Greg Cote: Have a cup of AK-47 Espresso at a Cowboys game. Nuthin’ wrong with that, right Jerry Jones?
Greg Cote, Miami Herald
In an uncomfortably combustible combination, it is the team and it is the timing driving this latest controversy in sports.
This is the Dallas Cowboys. The club’s last heydays in the early-mid ‘90s are now older than some of its current players. “America’s Team” has become a faint, stale perfume, an almost mocking appellation. Yet this is a franchise, led by an owner who never met a sponsor dollar he didn’t like, that memories still hold up as one of the biggest brands in all of sports.
And this is the team that chose now to announce its new sponsorship with the gun-themed Black Rifle Coffee Company.
The team located in the same state as Uvalde, where six weeks earlier a mass killer with an assault weapon slaughtered 19 elementary school children and two of their teachers.
The team that chose to celebrate its new partnership one day after another coward with an assault rifle perched on a rooftop and sprayed death across a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park, Illinois, murdering seven innocents and wounding 54 others.
Two of the murdered were a young couple who leave behind a 2-year-old.
“#CowboysNation, please welcome America’s Coffee to America’s Team,” tweeted the Cowboys.
The predominant response across social media has not been especially welcoming, as one might imagine.
The tone deafness of the Cowboys’ partnership and when it was announced was roughly in league with Darren Bailey, a far-right Republican running for governor of Illinois, advising people to “move on” from the Highland Park massacre. This he said two hours after the carnage. Before the killer had even been caught.
Move on.
Don’t do anything about this national shame. No. Just move on. Until the next massacre. Then move on again. Until the next one after that.
A couple of things are true about the Salt Lake City-based Black Rifle Coffee Company.
And don’t get this wrong: This company has broken no laws. Heck, the coffee might even be great!
One: It was founded by a former Green Beret, Evan Hafer, and the company hires and otherwise supports veterans and first responders. That’s the good part.
Two: Hafer donates to very conservative causes including one called the America Reloaded PAC, according to the Federal Elections Commission database. He called his company “pro-Second Amendment” in a 2021 New York Times story. Which probably was obvious based on BRCC’s coffee blend names like AK-47 Espresso and Silencer Smooth and Murdered Out.
Two, part two: Black Rifle Coffee Company has been adopted by many in the far right, its company apparel seen worn by Kyle Rittenhouse and by some insurrectionists who stormed the Capitol on January 6. It is not unreasonable to say this company is, and rather proudly is, interwoven in the pervasiveness of American gun culture. Leaning into it.
It also may be worth noting there are plenty of veteran-owned coffee companies in America that do not glorify and legitimize assault rifles by having a coffee named after them at a time when that is the weapon of choice for mass murder, the new and metastasizing American plague.
America’s obsession with gun culture encourages and enables the worst among us. And that obsession is its most outrageous when it finds logical that owning a military-grade weapon capable of mass destruction is somehow an inalienable right that founders of the Constitution had in mind or could have envisioned in a time of muskets and bows and arrows.
Saw a T-shirt offered online that reads, “If Guns Kills People, I Guess that Means Spoons Make You Fat.”
Might be a good item for the BRCC merch store. Of course the logic of the T-shirt slogan breaks down somewhat until which time people begin committing mass killings with spoons.
How about this: We protect the Second Amendment to include small-arms home protection and your hunting rifle, but we amend it to eliminate the assault weapons favored in mass shootings? No? Too logical?
Otherwise let’s just go with a Supreme Court very concerned about protecting the unborn but much less so in protecting the children murdered in their own school and the parade goers on the Fourth of July God Bless America.
Otherwise let’s just move on, like the man said.
Let’s don’t do anything about this national shame. No. Just move on. Until the next massacre. Then move on again. Until the next one after that.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
Paramount
Nick Nolte is wide receiver Phillip Elliott in 1979's "North Dallas Forty," ranked No. 1 on Tribune News Service's list of the 11 best football movies. It was directed by Ted Kotcheff and includes Mac Davis and former Oakland Raider John Matuszak in the story of the North Dallas Bulls, a team modeled after the Dallas Cowboys.
Paramount
Nick Nolte is wide receiver Phillip Elliott in 1979's "North Dallas Forty," ranked No. 1 on Tribune News Service's list of the 11 best football movies. It was directed by Ted Kotcheff and includes Mac Davis and former Oakland Raider John Matuszak in the story of the North Dallas Bulls, a team modeled after the Dallas Cowboys.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
Paramount Pictures
Burt Reynolds stars as quarterback Paul Crewe, thrown into prison in 1974's "The Longest Yard." Robert Aldrich directed the story about a group of prisoners taking on the guards on the football field. Eddie Albert played the evil warden.
Paramount Pictures
Burt Reynolds stars as quarterback Paul Crewe, thrown into prison in 1974's "The Longest Yard." Robert Aldrich directed the story about a group of prisoners taking on the guards on the football field. Eddie Albert played the evil warden.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
TriStar Pictures
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TriStar Pictures
Sean Astin stars as the Notre Dame football underdog in 1993's "Rudy." David Anspaugh directed the story of walk-on Rudy Ruettiger's time with the Fighting Irish. The cast included future stars Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
Peter Berg directed 2004's "Friday Night Lights," based on H.G. "Buzz" Bissinger's 1988 book about the Permian High School team in Odessa, Texas. Billy Bob Thornton played coach Gary Gaines.
