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"Gregory
Alan Williams, Star of
Baywatch TV Program, Was A
Real-Life Hero and Played An Integral Part
In
the In Search
Of HeroesTM
Copywriting Program for High
School and College
Journalism and Multi-media
Students That Teaches Students
How To Spread Good News
World-wide Using
Copywriting, Blogs, RSS
Feeds, Photos and Audio and
Video Interviews To Create
Websites That Tell the
Unique Stories of Local and
International Heroes Who
Help Others In Many
Different Ways and Deserve
Recognition For Their Good
Works"
Gregory Alan Williams, Baywatch
TV Program Star, Was Interviewed
by Dan Mader, As
a Part Of the In Search Of
Heroes™ Program
Click Play
for the video of the
Gregory Alan Williams
interview (fast modem)
Click Play
to hear the audio
interview
(Dial-up modem)
Dan Mader:
“Gregory Alan Williams is perhaps best known for his
role on the TV show Baywatch, where he plays Sergeant
Elerbee. But, he’s also a Shakespearian trained
actor and served in the Marine Corps. He’s also a
real-life hero, having saved the life of a man in the LA
Riot. And, he has recently written his memoirs titled “A
Gathering of Heroes.” Mr. Williams, I’d like to
present you, on behalf of the Heroes in Training
Program, with the picture of the previously interviewed
cast of Baywatch, David Charvet and Nicole Eggert.”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “Grand.”
Dan Mader:
“And here
are the certificates and hero cards to go with them.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“Thank you very much.”
Dan Mader:
“The
first question I’d like to ask you, in keeping in the
vein of heroism, I know as we’ve interviewed different
people through the course of this program, what comes up
often is that the real heroes are parents, and
especially single parents. I know that you were raised
by a single mother. Can you give me your thoughts on
parents as heroes?”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“Well, I think that heroism can often be
defined as a commitment to others long term…long, steady
and constant. And, I think parenting requires that kind
of heroism.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“We often think of heroes as being
extraordinary people, people who accomplish great
feats. But, when you consider paying the rent or the
mortgage on a regular basis, keeping groceries in the
refrigerator, keeping the utilities on, the gas and the
lights and so on and so forth, putting bandages on
wounds, putting love and kind words on hurts of the
heart, those are ongoing commitments and I think that
that is heroism. And, I think if we look at our
parents, we will find heroism very very close to home.
Dan Mader:
“Can you
tell me a little bit about the events in the LA Riots,
tell me what happened?
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“Well, I was in the intersection of Florence
and Normandy in hopes of being a voice of reason with
those few individuals there who were committing acts of
violence against strangers, but, strangers who were
human beings and fellow Americans. When I arrived, a
brown Ford Bronco pulled into the intersection and
debris struck the vehicle from almost every corner. The
driver stops, people ran out to the vehicle and began
beating the driver inside.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“The driver turned out to be a
Japanese-American named Tatao Hurata. I was standing
on the southwest corner. As he slumped forward
unconscious, I moved into the crowd and was able to get
him out of the truck. As I pulled him from the truck, I
was joined by a Mexican-American law student named Jorge
Gonzalez who moved to intervene on our behalf, to help
us out.”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “And, he was struck and knocked to the ground
and kicked and beaten. His assault - I should say, his
intervention, served as a diversion and I believe the
folks that struck him were about to strike myself and
Mr. Hurata again.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“So I was able to get Mr. Hurata down the
street where other neighbors in the neighborhood
intervened and summoned a passing police cruiser and
brought a paper towel to wipe his wounds and asked me to
set him down on their grass. And, folks came along and
asked if they could take him to the hospital. And
finally he was taken to the hospital by an
African-American man in a van. And, at that point, he
was bleeding from – I believe it was his left ear. And,
that single entity was hurt very badly and had it not
been for that man that took him to the hospital, Mr.
Hurata may well have died.”
