Where do we draw the line between the public's right to know
and an individual's right to privacy, especially when that
individual is a celebrity?
In the wake of comments by Reverend Wes Hall, president of
the West Indies Cricket Board, telling the media to leave
Brian Lara alone FANFARE took the question to the streets.
He has a responsibility and when you are in the position
Lara has reached, you have a responsibility to the public
and the fans, said Wayne Miller.
Lara is a world class player, so his life has become an open
book. Everyone will want to know who his girlfriend is, who
he is dating. He is a celebrity and that goes along with it.
This view was also shared by Earl Ifill.
When you become a celebrity, I don't feel you should be left
alone. You need to keep proving yourself more and more, so I
feel Lara should be out there trying to perform to let
people know he is still the cricket king, Ifill said.
But he drew the line with his privacy.
When it comes to your private life I feel that should be
left alone, but once it comes to sport, it should be open.
Derek Marshall was all for preserving the privacy of the
individual since everyone makes mistakes and deserves a
chance.
It is clear that Hophni Sargeant is a fan of the Trinidadian
batting star. He felt the media put too much pressure on
Lara and that affected his performance.
When you have the media out there hounding you down, and
every time you pick up the paper and see somebody with
something negative about you, it can't help your confidence,
and we need Lara full of confidence to take on the Sri
Lankans, he said.
It is all right to be interested, but to be applying
pressure with your comments and negative criticism, I don't
think that is good for the athletes, regardless of who it
is. They should leave him [Lara] alone and let him
concentrate on his batting, he added.
Lara is one of the better players in the team and he is a
celebrity, so obviously people would tend to be more
interested in him. I really think they should leave Lara
alone, because once you try to question what he does it
would put more pressure on him so it would be hard for him
to concentrate and perform at his best, said Vincent Burke.
You have to draw the line somewhere, said the domino player.