Peter Berg directed 2004's "Friday Night Lights," based on H.G. "Buzz" Bissinger's 1988 book about the Permian High School team in Odessa, Texas. Billy Bob Thornton played coach Gary Gaines.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
Paramount
Warren Beatty stars as Joe Pendleton, a backup quarterback for the Los Angeles Rams who is summoned to heaven before his time, in the romantic fantasy movie "Heaven Can Wait." Beatty co-directed the 1978 romantic comedy with Buck Henry and co-starred with Julie Christie, James Mason, Dyan Cannon, Jack Warden and Charles Grodin.
Paramount
Warren Beatty stars as Joe Pendleton, a backup quarterback for the Los Angeles Rams who is summoned to heaven before his time, in the romantic fantasy movie "Heaven Can Wait." Beatty co-directed the 1978 romantic comedy with Buck Henry and co-starred with Julie Christie, James Mason, Dyan Cannon, Jack Warden and Charles Grodin.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
TriStar
Tom Cruise stars as the title character, a sports agent, in 1996's "Jerry Maguire." Cameron Crowe directed the blend of a romance and a sports story. The film co-starred Renee Zellweger and Cuba Gooding Jr. and spawned the catchphrase "Show me the money!" shouted by Gooding's character, wide receiver Rod Tidwell.
TriStar
Tom Cruise stars as the title character, a sports agent, in 1996's "Jerry Maguire." Cameron Crowe directed the blend of a romance and a sports story. The film co-starred Renee Zellweger and Cuba Gooding Jr. and spawned the catchphrase "Show me the money!" shouted by Gooding's character, wide receiver Rod Tidwell.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
Paramount
The Marx Brothers take the field in 1932's "Horse Feathers." Norman Z. McLeod directed this college-based comedy that features Groucho as headmaster Quincy Adams Wagstaff, who tries to recruit a couple of ringers for the football team but winds up with Harpo and Chico.
Paramount
The Marx Brothers take the field in 1932's "Horse Feathers." Norman Z. McLeod directed this college-based comedy that features Groucho as headmaster Quincy Adams Wagstaff, who tries to recruit a couple of ringers for the football team but winds up with Harpo and Chico.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
United Artists
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United Artists
The offensive line of the New Orleans Saints awaits the call of quarterback Ron Catlan, played by Charlton Heston, in 1969's "Number One." Tom Gries directed the story of an aging quarterback who doesn't know when to hang it up. Jessica Walter played his wife, with Diana Muldaur as his mistress.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
United Artists
Alan Alda puts on his football gear for a practice session with the Detroit Lions in 1968's "Paper Lion." Alex March directed the story from the real-life adventures of George Plimpton, who spent a training camp and preseason scrimmage with the Lions. NFL stars Alex Karras and Roger Brown played themselves.
United Artists
Alan Alda puts on his football gear for a practice session with the Detroit Lions in 1968's "Paper Lion." Alex March directed the story from the real-life adventures of George Plimpton, who spent a training camp and preseason scrimmage with the Lions. NFL stars Alex Karras and Roger Brown played themselves.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
ABC
Gale Sayers (Billy Dee Williams) comforts Brian Piccolo (James Caan) in 1971's "Brian's Song." Buzz Kulic directed the true-life story about the friendship between Sayers and Piccolo, who died at age 26.
ABC
Gale Sayers (Billy Dee Williams) comforts Brian Piccolo (James Caan) in 1971's "Brian's Song." Buzz Kulic directed the true-life story about the friendship between Sayers and Piccolo, who died at age 26.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
Getty Images
Al Pacino is Miami Sharks coach Tony D'Amato and Cameron Diaz is the team owner in 1999's "Any Given Sunday." The Oliver Stone drama included Dennis Quaid and Jamie Foxx.
Getty Images
Al Pacino is Miami Sharks coach Tony D'Amato and Cameron Diaz is the team owner in 1999's "Any Given Sunday." The Oliver Stone drama included Dennis Quaid and Jamie Foxx.
The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl — and in all other sports
Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
Actor Will Smith attends a special screening of "Concussion" in New York in this Dec. 16, 2015, file photo. In the film Smith portrays Dr. Bennet Omalu, a forensic pathologist who fights against the National Football League over his research on chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) brain degeneration suffered by professional football players.
Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
Actor Will Smith attends a special screening of "Concussion" in New York in this Dec. 16, 2015, file photo. In the film Smith portrays Dr. Bennet Omalu, a forensic pathologist who fights against the National Football League over his research on chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) brain degeneration suffered by professional football players.
Greg Cote: Have a cup of AK-47 Espresso at a Cowboys game. Nuthin’ wrong with that, right Jerry Jones?
Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images North America/TNS
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones on the field prior to a game against the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Wild Card Playoff game at AT&T Stadium on Jan. 16, 2022, in Arlington, Texas. (Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images/TNS)
Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images North America/TNS
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones on the field prior to a game against the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Wild Card Playoff game at AT&T Stadium on Jan. 16, 2022, in Arlington, Texas. (Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images/TNS)