When Greg Louganis was competing in the Olympics, he was virtually unbeatable. |
Louganis, arguably the best-ever competitive diver ever in the history of the sport, will be featured on the boxes of Wheaties, the Breakfast of Champions, General Mills announced April 4.
The belated honor comes decades after Louganis, a Samoan/American, was competing in his prime winning gold medals in the Olympics. He became the only man to sweep the Olympic diving events in back-to-back games when he won gold medals in both springboard and platform diving in the '84 and '88 Olympics.
Times change, gay athletes are gaining acceptance. |
The General Mills breakfast cereal, known for featuring prominent athletes on its bright orange packaging, announced Monday that four-time gold medalist Greg Louganis will join swimmer Janet Evans and hurdler Edwin Moses on three separate boxes starting next month.
More than 43,000 people, inspired by an HBO documentary about the diver, had signed an online petition to get General Mills to belatedly feature the 56-year-old Louganis, who they say was overlooked for the honor at the height of his career.
Louganis, who came out as gay publicly in 1994 and revealed he was HIV-positive a year later, has said that homophobia likely blocked him from being featured on a Wheaties box after the 1984 and 1988 Summer Olympics, the New York Times reports.
“This means so much more than it would have back then,” he told the newspaper. “Getting it now means people will see me as a whole person — a flawed person who is gay, H.I.V.-positive, with all the other things I’ve been through.”
Greg Louganis today is an advocate and mentor for LBGTQ athletes and issues. |
Wheaties unveiled the "legends" cereal boxes after the documentary detailing Louganis' athletic career and experiences as a gay man sparked a petition on Change.org to get the diver on the iconic Wheaties cereal box. Created by Julie Sondgerath, who had never met Louganis, the petition garnered nearly 45,000 signatures.
"Back in '95, I wasn't expected to live very long because we thought of HIV-AIDS as a death sentence, so to be here today, now 56, the box means so much more to me than it would have then because I feel like I'm being embraced as a whole person, not just for my athletic achievements."
The cereal boxes will be in stores from May, Asian American & Pacific Islander Heritage Month, through at least the summer.
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For more news about Asian/Americans & Pacific Islanders, read AsAm News.
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