ADVERTISEMENT

The Blind Side

So capitalism works? You are a reaganomics success story. What is stopping the poor from following your lead?
I have a borderline genius IQ. I come from a family of uneducated eventual Trump supporters (that's a redundancy) who deterred my intelligence because they found it abnormal, so I became a gifted athlete until injuries (resulting from a car accident) overcame that natural advantage. Luckily my brain stayed intact.

What's your excuse for being a Grand Wizard?
 
I have a borderline genius IQ. I come from a family of uneducated eventual Trump supporters (that's a redundancy) who deterred my intelligence because they found it abnormal, so I became a gifted athlete until injuries (resulting from a car accident) overcame that natural advantage. Luckily my brain stayed intact.

What's your excuse for being a Grand Wizard?

Your second sentence proves your first sentence wrong
 
Why is their a conservatorship any way? He was 18 in 2004, no cognitive disability or inability to handle his own affairs. People don't just create a conservatorship with their children when they turn 18.
Well the family alleges they “needed” to do so to allow him to go to Ole Miss, otherwise his living with them would have been a recruiting violation because they were boosters.

That’s it, that’s the reason. Not “we wanted him to be an official member of the family”.
 
Well the family alleges they “needed” to do so to allow him to go to Ole Miss, otherwise his living with them would have been a recruiting violation because they were boosters.

That’s it, that’s the reason. Not “we wanted him to be an official member of the family”.

Both can be true
 
They could be, but the fact that making him a member of their family isn’t the go to defense is likely pretty telling unfortunately
yeah...I watched that movie in great anticipation of watching a good feel good college football movie. But walked away with it not passing the "smell test". I've never watched it again despite the fact that it is on TV a ton.

They are asking us to believe, with all of the needy kids in the world, that they chose a kid over 18 who happened to be 6-4 and 300 lbs. They are now telling us they couldn't legally "adopt" him because he was over 18 (an adult) but brought him in to live with them out of the goodness of their hearts. Yet, they've never done this for any other needy child. This one, for some reason, just spoke to them.

The logic doesn't make any sense.
 
I have a borderline genius IQ. I come from a family of uneducated eventual Trump supporters (that's a redundancy) who deterred my intelligence because they found it abnormal, so I became a gifted athlete until injuries (resulting from a car accident) overcame that natural advantage. Luckily my brain stayed intact.

What's your excuse for being a Grand Wizard?
I have a borderline genius IQ and I don't suffer from Trump Derangement Syndrome. What's your excuse?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Fac and bison13
Here is the take from former ESPN commentator, Jason Whitlock. It's not kind to Oher.

------------------------------------
The 2009 movie “The Blind Side” does not state or imply that the Tuohy family adopted Michael Oher. Neither does Michael Lewis’ 2006 book that inspired the film that won Sandra Bullock an Oscar.

In 2011, when Michael Oher published his first memoir, “I Beat the Odds,” he stated directly that the Tuohys secured a conservatorship when he was a senior in high school. He wrote that Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy insisted that he maintain a relationship with his biological mother and 11 siblings. Oher wrote that his mother participated in the procedures necessary for the Tuohys to become conservators.

Why on earth is Michael Oher pretending he only recently discovered that the Tuohy family didn’t adopt him? Why are members of the media going along with Oher’s effort to shake down the Tuohy family for cash under the pretense that they lied to him and exploited him for profit?

Yesterday, Oher, a former NFL offensive lineman, filed a petition in a Tennessee court arguing that the Tuohys earned millions of dollars from “The Blind Side” and the false belief that they “adopted” him. He claims that he earned nothing from the movie and that the Tuohys owe him millions. This made headlines across corporate and social media. Twitter feeds overflowed with allegations that the Tuohys had profited from Hollywood’s love affair with the “white savior trope.”

None of this made any sense. So here’s what I did: 1) I read Oher’s 2011 book, “I Beat the Odds.” 2) I rewatched the movie “The Blind Side.”

