I commented yesterday on the Nike ad. I thought it made Tiger Woods look phony. Below is a video of his comments on the ad. I know Nike's interest is to sell sneakers and T-shirts, caps, and such. Tiger Woods interest maybe more than to please Nike. Maybe this is part of his healing, another demonstration of his penitence, with the lingering promise of more to come.. But enough already. Enough with the shame. Bringing out the deceased father seemed going over the top.
The Washington Post summed it up well --"If Woods is feeling real, true shame -- not regret that he got caught, not regret that his golf game might have suffered, but real sorrow over what he's done to his family -- then he might be able to fix the mess he's made of his life. But his shame is his; it shouldn't be used to sell golf shirts. What's next, a 30-second video clip of Elin yelling at him for forgetting to take out the trash? "
Again, Tiger Woods didn't need to make all of these apologies. What he did was is his private business. It effects his family, and business as it is related to his commercial sponsors. It are the hypocritical mouths that are screaming the loudest for an apology from him, for an endless series of apologies. He's been apologizing, it seems forever. Hypocritical people act as if they never make mistakes. Very successful people like Tiger Woods, when they stumble, they really get gotten, by the monsters of exploitation, whom jump on other people's trouble for personal gain and for profit, and by the monsters of envy, who crank up the criticism to the harshest level. Tiger Woods is just a man who is a great golfer. Let the hypocritical horde just live with that.
News Source: The Washington Post