Dan Mader:
“Saving
that man’s life, I’m sure everyone agrees, is certainly
a heroic act and makes you a hero. But, when we talked
earlier, you said a few things that I thought were very
interesting. You said that was your responsibility to
act like that. And you also said that it was a selfish
thing.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“No question. We ask that proverbial
question, ‘Am I my brother’s keeper?’ ‘What is my
responsibility to another human being?’ Dr. King told
us that we are tied in a single garment of destiny and
whatever affects one directly affects one indirectly.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“Mr. King quoted another writer saying, ‘Never
seem to know for whom the bell tolls. It tolls for
thee.’ Some folks talk about karma. Other folks say,
‘What goes around, comes around.’ Some folks say, ‘You
reap what you sow.”’ In every culture, there is some
sort of saying that suggests that you get back what you
put out.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“If that is so, then it is in my best
interests to look out for my neighbor. As Americans, we
have throughout our lives, taken a pledge to preserve
liberty and justice for all. The day Mr. Hurata was
beaten, his liberty was stolen…liberty in this instance
defined as security of person, the right to go to and
from one place to another unmolested, unafraid, and so
on.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“It is then as an American, I’ve taken the
pledge, made the oath, that I would preserve liberty and
justice for all. It is then my responsibility as an
American to do that when I can and wherever I can. The
promise of Democracy is fulfilled person to person. The
principles of the Constitution are honored person to
person. And, so is the Bill of Rights. If I wish to
demand justice, then I must be willing to preserve
justice.”
Dan Mader:
“So, does
it all come back to the Golden Rule?
Gregory Alan
Williams: “Yes, and that’s why it’s golden, because it
is universal. ‘Do unto others as you would have them.’
Certainly, were I in a vehicle at an intersection being
beaten, I would have others do unto me as I did unto Mr.
Hurata. I would have someone – if it was in my power to
mesmerize someone to come rescue me – I would do that.
I would want that. I would need that. I would require
that. So then, with Mr. Hurata, I did unto him what I
would have others do unto me.”
Dan Mader:
“Isn’t
that just one of the greatest parts of human nature,
though, that we are willing to help?”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“It is one of the parts of our nature. Our
natures are varied. We are as capable of great acts of
compassion as we are horrible acts of intolerance and of
course indifference.”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “So our natures are varied and that is one of
the things that I have to come to accept. There is a
bit of bad in the best of us, and a little good in the
worst of us. I must be on guard for those aspects of my
nature that are not compassionate. I must be on guard
for my racist nature which is brought about by my
fearful nature…afraid that I’m not going to get
something I want or I’m going to lose something I’ve
got.”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “Our lives generally speaking are shot through
with fear. We don’t see it as fear because it manifests
itself as anger, righteous indignation. And, we don’t
acknowledge that it’s really fear based.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“I’m afraid of these people, of this person,
because they might take something away from me or they
might prevent me from getting something that I need or
my children might not be getting something they need,
and that sort of thing. So, we have to be on guard for
those ugly things in our nature, and be willing to
accept them and embrace them as being a part of our
nature.”
Dan Mader:
“When you
saw the man being attacked, it would have been easy,
probably the easiest thing to do was just walk on by.
And, earlier we talked about possibly what makes a hero
is that the great people we talked about…Martin Luther
King, Malcolm X…they have the strength to overcome the
desire to conform and stand up for what they believe
in.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“Jefferson, Franklin, Madison, Hale, great men
all. Likewise, Robert E. Lee. All these men, men who
made choices, difficult choices. It certainly would
have been easier to acquiesce to the rule, the king’s
rule, for learned men of property as Mr. Jefferson was a
learned man of property.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“It would have been easier. He could have
gotten his perks and even become a wealthier man. But,
he went against the grain. He chose liberty. Malcolm X
also chose liberty. His father was murdered by a mob.
His mother died of – of grief induced – or madness
induced by grief. She lost her mind. He too opted for
liberty.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“Martin Luther King opted for liberty. Robert
E. Lee opted for what he felt was liberty, you see. The
right to choose, to make choices. All of these men,
great American patriots. Being a patriot is not
necessarily going along with what the government thinks
is right. Going along – going for what one thinks is
best for the people.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“There’s also a thing – an issue of honor. I
am an ex-Marine, and you know, I was taught that honor
was being willing to die and often dying…that that was
the ultimate sacrifice.”
Gregory
Alan Williams:
“The ultimate
sacrifice was not how you lived, but how you died.
I am not exactly sure how I feel about that. But,
if I consider myself an honorable man, then how in the
name of Heaven can I stand in the face of another man
who’s being deprived of his liberty and call myself an
honorable man?”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“Which is another reason why the act was
selfish. I could not! How could I look my son in the
eye. How could I talk to anyone about honor, having
stood in the face of a man being beaten to death and not
made a move? How could I call myself a man? Now, I
could lie to you and I could lie to me, but, I’m not
comfortable with that, with lying to myself.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“So as I stood there and watched Mr. Hurata
slump forward, I’m saying to myself, ‘Well, first of
all, buddy, if you don’t do something, you’re going to
have to live with this dishonor. Nah, don’t want to do
that.’”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“So I moved forward to preserve my honor.