I wanted to know what was being said a decade ago, long before social media had made it wildly popular to decide all conflicts based on racial dynamics.

Michael Oher is black. The Tuohys are white. “The Blind Side” is a real-life, feel-good movie about a wealthy white couple providing a home for a homeless, black teenage boy in Memphis. The movie was an offshoot of Michael Lewis’ book, which was an exploration of the importance of the left tackle position in the aftermath of linebacker Lawrence Taylor’s career terrorizing quarterbacks.

Lewis, a childhood friend of Sean Tuohy, made Oher’s unusual relationship with the Tuohys a part of the book. Sensing an opportunity to make a profit, Hollywood producers zeroed in on Oher and the Tuohys and ignored Lewis’ larger narrative about Lawrence Taylor and left tackles.

It was a smart decision. “The Blind Side” rocked the box office, earning $300 million. For the most part, the movie is accurate. It does not lie about the Tuohys adopting Oher.

Midway through the two-hour film, in a quest to secure then 17-year-old Oher a driver’s license, Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy seek to become Oher’s legal guardians. A state social worker informs Leigh Anne that she can obtain guardianship of Oher without the permission of Oher’s biological mother. Unsatisfied, Leigh Anne hunts down the boy’s mother and visits her in the ghetto. The two chat about Michael’s father and whether Ms. Oher wants to see her son.

In the next scene, the entire Tuohy family sits with Michael at a dining room table. Sean tells Michael that they would like to become Michael’s “legal guardian.” Michael asks what that means. Leigh Anne replies: “We wanna know if you’d like to become part of this family.”

What Michael Oher is doing to the Tuohy family is despicable. He’s telling an obvious lie that he knows most of the media will be too afraid to question because of the racial dynamics. Plus, the media is lazy. It’s easier to repeat Oher’s allegations than to question and/or research the legitimacy of them.

It’s also easier just to feel sorry for Oher. He’s broken. The first 15 years of his life are a tragedy. That’s not my opinion. Read his book. His mother was addicted to crack cocaine and birthed a dozen children with a variety of men. Oher and his siblings would routinely come home and find the door locked, their mother nowhere to be found. She would disappear for days, ingesting cocaine with friends. Her kids, as young as 14 months, would be left locked out of their apartment, forced to beg for food and a couch to sleep on. This was a regular pattern. That type of neglect causes lifelong trauma. Oher met his father but had no relationship with him. His grandmother hated him. State social workers eventually intervened. Oher moved from foster home to foster home, school to school, from one friend’s couch to the next.

At the time of his 2011 book and after being dissatisfied with his portrayal in “The Blind Side,” Oher reached the conclusion that he wasn’t getting nearly enough credit for his rags-to-NFL-riches story. In “I Beat the Odds,” Oher argued that at age 7 he watched Michael Jordan slay the Phoenix Suns in the 1993 NBA Finals and he crafted a plan to become a professional athlete.

Seven-year-old Michael Oher saved Michael Oher, not the Tuohys or anyone else. The Tuohys and everyone else simply assisted Oher in executing his plan. He planned to be the next Michael Jordan. He wound up being a solid eight-year NFL lineman.

For years, he’s complained that “The Blind Side” made him look stupid, like he couldn’t read before tutors in high school taught him. He has expressed frustration that the movie suggested the Tuohys’ young son taught him football and that Leigh Anne coerced him into being aggressive.

Michael Oher wants credit. I get it. He wants to be the star and hero of his own movie. Most people do. Oher lacks self-awareness, humility, and, quite possibly, intelligence. Making $34 million as an average professional athlete will certainly create some delusion.

At 6-foot-4 and 300 pounds, Oher fancied himself as the next Michael Jordan or Charles Barkley. He had to be talked into focusing on football. He thinks hatching the scheme to be a pro athlete at age 7 was a sign of brilliance and vision. It’s a ghetto dream that 99% of the time leads to failure. Where would Oher be today had he stopped growing at 5'9" like most American men?

