Mayor Rocky Anderson supports gay rights, and Census numbers suggest the city has a significant number of gay households.

Utah's gay pride celebration has expanded this year to run from Friday through Sunday and includes concerts by En Vogue and Sheena Easton.

As a single-day event in the past, it drew estimated crowds of more than 30,000.

"This city has just come the distance in the last 10 years," organizer Terry Mitchell Nani said.

Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press

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hater
05-31-2007, 04:19 PM
mormowned

ObiwanGinobili
05-31-2007, 04:47 PM
well you learn something new everyday. (salt lakes gay friendlyness)

MadDog73
05-31-2007, 04:59 PM
Hmm, go figure.

SLC is racist, but gay-friendly?

RJF08
05-31-2007, 05:28 PM
Hmm, go figure.

SLC is racist, but gay-friendly?


Uh, okay? I love generalizations(sarcasm). They make people look pretty foolish.

Summers
05-31-2007, 05:49 PM
That's awesome! Did y'all see him on the Daily Show when his book first came out and Stewart asked him, "How hard was it, when you were in the NBA, to hide the fact that you are British?"

SAtown
05-31-2007, 05:53 PM
I hope heterosexuals don't start throwing shit at the floats or whatever.

GrandeDavid
05-31-2007, 06:11 PM
Uh, okay? I love generalizations(sarcasm). They make people look pretty foolish.

I agree.

Don Quixote
05-31-2007, 06:14 PM
Hmm, go figure.

SLC is racist, but gay-friendly?

It never ceases to amaze me how people automatically assume that conservative types are racist, sexist, homophobe, anti-environment (for dirty water, dirty air, etc.), etc.? I assure you, as a student at a leading evangelical institution, that these traits do not characterize any of us, faculty or students. Nor does it characterize any of us "paleo-cons" (I guess, the counterpart to a neo-con, whatever those are). But it does, sometimes, annoy us that people think we're these bad and evil people.

And I've never met any racist Mormons. Not one. I've met more (unfortunately) racist Christians out there than racist Mormons.

In fact, SLC is the most liberal, least Mormon city in all of Utah. By Utah standards, that's still pretty conservative, but they're only about 50% Mormon. Now ... go to Brigham City or Provo, or certainly southern Utah, and it's just about all Mormon.

They want to throw a gay pride parade? Fine, let em. It's the only parade they'll be having anytime soon.

slayermin
05-31-2007, 06:18 PM
I remember back when I was a retail computer salesman, there was this cool sales rep. from WordPerfect that used to stop by once or twice a month. He loved our store because we pushed WordPerfect and sold many copies.

Anyway, I am pretty sure he was mormon and he was cool as hell. Best sales rep. I have ever met.

Kori Ellis
05-31-2007, 06:25 PM
SLC isn't racist and they have better night clubs and rap music radio stations than San Antonio. :tu

Trainwreck2100
05-31-2007, 06:31 PM
they have better rap music radio stations than San Antonio. :tu


That is due to their higher "wigga" population. And our horrible rap stations.
:tu

Don Quixote
05-31-2007, 06:37 PM
And our horrible rap stations.
:tu

Isn't that redundant?

timvp
05-31-2007, 06:40 PM
In the downtown of Salt Lake, they have billboards touting gay clubs everywhere you look.

Don Quixote
05-31-2007, 06:41 PM
That is due to their higher "wigga" population. And our horrible rap stations.
:tu

Not as many wiggers in N.O. Our riff-raff is the old-fashioned kind -- complete with gold teeth, neck-toos, loud "music" bellowing from the Cadillacs at all hours of the night. (If I wanted to hear that sewage you're listening to, I'd be sitting in the car with you). :madrun

I take that back. The white neighborhoods -- Metairie, St. Bernard, Gretna, have alot of wiggers.

Don Quixote
05-31-2007, 06:42 PM
In the downtown of Salt Lake, they have billboards touting gay clubs everywhere you look.

What are they like on the inside?