A week of Super Bowl hype begins in earnest Monday, finally giving us a chance to discuss the appalling case of the most famous player in the game taking advantage of an interview with a sideline reporter to go on a wild-eyed rant about another player.
Analyze the rant and you find a personality overflowing with arrogance, ego, self-importance and a cunning use of the media.
If you think this is a reference to Richard Sherman, you have a short memory.
Sherman shrewdly made himself a national celebrity with his postgame interview after his Seahawks beat the 49ers in the NFC Championship Game. Whether or not he made himself likable to the average sports fan, he made himself more notorious.
After he taunted 49ers receiver Michael Crabtree, Sherman's jersey sales rocketed. Playing an unheralded position in the NFL's most far-flung city, Sherman, in an instant, transformed himself from a great cornerback into a national celebrity.
Because he is black, loud and dreadlocked, the reaction to his rant on social media included all manner of overt and coded racial commentary, allowing Sherman, whose life story and body of work are admirable, to go from vilified to sympathetic to celebrated in a matter of days.
Imagine if he had used his national platform and celebrity to ridicule one of his teammates.
That's what Peyton Manning did.