And, you know, I know that in this day and time, honor
is not a politically correct kind of term or attitude.
But, one thing I’ve learned about living is that you
take what is good from your experiences…what you can
use, and leave what you can’t.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“Rarely should we write an experience off
wholesale. There is much good that we can take from
even things that may be a bit unpleasant. And, one of
the things that I took from the Marine Corps was the
concept of duty and the concept of honor and
faithfulness.”
Dan Mader:
“You talk
about Jefferson. You talked about all the great
Americans, and is it fair to say that this is really a
country founded by heroes? I mean, the American dream
is the dream – to desire for freedom – you have the
right to freedom. No one can deny you your freedom.
And, these heroic men set all this up so people today
can live with that. And, so you knew that you had to
step in.
Gregory Alan Williams:
“They set it up, but they were shortsighted. Mr.
Jefferson himself demanded liberty for himself, but was
unwilling to preserve liberty for the black folks who he
owned.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“There’s a bit of bad in the best of us, and a
bit of good in the worst of us. And, the humanity in
all of us…shortsightedness, misunderstanding, a failure
to see the forest for the trees. Here, on one hand, Mr.
Jefferson demands justice for himself and is unwilling
to preserve justice for other human beings.”
Gregory Alan Williams:
“Now one can say, well, he really – he really didn’t
make a mistake because he didn’t consider black people
to be his equal. He considered them to be beasts.
Well, if that’s the case, why did Mr. Jefferson then
have so many black children? Why did he sleep with
one of his black slaves, if she was a beast…an animal?
Well, I’m not going to condemn Mr. Jefferson. I’m
as flawed as he is. I suffer from the same kind of
shortsightedness. But, because one has flaws,
because one fails, does that make one less heroic?
It perhaps makes them more heroic because we see in the
face of their failings, in the face of their
shortcomings, they still were able, at moments, to rise
to pinnacles of greatness.”
Dan Mader:
“If we
look for perfect heroes, we will always be
disillusioned, won’t we?
Gregory Alan
Williams: “There will be no heroes! If perfection is a
requisite for heroism, there are no, there will be,
there are no heroes. It is often, however, a person’s
flaws that inspire. As I mentioned, if a person, if a
man or a woman can achieve great things and by great we
mean… remember that consistent, steadfast kind of
commitment to purpose and to our own lives and to the
lives of others. If we can maintain that, even in the
face of our fear and our anger and our shortsightedness,
then we are, we are truly heroes.”
Dan Mader: “Do you
think of yourself as a hero?
Gregory Alan
Williams: “No. Yesterday’s scores will not win today’s
ballgames. If the Padres go out and win on Tuesday and
they’ve got a game on Thursday, and when they hit the
field, they say, ‘Well, you know what, folks, we won
Tuesday so…’The fans will say, but today is Thursday,
you see.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“So, my actions in the intersection of
Florence and Normandy are, will not hold me today in the
face of a indifferent injustice, of a new injustice, in
the face of a new victim, new perpetrators and new mobs
and new bystanders, you see.”
Gregory Alan Williams:
“Heroism is a commitment. It’s steadfast.
It’s – it’s – it’s ongoing. Perhaps, all that’s
required to rush into the midst of a mob is a rush of
adrenaline. I have a firefighter friend named
Newman. I asked Newman one time what requires
greater – which requires greater courage, rushing into a
burning building or taking care of your family one day
at a time.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“He said, oh, most certainly taking care of
my family. And he was the one who said rushing into a
burning building requires some degree of skill.
Primarily, it’s about a rush of adrenaline. But, the
compassion that is required as a husband, a wife, a
father, friend, teacher, disciplinarian, that, my
friend, is where the struggle is.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“We may want to go bowling, you know, but
they, it’s, it’s bazaar night at the kid’s grade school,
you know. This is your big bowling night. What do I
do? Do I go and be with this child who will probably
not remember this, you know, or do I go bowling. That
is where our heroism comes in, our willingness to
commit.”
Dan Mader:
“So we
need to be able to see the difference between true
heroism and heroic acts?
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“There is heroism in, certainly, heroic acts.
