I Know Andre

Scott Dickensheets

Example: Last September, the time I met him, I tagged along as Agassi gave Janet Jackson a tour of the Andre Agassi College Preparatory Academy, his charter school in West Las Vegas. As the school nurse enumerated for Jackson the programs she oversees, she mentioned a community service for the poor mothers in the neighborhood: free mammograms. You got the funny, right? You immediately did the ironic math: mammogram reference + Jackson's Nipplegate notoriety = a moment of unintended humor. Between Agassi's people and Jackson's hired beef, there must've been 15 people listening. I'm certain 14 of us made that same calculation. (I know I smirked.) I glanced at Agassi—not one hint of a suppressed grin, no small tug in his features to suggest he got it. Now, maybe he just has great control of his facial muscles. But my expert thesis formed immediately and I've stuck to it ever since: He's one earnest dude. I doubt that a team of foresnic ironists could find a snarky bone in his body. (Snapping at the sports media doesn't count as snark so much as occupational necessity.)

A bit later, he and I talked about his school for 20 minutes, and while I've lost that interview tape, if memory serves he used the phrase "the human spirit" 214 times and meant every one. See, earnest.

Of course, the other time I saw him was at a Wienerschnitzel, so he is clearly more complicated than my possibly reductive theory allows.

In fact, it occurs to me now that in my rush to savor the full ironic flavor of that Janet Jackson moment, I might've missed, you know, a moderately significant detail or two: Wasn't the nurse saying something about free medical aid to the poor mothers ... ? And didn't this take place in a forward-thinking school that makes unusual demands of parents (read to your child; volunteer at the school) and teachers (be accountable), enforcing the educational values we often talk about but don't often practice ...? The sole Vegas school judged exemplary by the feds last year ...? A school that Agassi's foundation funds to the national per-pupil average, but no more, as a challenge to Nevada: Maybe you can throw money at a problem if your aim is good ...? And didn't I immediately urge a teacher I know to apply at the school without delay ...?

Okay, so maybe it's not that Agassi doesn't appreciate irony, but simply that he keeps his eye on the ball. I mean, it's possible.

Of course, this very slight revision in my thesis does not detract from my expertise on the subject of Andre Agassi. Really. Ask me anything.


Scott Dickensheets is coeditor of the Weekly.

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