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The words of a woman who once approached me at an airport.
"Weren't you that cheerleader for UCLA?"
A question I was asked, wherever I went, for a good fifteen years after college.
"Didn't you used to be a yell leader for USC?"
Another question that followed me for years after college.
"Hey, it's the traitor! He used to be a USC yell leader, but he transferred and became a UCLA cheerleader. He's a traitor! It's the traitor! Look everybody, it's the traitor!"
The loud accusations of a handful of black kids as I escorted my mother to a LA Clippers game
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My young black hecklers served as inspiration for a similar bit in Walt Loves the Bearcat, my fourth novel about the life of a black male cheerleader (and his QB hubby who comes out and shocks the world).
But what inspired me to become a cheerleader? And why did I do it at two major universities who are bitter crosstown rivals? And what was cheerleading like for this big-assed, six-foot-three, athlete-looking ni ... nice black man?
Find out in the blocks labeled Cheer Up, now and forever at Randy Boyd's Blocks:
So I Thought I Could Dance
USC Yell Leader Has Love Hangover at Fiesta Bowl
UCLA Cheerleader Sacked by Rose Bowl