I guess what I’m saying is, is that we, we can find
heroism in other than extraordinary acts. Or, because I
think that the daily commitment and fulfillment of a
commitment is extraordinary.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“As I became an adult and realized what was
required to be an honorable adult, I realized. And I –
I – I – oh, goodness gracious, I tried to avoid it. I
mean, I tried all kinds of ways, because I thought, oh,
my goodness, this adult thing, this responsible thing,
this is, you know…let me hang out and go party, you
know.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“But there’s definitely heroism. We need to
look in other places because as long as we say that
heroism is an extraordinary act of courage or bravery at
great risk to one’s self, to one’s physical self, for
example, then I can deny my responsibility to other
people because I can say, oh, well, that guy was very
strong. He was very brave. He was very courageous, and
I’m not very brave, and I’m not very strong.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“So I can never do what he did. I could never
be a hero. And, so that allows people then to
disassociate themselves from their responsibility to
other people. If they come to believe that that
responsibility requires great bravery, great courage,
great strength, you see, then they can say, oh, they can
distance themselves and say, ‘Well, no, I don’t have to
raise my voice in the face of mob violence because that
man who did was strong and tall.’ You see, so I don’t
have to do that. But, the truth is, that we all must
raise our voices in the face of a mob.”
Dan Mader: “I
believe that no matter what the age of a person, I mean,
people say that teenagers lose their respect for heroes,
adults lose their respect for heroes, but I think that
we’re always searching for heroes, someone to pattern
our life after. So, who do you feel would be the best
hero today?
Gregory Alan
Williams: “I call my book A Gathering of Heroes because
I think that’s what we require – a gathering of heroes.
And those folks come in all different forms. Sometimes
they enter our lives for only a brief moment, passionate
moment. A word, a phrase. There’s nothing to fear but
fear itself.”
Gregory Alan Williams:
“I wonder how many
soldiers in the Second World War remember Mr.
Roosevelt’s words in battle, ‘There’s nothing to fear
but fear itself when you are scared to death.’ So
for some, see, that’s a moment, you know, someone we can
– oh, that’s a hero. I’ll take that. Here’s
a man who, once vital and healthy, finds himself in a
wheelchair, but yet he kept pushing or perhaps that was
inspirational to people and he saw Mr. Roosevelt as
being his hero in his life.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“There is a gathering of heroes in our lives…
all kinds of different folks, I think, who come in. I
think it’s best for us to be pragmatic. If we say I
want to pattern my life after this person, the moment we
see imperfection, then what happens to the pattern, you
see.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“My mother sews and I remember when I was
little, we used to go to J.C. Penney’s, she used to get
a pattern. And, she would make that dress based on that
pattern. If the pattern was messed up, the dress would
be messed up. I guarantee you, that any human being
that you pattern your life after will be imperfect,
therefore, the pattern will be messed up.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“So, what one wants to do, perhaps, is to take
from a variety of experiences, situations, and people,
and create their own pattern for your own life, you
see. Take a little from Bob, a little from Bill, from
Ellen, little bit from Susie, little bit from Confucius,
little bit from Roosevelt, little bit from Kennedy,
little bit from Cain, little bit from Malcolm, you see.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“What we’re so used to doing is throwing out
the baby with the bathwater. Oh, he’s a
republican…write him off. He’s a democrat…write him
off. He’s white…write him off. And, there may be all
sorts of good things coming out of this person which we
can learn, but if they aren’t a member of our group, if
we aren’t affiliated with their sect, if we don’t speak
their dialect of English, then, oh, write them off. And
we lose.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“You have two men. And one has a parcel of
land and the other has seed. Well, the man with the
parcel of land says, ‘Well, you know what, you don’t
speak my dialect of English so I’m not going to let you
plant your seeds on my land.’ So the man with the seeds
says, ‘Oh, yeah, well, no big deal. You don’t speak my
dialect of English, you know what I mean, so I’m not
going to plant my seeds in your land.’ And come spring,
they find them both dead of starvation.”
Gregory Alan Williams:
“See what I’m saying? One’s got the land and the
other’s got the seed. But, they got these things going
on with each other which keeps them from coming together
cooperatively and sharing the value that they both have.
One has valuable seed, the other has the land, and one
without the other is worthless, you see. They both
die. They both starve to death. And, so very
often in our lives, this is what happens.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“We starve spiritually, psychologically,
emotionally, physically, because we’re unwilling to
exchange with people what we need because we are not a
part of their group, you see. It’s a dangerous way to
live, so I suggest that we be pragmatic. And if we see
a person with some seed, and I know I’ve got a little
land, even if I don’t have some land, I’d say, ‘Hey,
listen, you’ve got some seeds there. Could I get a
couple of those, you know.’ And maybe I can, you know,
and I could start my own garden.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“So I think patterning our lives after a
specific person may be a mistake. I think we may be
doomed for disappointment. But, if we recognize that
people are imperfect and we go about gathering what we
can from people, from a gathering of heroes, we may be a
lot better off.”