Where would he be without the Tuohys? They provided the stable home where a tutor could come work with him every day so he could catch up academically. By his own admission in “I Beat the Odds,” Oher never attended school regularly until he enrolled at Briarcrest Christian School as a sophomore.

Oher is so arrogant and delusional that he believes that his natural intellect would have been developed regardless of circumstance. It’s a naive worldview. He’s still naive. He believes this desperate attempt to shake down the family who welcomed him into their home is a good look and is going to lead to a financial windfall. It’s not. Eventually reporters and pundits will have to deal with the truth. The Tuohys were wealthy when they took legal guardianship of Oher. They sold their family business for $200 million. They had no financial motive to exploit Oher. They exercised no control over his professional career.

The Tuohys are longtime friends of super agent Jimmy Sexton. They wanted Oher to sign with Sexton when he left Ole Miss for the NFL. Oher chose a different agent. He wrote about the decision in “I Beat the Odds.” Months later, when it became obvious that he made the wrong choice, he cut a deal with Sexton.

This whole exploitative “conservatorship” nonsense isn’t exactly Britney Spears’ parents controlling her money. The Tuohys have and always had more money than Michael Oher. They also have more class, decency, and compassion than Oher. Sean Tuohy says he still loves Michael Oher. Tuohy knows Oher is every bit as emotionally broken as the first day the overgrown teenager slept on their couch.
 
Last edited:
Well the family alleges they “needed” to do so to allow him to go to Ole Miss, otherwise his living with them would have been a recruiting violation because they were boosters.

That’s it, that’s the reason. Not “we wanted him to be an official member of the family”.
Adopt him but no conservatorship. A big difference as in when he is 30 and making $2 mill a year they can't just control all the money because he is "unable" if he was adopted but no conservatorship. Under a conservatorship you are granted full control over their finances.

A conservstorship is designed for individuals who are unable to competently manage the finances of their life and their own health like doctor appointments and communicating with a doctor, etc, etc. Even if they got a conservatorship through when he was 18 stating they needed to have oversight in his own affairs because of the impoverished life he had then that should have been terminated after a year or two once he had matured and his life was stable. You need to report to a court and prove the conservatorship is still necessary every year or two years. It is not like it is some kind of binding contract that lasts forever with no checks. The whole thing seems to stink the more you dive into it.
 
Here is the take from former ESPN commentator, Jason Whitlock. It's not kind to Oher.

------------------------------------
The 2009 movie “The Blind Side” does not state or imply that the Tuohy family adopted Michael Oher. Neither does Michael Lewis’ 2006 book that inspired the film that won Sandra Bullock an Oscar.

In 2011, when Michael Oher published his first memoir, “I Beat the Odds,” he stated directly that the Tuohys secured a conservatorship when he was a senior in high school. He wrote that Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy insisted that he maintain a relationship with his biological mother and 11 siblings. Oher wrote that his mother participated in the procedures necessary for the Tuohys to become conservators.

Why on earth is Michael Oher pretending he only recently discovered that the Tuohy family didn’t adopt him? Why are members of the media going along with Oher’s effort to shake down the Tuohy family for cash under the pretense that they lied to him and exploited him for profit?

Yesterday, Oher, a former NFL offensive lineman, filed a petition in a Tennessee court arguing that the Tuohys earned millions of dollars from “The Blind Side” and the false belief that they “adopted” him. He claims that he earned nothing from the movie and that the Tuohys owe him millions. This made headlines across corporate and social media. Twitter feeds overflowed with allegations that the Tuohys had profited from Hollywood’s love affair with the “white savior trope.”

None of this made any sense. So here’s what I did: 1) I read Oher’s 2011 book, “I Beat the Odds.” 2) I rewatched the movie “The Blind Side.”

