Friday Night Lights Key Quotations.pdf

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Key Quotations- Friday Night Lights. “Life really wouldn't be worth livin' if you didn 't have a high school football team to support.” (pg. 20). This quote is said by ...
Key Quotations- Friday Night Lights “Life really wouldn’t be worth livin’ if you didn’t have a high school football team to support.” (pg. 20) This quote is said by Bob Rutherford, a town realtor, and it symbolizes the epic dependence the town has on Permian. “Whatever they fantasized about, it all seemed possible that day.” (pg. 24) Said by the author, it was his observation of the feeling of invincibility that the players had. “A place still rooted in the sweet nostalgia of the fifties – unsophisticated, basic, raw – a place where anybody could be somebody, a place still clinging to all the tenets of the American Dream, however wobbly they had become.” (pg. 33) This is how Bissinger described Odessa and how it appeared to him. “The grand dukes of Permian, men in their fifties and sixties, who had become as dependent on the Panthers as they were their jobs and children and wives and treated the memory of each game as a crystal prism that looked more beautiful and intricate every time it was lifted to the light, were there in full force, of course.” (pg. 40) This shows that playing Permian football was like a rite of passage to be apart of the former player fan base, one where former players could recount their memories and treat them like valuable possessions. "'He’s got a man’s body, but you’re dealing with the mentality of a twelve year old child.'" (pg. 66) Said by running back coach Mike Belew of Boobie Miles, this quote is representative of Boobies immaturity; his choice to put all of his chips into football was a decision that someone who did not realize the importance of reality (a twelve year old child) would make. “I got him to live through and that’s something pretty special.” (pg. 84) These words, said by Charlie Billingsley of his son, Don, are not only representative of their relationship but also of the ultimate relationship between the players and their die-hard fans. “Nigger. The word poured out in Odessa as easily as the torrents of rain that ran down the streets after and occasion storm, as common as a part of the vernacular as ‘ole boy’ or ‘bless his ittl biddy heart’ or ‘awl bidness’ or ‘I sure did enjoy visitin’ with you’ or ‘God dang.’ “ (pg. 89) This is the author's assessment of the racism in Odessa and how it saying the word "nigger" was as easy as saying anything else. “The American version of the Berlin Wall – the railroad tracks that

inevitably ran through the heart of town.” (pg. 91) Another way Bissinger describes the social divide between the whites and the blacks of Odessa. “But it also may be that under the right circumstances, the demon wins the heart of the most steadfast soul, and the nemesis always becomes a lover.” (pg. 120) Bissinger's description of Ivory Christian's attitude towards football: no matter how much he tried to hate it, he couldn't help but love the game. “There was a heartbeat in those stands that dotted the Friday nights of Texas and Oklahoma and Ohio and Pennsylvania and Florida and all of America like a galaxy of stars, a giant, lurking heartbeat.” (pg. 193) This explains that the attitude shown towards football in Odessa is not uncommon in other big football states. “It was a phenomenon that Trapper had seen dozens of times before, a kid so caught up in it all that there was no room for anything else, another kid for whom nothing in life would ever be so glorious, so fulfilling as playing high school football. Trapper didn’t see the game as being a savior for these kids. He saw it as ‘the kiss of death.’ “( pg. 284) Said by Trapper, the team trainer, this quote represents the inevititable fact that once Permian football has chewed you up and you lived your glory days, it will spit you out just as quick, and you become just another onlooker. “. . . Kirby felt compelled to uphold the integrity of the no-pass, no play rule.” (pg. 303) The fact that the people of Odessa could ignore this rule, which was meant to encourage education as a priority over playing football, d emonstrates their ill-advised priorities. “There was no glory here, no pomp, just the raw-boned sound of bodies crashing into bodies.” (pg. 325) Bissinger's description of the State Semi-final game between Carter High and Permian. “This is the last minute of your life.” (pg. 326) Said by Ronnie Bevers, an offensive lineman, this quote demonstrates that once your Permian football career is over, you have nothing to look forward to. “He lingered by his locker and started to sob again. ‘That’s why it hurts so much, to lose to someone you know hasn’t worked as hard as you.’ “ (pg. 335)

Jerrod McDougal's quote after losing to Carter, depicts the unrivaled passion and determination the Permian players had