Dan Mader:
“Does it
all start with tolerance, then?”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “I think that’s a major part. I think it
starts with tolerance of ourselves. You know there are
days when I’m intolerant. There are days when I pull
into a gas station in California, I’m looking for
directions, and it seems the people in the gas station
don’t know where they are let alone where I need to get
to.”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “See, I grew up in a place where you could
always count on directions at a service station. At a
filling station, you could get your car fixed. You could
get water. You could get air. For me, a service
stations was a landmark and it was a place where the
people who worked there knew their community.”
Gregory Alan Williams: “So today, I live
in an area that has a very new immigrant population.
Where I grew up, we didn’t have any new immigrants.
All the immigrants were old immigrants, and everybody in
the community was an immigrant or a descendant of an
immigrant. But, it was old immigrants. So I
now live in a community where there are a lot of new
immigrants. And I’m paying for gas and asking for
directions and no one can tell me where I need to go and
I get upset, and I say, oh, man, these people. Oh,
these people! Why don’t they learn to speak
English? Why don’t they go back where they came
from? They don’t even know where they are.
‘Oh, Man!’ goes through my head like a shotgun blast.
And, then two or three minutes later, I say, ‘Hmmm,
what’s that all about, pal? You know, what’s it
all about? These people go back where you came from,
even learn to speak the language.’”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “We’re a nation of immigrants, voluntary or
involuntary. That’s what we are. There was a time when
my descendants didn’t know where they were. Didn’t want
to be where they were. So I have to be tolerant of
myself knowing that I’m going, I’m not going to beat
myself up and beat my head with a baseball bat.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“I’m going to be aware that I can be
intolerant, and I have to be tolerant of myself to work
with that, to work on that, and it will get better over
time. And, it has gotten better over time. And, I need
to be, not only tolerant of other people. St. Francis of
Assisi said, ‘It is better to understand than to be
understood if one wishes to be a channel of peace.’”
Gregory Alan Williams:
“So, and indifference is the other current
scourge. I mean, Ellie Fazel says that, the great
Nobel laureate, writer, Holocaust survivor says that,
‘The opposite of love is not hate, it is indifference.’
But, indifference is more dangerous than hatred. And,
that is the other thing I have to be on guard for,
indifference. Well, it’s not me being beaten, it’s not
my family…couple of guys on my soccer team. Hey, it’s
not my business. That is what is dangerous,
indifference. So intolerance and indifference.”
Dan Mader: “Right
now, you hear the 'naysayers,' the media – I hate to
bring the media up – but specifically the media projects
a negative image of the teenagers of America are
apathetic. They don’t care about anything. They don’t
hold any values dear. What do you feel about
that?”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “I think to a large degree, the news is the
news. Used to be the news was what was happening, but
now the news is the news. You must understand that the
media is a profit-based, a profit-based organization.
They’re in business to make money.”
Gregory Alan Williams: “It is perhaps
easier to make money feeding a people images that they
will more readily accept than it is to feed them images
that require them to think or wrestle with. It is
perhaps easier to go along with the popular mindset than
to be about the business of changing minds.”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “Certainly if I wish a greater constituency, a
greater demographic, a bigger audience, what will I do?
Show that audience things, images that they are not
familiar with, or show them images that they’re already
comfortable with so they can tune in to my station, they
can tune to my station and say, ‘Oh, this is my station
because I’m comfortable with the images.’ No one likes
change.”
Gregory Alan
Williams:
“So it’s easier to make money by showing
images that people are familiar with. I think there’s
one thing we need to understand. The youth of America or
the youth of America is more underdeveloped than it’s
ever been. Youth of America is always, it is, it is
natural for youth to be at odds with age and for age to
be at odds with youth. That is the nature of things.”
Gregory Alan
Williams: “Each generation says, ‘Oh, those kids today.
Wasn’t like when we grew up.’ I don’t know how it is
that we come of age and seem to forget we were 16 and 12
and – it’s a weird thing, you know. It’s a very strange
thing. I don’t, I think youth today are facing
challenges. We all face new challenges. The
information superhighway, the speed which information is
transmitted from one person to another and the modes of
transmission mean that genocide and madness can also be
disseminated much more quickly. And, I think that’s our
current danger.”
Dan Mader:
“Okay.
Mr. Williams, thank you very much for meeting with us.”
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