What bothers me is how quickly people forgive and forget with celebrity deaths. Bryant was a diva. He was selfish on and off the court and never lacked in drama and scandal. He was unfaithful to his wife and thanks to his money and status swept it under the rug buying her a very expensive rare, pink diamond ring.
I'm not saying what happened to him, his daughter and the others on board isn't tragic. Only saying he gets litte if any sympathy from me. This instant sainthood upon death is ridiculous.
It's inane and out of touch to assume that people's eulogies for him are just the result of them "being quick to forgive and forget with celebrity deaths". Nobody has forgotten anything about Kobe. Everyone remembers how he was like as a player and teammate, and the things he got involved in off the court.
Kobe inspired millions upon millions of people with his commitment to work, drive to excel and incredible resilience. He had tremendous impact on many young men who perhaps would not have grown up to become as successful as they have had it not been for his inspiration - many of these people came from poverty-ridden backgrounds.
He was an intellectually sound and cultured man, which is a rarity among athletes. He was, by all visible evidence, a caring father to his four daughters and was involved in many charitable activities. He meant something to so many people, it went beyond being a stand-out athlete, it certainly went beyond his celebrity status.
The case in Denver hasn't been forgotten, whether it be from its adultery angle, or the sexual assault allegation. He has shown tremendous amount of regret for his actions and that sort of behaviour hasn't been consistent with him. Both his wife and his accuser seem to have forgiven him - regardless of what the cause may be. It's certainly not something to be excused or brushed off, but it's completely unfair to discredit the man for that one reprehensible action. He has done far too much good, and has done far too little bad to be beholdened to that individual case, as large as its magnitude in the scale of moral judgment is. Him being a diva or a selfish player and so on. Meh. That's fluff in the grand scheme of things.
I wasn't a fan of Kobe Bryant, in fact I disliked his style of play for the very same reasons as you and
@bearfan pointed out - though being a passionate basketball fan I did respect him greatly as an athlete. That doesn't keep me from giving him his just due.