This is getting unraveled. I'm with you on most of the other issues, though. Thanks for the info on the production companies.
A quick google came up with a CNNSI article that's from 1999:
NBA players have the highest average salary in professional sports, about $2.6 million annually, and the median salary is about $1.3 million. NFL players average about $900,000, and major league baseball pays an average of $1.45 million.
Your attempts to link the poor indentured servant in the Frontier league with Kobe Bryant aside, even a WNBA player makes 35-55 thousand for less than a year's work, and probably had a shot at a free college education.
Again, I have a hard time feeling sorry for the poor MLB rookie who makes as much before he's 25 as my wife and I do during our peak earning years. Even if it takes him an entire decade to make two million dollars, it ain't exactly picking cotton.
In the real world, there's a difference between a salaried employee and one working under contract. Those under contract are not eligible for promotions, raises, or benefits. The idea that a pro athlete should be given an opportunity to go to the front office of a team just because he played for them is as silly as the idea of letting the owner suit up because he bought the team. It's still something that happens far too often, if you look at examples like Matt Millen and Isiah Thomas.
The bottom line for me is that Jim Brown is en led to his opinion, but he should be wise enough to avoid his impulses when there's a microphone in his face. I absolutely reject the idea that anyone "owes" their ethnic group anything or that they are guilty of something nefarious if they simply choose to live their lives like everyone else does. People like Al Sharpton and Ted Kennedy preying on blacks in this country causes more damage than a hundred Kobe Bryants could fix, but Jim Brown doesn't seem to have the courage to take them on.