I wanted to know what was being said a decade ago, long before social media had made it wildly popular to decide all conflicts based on racial dynamics.

Michael Oher is black. The Tuohys are white. “The Blind Side” is a real-life, feel-good movie about a wealthy white couple providing a home for a homeless, black teenage boy in Memphis. The movie was an offshoot of Michael Lewis’ book, which was an exploration of the importance of the left tackle position in the aftermath of linebacker Lawrence Taylor’s career terrorizing quarterbacks.

Lewis, a childhood friend of Sean Tuohy, made Oher’s unusual relationship with the Tuohys a part of the book. Sensing an opportunity to make a profit, Hollywood producers zeroed in on Oher and the Tuohys and ignored Lewis’ larger narrative about Lawrence Taylor and left tackles.

It was a smart decision. “The Blind Side” rocked the box office, earning $300 million. For the most part, the movie is accurate. It does not lie about the Tuohys adopting Oher.

Midway through the two-hour film, in a quest to secure then 17-year-old Oher a driver’s license, Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy seek to become Oher’s legal guardians. A state social worker informs Leigh Anne that she can obtain guardianship of Oher without the permission of Oher’s biological mother. Unsatisfied, Leigh Anne hunts down the boy’s mother and visits her in the ghetto. The two chat about Michael’s father and whether Ms. Oher wants to see her son.

In the next scene, the entire Tuohy family sits with Michael at a dining room table. Sean tells Michael that they would like to become Michael’s “legal guardian.” Michael asks what that means. Leigh Anne replies: “We wanna know if you’d like to become part of this family.”

What Michael Oher is doing to the Tuohy family is despicable. He’s telling an obvious lie that he knows most of the media will be too afraid to question because of the racial dynamics. Plus, the media is lazy. It’s easier to repeat Oher’s allegations than to question and/or research the legitimacy of them.

It’s also easier just to feel sorry for Oher. He’s broken. The first 15 years of his life are a tragedy. That’s not my opinion. Read his book. His mother was addicted to crack cocaine and birthed a dozen children with a variety of men. Oher and his siblings would routinely come home and find the door locked, their mother nowhere to be found. She would disappear for days, ingesting cocaine with friends. Her kids, as young as 14 months, would be left locked out of their apartment, forced to beg for food and a couch to sleep on. This was a regular pattern. That type of neglect causes lifelong trauma. Oher met his father but had no relationship with him. His grandmother hated him. State social workers eventually intervened. Oher moved from foster home to foster home, school to school, from one friend’s couch to the next.

At the time of his 2011 book and after being dissatisfied with his portrayal in “The Blind Side,” Oher reached the conclusion that he wasn’t getting nearly enough credit for his rags-to-NFL-riches story. In “I Beat the Odds,” Oher argued that at age 7 he watched Michael Jordan slay the Phoenix Suns in the 1993 NBA Finals and he crafted a plan to become a professional athlete.

Seven-year-old Michael Oher saved Michael Oher, not the Tuohys or anyone else. The Tuohys and everyone else simply assisted Oher in executing his plan. He planned to be the next Michael Jordan. He wound up being a solid eight-year NFL lineman.

For years, he’s complained that “The Blind Side” made him look stupid, like he couldn’t read before tutors in high school taught him. He has expressed frustration that the movie suggested the Tuohys’ young son taught him football and that Leigh Anne coerced him into being aggressive.

Michael Oher wants credit. I get it. He wants to be the star and hero of his own movie. Most people do. Oher lacks self-awareness, humility, and, quite possibly, intelligence. Making $34 million as an average professional athlete will certainly create some delusion.

At 6-foot-4 and 300 pounds, Oher fancied himself as the next Michael Jordan or Charles Barkley. He had to be talked into focusing on football. He thinks hatching the scheme to be a pro athlete at age 7 was a sign of brilliance and vision. It’s a ghetto dream that 99% of the time leads to failure. Where would Oher be today had he stopped growing at 5'9" like most American men?

