'Rush' Driver Lauda Challenges Our Definitions Of Heroism
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Our standards for heroism really have tanked, and a new Hollywood
movie has driven that point home -- at 180 mph.
Ron Howard's breathtaking new movie, "Rush," is the story of the famous 1976
season of Formula One legends Niki Lauda and James Hunt, during which world
champion Lauda had a near-fatal crash at Germany's Nürburgring track. The film
underscores just how easily impressed we've become as a society since the Lauda-Hunt
era. I walked out of the theater wanting to punt a Bieber.
Just 42 days after Lauda's disfiguring crash -- a priest had read the Austrian
driver the last rites -- he climbed back into his Ferrari to defend his
championship against Britain's James Hunt. If that doesn't leave you
slack-jawed, Lauda's post-racing heroics (omitted from the film) ought to do the
trick.
Lauda is as well known here in Europe for his business accomplishments as he is
for those of his racing career, having founded two airlines: Lauda Air (now
defunct) and NIKI (now a subsidiary of Air Berlin). In 1991, Lauda Air Flight
004, a Boeing 767-300ER, crashed in Thailand, killing all 223 passengers aboard.
Boeing was prepared to blame pilot error rather than a mechanical problem with
the thrust reverser that Lauda had suspected to be the cause. That's when Lauda,
a commercial pilot himself, stepped in.
In an interview with The Guardian, Lauda explained: "I said, 'Take a 767, load
it up like it was with two pilots, deploy the reverse thrust in the air and, if
it keeps on flying, I want to be on board. If you guys are so sure that people
can continue to fly these airplanes without being at risk, then let's do it.'"
Boeing declined, and the company acknowledged that a mechanical failure had led
to the tragedy. Without Lauda offering to put his own life on the line in the
greater interests of the truth, who knows what similarly fatal consequences
might have transpired. Now THAT is a hero.
But take today's icons. No, really -- take them, please. What kind of standards
do we set, if any, for those we pronounce "heroes," "role models" or "icons"? It
seems to be enough just to win sporting contests, or sing well, or survive a
high-profile divorce from a billionaire, or appear on airbrushed magazine
covers. Merely pushing the kill button on a drone joystick, at zero risk to
oneself, gets people war medals now.
The truth about genuine heroes is that they aren't popular in their time -- at
least not in the likeable sense. Leadership, a quality that bona fide heroes
typically possess, rarely makes one a sweetheart of the masses. They tend to
ruffle feathers, as Lauda did and continues to do.
To wit, "Rush" emphasizes that, unlike his rival Hunt, Lauda wasn't exactly Mr.
Popularity among other drivers. If you're focused on pleasing others, then you
aren't truly leading -- you're merely reflecting. During that fateful week at
Nürburgring, Lauda called a meeting of his fellow racers and implored them to
boycott the race because of dangerous track conditions. He lost that vote but
turned out to be spot-on in his assessment -- tragically so.
The willingness to take an unpopular stand is common among leaders, because if
being one was easy, then more people would assume leadership roles. It often
rubs people the wrong way when a leader eschews popular opinion and the status
quo in favor of steadfast commitment to principles (not to mention the
inevitable envy of their success). Leaders often have to settle for the grudging
respect they earn through consistent proof of merit. To them, it's all about the
long game.
Lauda consulted extensively with "Rush" screenwriter Peter Morgan of
"Frost/Nixon" fame. In the film, Lauda (portrayed by Lauda doppelgänger Daniel
Brühl) says to James Hunt (Chris Hemsworth): "A wise man can learn more from
his enemies than a fool from his friends."
Take the celebrity your kids idolize. Now take the celebrity who recently
engaged in a public catfight with your kid's favorite celeb. Now try to imagine
Lauda's words of wisdom coming out of either of their mouths. Better yet, take
your kids to see "Rush" so they can learn what their standard for heroism ought
to be.
COPYRIGHT 2013 RACHEL MARSDEN