Where would he be without the Tuohys? They provided the stable home where a tutor could come work with him every day so he could catch up academically. By his own admission in “I Beat the Odds,” Oher never attended school regularly until he enrolled at Briarcrest Christian School as a sophomore.

Oher is so arrogant and delusional that he believes that his natural intellect would have been developed regardless of circumstance. It’s a naive worldview. He’s still naive. He believes this desperate attempt to shake down the family who welcomed him into their home is a good look and is going to lead to a financial windfall. It’s not. Eventually reporters and pundits will have to deal with the truth. The Tuohys were wealthy when they took legal guardianship of Oher. They sold their family business for $200 million. They had no financial motive to exploit Oher. They exercised no control over his professional career.

The Tuohys are longtime friends of super agent Jimmy Sexton. They wanted Oher to sign with Sexton when he left Ole Miss for the NFL. Oher chose a different agent. He wrote about the decision in “I Beat the Odds.” Months later, when it became obvious that he made the wrong choice, he cut a deal with Sexton.

This whole exploitative “conservatorship” nonsense isn’t exactly Britney Spears’ parents controlling her money. The Tuohys have and always had more money than Michael Oher. They also have more class, decency, and compassion than Oher. Sean Tuohy says he still loves Michael Oher. Tuohy knows Oher is every bit as emotionally broken as the first day the overgrown teenager slept on their couch.
Spot on but libs will keep calling Whitlock an Uncle Tom
 
Here is the take from former ESPN commentator, Jason Whitlock. It's not kind to Oher.

------------------------------------
The 2009 movie “The Blind Side” does not state or imply that the Tuohy family adopted Michael Oher. Neither does Michael Lewis’ 2006 book that inspired the film that won Sandra Bullock an Oscar.

In 2011, when Michael Oher published his first memoir, “I Beat the Odds,” he stated directly that the Tuohys secured a conservatorship when he was a senior in high school. He wrote that Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy insisted that he maintain a relationship with his biological mother and 11 siblings. Oher wrote that his mother participated in the procedures necessary for the Tuohys to become conservators.

Why on earth is Michael Oher pretending he only recently discovered that the Tuohy family didn’t adopt him? Why are members of the media going along with Oher’s effort to shake down the Tuohy family for cash under the pretense that they lied to him and exploited him for profit?

Yesterday, Oher, a former NFL offensive lineman, filed a petition in a Tennessee court arguing that the Tuohys earned millions of dollars from “The Blind Side” and the false belief that they “adopted” him. He claims that he earned nothing from the movie and that the Tuohys owe him millions. This made headlines across corporate and social media. Twitter feeds overflowed with allegations that the Tuohys had profited from Hollywood’s love affair with the “white savior trope.”

None of this made any sense. So here’s what I did: 1) I read Oher’s 2011 book, “I Beat the Odds.” 2) I rewatched the movie “The Blind Side.”

I wanted to know what was being said a decade ago, long before social media had made it wildly popular to decide all conflicts based on racial dynamics.

Michael Oher is black. The Tuohys are white. “The Blind Side” is a real-life, feel-good movie about a wealthy white couple providing a home for a homeless, black teenage boy in Memphis. The movie was an offshoot of Michael Lewis’ book, which was an exploration of the importance of the left tackle position in the aftermath of linebacker Lawrence Taylor’s career terrorizing quarterbacks.

Lewis, a childhood friend of Sean Tuohy, made Oher’s unusual relationship with the Tuohys a part of the book. Sensing an opportunity to make a profit, Hollywood producers zeroed in on Oher and the Tuohys and ignored Lewis’ larger narrative about Lawrence Taylor and left tackles.

It was a smart decision. “The Blind Side” rocked the box office, earning $300 million. For the most part, the movie is accurate. It does not lie about the Tuohys adopting Oher.

Midway through the two-hour film, in a quest to secure then 17-year-old Oher a driver’s license, Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy seek to become Oher’s legal guardians. A state social worker informs Leigh Anne that she can obtain guardianship of Oher without the permission of Oher’s biological mother. Unsatisfied, Leigh Anne hunts down the boy’s mother and visits her in the ghetto. The two chat about Michael’s father and whether Ms. Oher wants to see her son.

In the next scene, the entire Tuohy family sits with Michael at a dining room table. Sean tells Michael that they would like to become Michael’s “legal guardian.” Michael asks what that means. Leigh Anne replies: “We wanna know if you’d like to become part of this family.”

What Michael Oher is doing to the Tuohy family is despicable. He’s telling an obvious lie that he knows most of the media will be too afraid to question because of the racial dynamics. Plus, the media is lazy. It’s easier to repeat Oher’s allegations than to question and/or research the legitimacy of them.

It’s also easier just to feel sorry for Oher. He’s broken. The first 15 years of his life are a tragedy. That’s not my opinion. Read his book. His mother was addicted to crack cocaine and birthed a dozen children with a variety of men. Oher and his siblings would routinely come home and find the door locked, their mother nowhere to be found. She would disappear for days, ingesting cocaine with friends. Her kids, as young as 14 months, would be left locked out of their apartment, forced to beg for food and a couch to sleep on. This was a regular pattern. That type of neglect causes lifelong trauma. Oher met his father but had no relationship with him. His grandmother hated him. State social workers eventually intervened. Oher moved from foster home to foster home, school to school, from one friend’s couch to the next.

At the time of his 2011 book and after being dissatisfied with his portrayal in “The Blind Side,” Oher reached the conclusion that he wasn’t getting nearly enough credit for his rags-to-NFL-riches story. In “I Beat the Odds,” Oher argued that at age 7 he watched Michael Jordan slay the Phoenix Suns in the 1993 NBA Finals and he crafted a plan to become a professional athlete.

Seven-year-old Michael Oher saved Michael Oher, not the Tuohys or anyone else. The Tuohys and everyone else simply assisted Oher in executing his plan. He planned to be the next Michael Jordan. He wound up being a solid eight-year NFL lineman.

For years, he’s complained that “The Blind Side” made him look stupid, like he couldn’t read before tutors in high school taught him. He has expressed frustration that the movie suggested the Tuohys’ young son taught him football and that Leigh Anne coerced him into being aggressive.

Michael Oher wants credit. I get it. He wants to be the star and hero of his own movie. Most people do. Oher lacks self-awareness, humility, and, quite possibly, intelligence. Making $34 million as an average professional athlete will certainly create some delusion.

At 6-foot-4 and 300 pounds, Oher fancied himself as the next Michael Jordan or Charles Barkley. He had to be talked into focusing on football. He thinks hatching the scheme to be a pro athlete at age 7 was a sign of brilliance and vision. It’s a ghetto dream that 99% of the time leads to failure. Where would Oher be today had he stopped growing at 5'9" like most American men?

Where would he be without the Tuohys? They provided the stable home where a tutor could come work with him every day so he could catch up academically. By his own admission in “I Beat the Odds,” Oher never attended school regularly until he enrolled at Briarcrest Christian School as a sophomore.

Oher is so arrogant and delusional that he believes that his natural intellect would have been developed regardless of circumstance. It’s a naive worldview. He’s still naive. He believes this desperate attempt to shake down the family who welcomed him into their home is a good look and is going to lead to a financial windfall. It’s not. Eventually reporters and pundits will have to deal with the truth. The Tuohys were wealthy when they took legal guardianship of Oher. They sold their family business for $200 million. They had no financial motive to exploit Oher. They exercised no control over his professional career.

The Tuohys are longtime friends of super agent Jimmy Sexton. They wanted Oher to sign with Sexton when he left Ole Miss for the NFL. Oher chose a different agent. He wrote about the decision in “I Beat the Odds.” Months later, when it became obvious that he made the wrong choice, he cut a deal with Sexton.

This whole exploitative “conservatorship” nonsense isn’t exactly Britney Spears’ parents controlling her money. The Tuohys have and always had more money than Michael Oher. They also have more class, decency, and compassion than Oher. Sean Tuohy says he still loves Michael Oher. Tuohy knows Oher is every bit as emotionally broken as the first day the overgrown teenager slept on their couch.

I don't have any problem with the criticism of Oher here and don't think he is a "good guy" in this situation. The lawsuit does indeed seem to be a way to get some more money rather than some moral imperative to right a wrong.

That being said, the actions of the Tuohys still seems as shady as hell. It's hard not to look at their actions and see it as a way to basically be a "bagman" for Oher to get him to get to go to Ole Miss while framing it as being all about kindness and grace and helping someone underprivileged. And then doing some PR with the book and movie to even make the family seem "inspirational".
 
  • Like
Reactions: Ski and ryoder1
I don't have any problem with the criticism of Oher here and don't think he is a "good guy" in this situation. The lawsuit does indeed seem to be a way to get some more money rather than some moral imperative to right a wrong.

That being said, the actions of the Tuohys still seems as shady as hell. It's hard not to look at their actions and see it as a way to basically be a "bagman" for Oher to get him to get to go to Ole Miss while framing it as being all about kindness and grace and helping someone underprivileged. And then doing some PR with the book and movie to even make the family seem "inspirational".
I agree completely. My simple question is why did they need a conservatorship and then is that still in existence today or at least how long did it last? That conservatorship gives them all this power and control over Oher's finances. He is not some working stiff making min wage, he was an NFL player making millions so it becomes very relevant. I know the Tuohy's have a lot of money (own McDonald's franchises or whatever it is) but this just seems very suspicious. And yes, what do you know they are big Ole Miss boosters and Oher was the best lineman prospect for them in a decade.

I don't disagree that Oher's actions also seem disingenuous and he is not the innocent victim here either.
 
I agree completely. My simple question is why did they need a conservatorship and then is that still in existence today or at least how long did it last? That conservatorship gives them all this power and control over Oher's finances. He is not some working stiff making min wage, he was an NFL player making millions so it becomes very relevant. I know the Tuohy's have a lot of money (own McDonald's franchises or whatever it is) but this just seems very suspicious. And yes, what do you know they are big Ole Miss boosters and Oher was the best lineman prospect for them in a decade.

I don't disagree that Oher's actions also seem disingenuous and he is not the innocent victim here either.

The conservatorship was the way he could go to Ole Miss without sanctions.
That or adoption.

LdN
 
Here is the take from former ESPN commentator, Jason Whitlock. It's not kind to Oher.

------------------------------------
The 2009 movie “The Blind Side” does not state or imply that the Tuohy family adopted Michael Oher. Neither does Michael Lewis’ 2006 book that inspired the film that won Sandra Bullock an Oscar.

LOL is all I have to say. Why bother reading past this?
 
The Tuohys are making more sense than he is. I suspect the conservatorship's real purpose was in fact to make him a permanent part of their family because they couldn't adopt him as an adult in that state.

They probably had him in their will and everything. But the relationship just went bad as these often do. They're probably not perfect but what parent is perfect? It looks to me like Oher made a mess of his life after he got rich on NFL money, and this whole lawsuit was just a shakedown trying to get a few more millions out of the Tuohys -- I have no respect for that.

I haven't heard anything that makes me question the basic outline and tone of Michael Lewis's book.
 
The Tuohys are making more sense than he is. I suspect the conservatorship's real purpose was in fact to make him a permanent part of their family because they couldn't adopt him as an adult in that state.

They probably had him in their will and everything. But the relationship just went bad as these often do. They're probably not perfect but what parent is perfect? It looks to me like Oher made a mess of his life after he got rich on NFL money, and this whole lawsuit was just a shakedown trying to get a few more millions out of the Tuohys -- I have no respect for that.

I haven't heard anything that makes me question the basic outline and tone of Michael Lewis's book.
I get the "conservatorship" for some period of time as he navigates his way through college and into his early adult years. But he's 37 and made $34m. Why is he not stable enough to be an independent person? Perhaps he's not. But to be able to have a successful NFL career would be surprising if he can't even manage a checking account.

So let's see where all the money is.
 
I get the "conservatorship" for some period of time as he navigates his way through college and into his early adult years. But he's 37 and made $34m. Why is he not stable enough to be an independent person? Perhaps he's not. But to be able to have a successful NFL career would be surprising if he can't even manage a checking account.

So let's see where all the money is.
Sounds like they had money--maybe he thought he'd cash in on that later but then wasted all of his cash and is now desperate. Lots of options here but if he never asked them to release him from it then that's on him.
 
Sounds like they had money--maybe he thought he'd cash in on that later but then wasted all of his cash and is now desperate. Lots of options here but if he never asked them to release him from it then that's on him.
Yep. We’ll never know until we see the receipts. Was he taken advantage of or is he an incompetent leach?

Where did his considerable nfl money go? That’s the real question. If he was under conservatorship, he didn’t have free access so it should still be there
 
claims he was blindsided. I don't know but that story never rang true to me. For all of the needed kids in all of the USA, they just happened to stumble onto the 6 foot 4, 300 lbs guy!


i
Poor black kid destined to die in the ghetto, forced to get educated, play football and earn millions. Start a GoFund Me for this poor fellow. According to Democrats, you are not black if you are not a victim.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Ski
I get the "conservatorship" for some period of time as he navigates his way through college and into his early adult years. But he's 37 and made $34m. Why is he not stable enough to be an independent person? Perhaps he's not. But to be able to have a successful NFL career would be surprising if he can't even manage a checking account.

So let's see where all the money is.
At some point the conservatorship should have ceased if a court is doing it's job competently. Did it?? You cannot be independent on your own making millions in the NFL and need a conservatorship. Does not make sense. It is set up for people with disabilities who cannot competently manage their own affairs. So who was managing his money? The Tuohy's? What happened to his money? Is he now broke or did he lose a lot of it? If he was under conservatorship from the Tuohy's all along then they are responsible.
 
The Tuohys are making more sense than he is. I suspect the conservatorship's real purpose was in fact to make him a permanent part of their family because they couldn't adopt him as an adult in that state.

The conservatorship was so he could go to Ole Miss.

LdN
 
  • Like
Reactions: doctornick
Spot on but libs will keep calling Whitlock an Uncle Tom
Um he is an Uncle Tom -- you don't have to be Lib to say it..put it this way there will always be spots for skinfolk who are not kinfolk

put your stupid political agenda back in the bag
 
At some point the conservatorship should have ceased if a court is doing it's job competently. Did it?? You cannot be independent on your own making millions in the NFL and need a conservatorship. Does not make sense. It is set up for people with disabilities who cannot competently manage their own affairs. So who was managing his money? The Tuohy's? What happened to his money? Is he now broke or did he lose a lot of it? If he was under conservatorship from the Tuohy's all along then they are responsible.

The question I have is were they involved in his NFL contracts. I've seen nothing to indicate they were.
 
The conservatorship was so he could go to Ole Miss.

LdN
And in fact that’s exactly how they defended it to the press just now. Basically saying they wanted a way to be bagmen for Oher to go to their alma mater without violating NCAA rules. 🤦‍♂️
 
And in fact that’s exactly how they defended it to the press just now. Basically saying they wanted a way to be bagmen for Oher to go to their alma mater without violating NCAA rules. 🤦‍♂️

Yes. The book was a farce. The book at least told a good story about the Left Tackle position and how it became so valuable.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT