Robert Davi
Profile: Internet Safety Advocate, Actor and Dad
By Donna Smith
Actor Robert Davi has worked with some of Hollywood's finest. A few
of his movie credits include Die Hard (1988), License to Kill (1989), Raw Deal (1986),
Showgirls (1995), The Hot Chick (2002) and Contract on Cherry Street
(1977), where he starred opposite Frank Sinatra. He recently finished
filming One Last Ride and will soon film
the epic Gildamesh in Morocco. But many know him best from his
role as veteran FBI agent Bailey Malone in the NBC series
Profiler.
Davi's most serious roles now are as dad to his five children, Christopher, born in 1980, Adrianna, Frances, and twins, Isabella and Nicholas, and promoting Internet safety. Through an organization called i-SAFE, this safety-conscious dad is helping protect not only his children, but thousands across the country from Internet predators.
Profile:
Daddy
Davi is an active father who encourages education as well as extracurricular
activities. His children enjoy swimming, horseback riding, singing, music and
sports, with softball topping the list. Davi has helped by coaching his
daughter's team and participating in tournaments.
The twins, Isabella and Nicholas, go to
preschool a couple of days a week "just to get their feet wet," says
Davi, who is amazed at their ability to communicate so well at their age due to
having older siblings. "The difference in their ability to communicate is
so far advanced from other kids who are the same age," he says. "They
(the teachers) are even surprised with their ability to communicate and express
themselves. I think that's something also we encourage ... that self-expression
and the individual attitude a kid can have to develop a strong personality. I'm
a pretty strong individual and so is their mom."
When his schedule permits, Davi enjoys helping
the kids with their special projects at school. He's been fortunate to be home
a lot lately, but says there are periods of time when he's on location, and
that can get difficult. On occasion, he will take the kids on set with him.
"They enjoy that," he says. "Sometimes they bring their
homework, sometimes they just hang out and have a fun lunch – behind-the-scenes
stuff."
It should come as no surprise that Christopher is interested in the business and following in Dad's footsteps. Christopher is now attending acting school, which is fine with Davi. "It has to be something that internally comes from him," he says. "I support him, as I see his passion for it. But there's a lot of rejection involved in it because it's a tough business, but I wouldn't discourage it if that's what a kid wants to do."
His girls are also showing an interest in
acting, but for Davi, education is top priority. "I stress to them
education," he says. "Education is first. For me, that's what it was.
Because the more educated you are, the better an actor you are. You understand
the world we live in. "
Encouraging
Education
Davi describes his children as "struggly" students, and feels, as
many parents do, that his children could work harder. "They fly off a cuff
and study when they have to study instead of having that self-motivating thing
in them," he says. Davi wants them to know that learning is fun, but says
it's an interesting balance between being able to inspire a child or turn them
off to something.
"Sometimes it's tough," he says.
"Sometimes it's the excitement of learning, of gaining knowledge and
growth. It's that they understand the purpose of life. It's about growth.
Knowledge and education is like water for your growth."
Growth for the Davi family also includes
spirituality. "My wife and myself encourage God and respect and understand
the commandments," he says. Davi wants his children to understand all
kinds of religions.
His Better
Half
In 1990, Davi married Christine Bolster, the original model for Guess jeans.
Besides her role as a mom, Bolster also does volunteer work as a court
appointed special advocate (CASA). "She goes into situations where
children are taken from their parents or in homes and need special programs and
special attention," says Davi. "She goes in and she talks to the
parents and she talks to the educators. She makes sure they get the kind of
help that they need."
Davi says there's a shocking and
surprising amount of neglect out there, and without someone being an advocate
for a child, they can just get pushed through the system. Bolster also
volunteers at her children's schools and does "mom stuff."
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For more information on becoming a CASA,
visit The National CASA Association at www.nationalcasa.org.
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An Internet
Advocate
While working on Profiler, Davi went to the FBI
academy at Quantico, Va., and met Bill Hagmire, who was "the real Bailey
Malone" and in charge of the child abduction/serial killing unit. "He
filled me in on the epidemic of missing children and child predators,"
says Davi. "And when I went to Washington, D.C., at the Hoover Building
and went to the computer critical response unit there, which is computer crime,
I was made aware of the amount of computer crime that's happening. So I was
aware of what was happening in the world."
About a year later, Davi became involved
with i-SAFE, an organization that works with schools, law enforcement and
community leaders to bring age-appropriate curriculum directly to classrooms
nationwide to help students not only gain critical-thinking and decision-making
skills, but empower them to take control of their Internet experiences. Davi
was contacted by Teri Schroeder, the developer of i-SAFE, and soon came on
board and started using his contacts and influence to help get the program up
and gain more visibility.
Since its launch in 1998, i-SAFE has
reached thousands of students, and Congress has recently increased its funding
to $5 million. The program has expanded from 24 to 50 states during the
2003-2004 school year. "It's going very well," says Davi. "It's
now gone from being like a satellite group to being in all 50 states and funded
by Congress." Davi routinely talks at schools and spoke at the National
Association School Resource Officers (NASRO) convention last summer.
Davi says i-SAFE should be in every school because
it's not going to get any easier. "We continually have new problems that
crop up on that Cyber World," he says. "My whole thing with the kids
is giving them a visceral understanding. On the playground they can see who
they're interacting with – on the Cyber Playground, they can't."
What can parents do to get i-SAFE at their child's
school? "People should call their congressman and say, 'Hey, we want this
program in our school,'" says Davi. "It's a way of getting tax
dollars back in the community."
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When coaching his daughter's softball team
one day, the lessons of i-SAFE came into play not on the computer screen, but
on the baseball field. "One tournament, the girls [on the team] came to me
and said, 'Mr. Davi, there's a man over there that wants to give us a ride on
his wagon.'" Davi called park security and told the girls to stay away
from the man. "That next day, the security guy said thanks for the heads
up, that guy was a child predator and we arrested him at 10 last night."
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Bringing the Lessons
Home
Davi does not think children should have computers in their rooms until they're
18. "Parents should be parents, and children should feel safe and feel
monitored that at any time the parent (can ask), 'What are you doing on there?
Who are you talking to?' I don't think you should stop them from using it – I
don't believe in filtering – but I believe in educating them, and I believe
that there are certain things you can do to help safeguard. There's a huge
statistic as [to] the amount of children that are approached, from pornographic
kiddie sites, etc."
Davi says his girls know to share any
suspicious e-mails with him. He recalls when FOX news did a segment on him and
his daughters. He believes that someone stopped the frames repeatedly and
looked at the footage over and over again to figure out his daughter's e-mail
address. "They got my daughter Frances' e-mail address," he says.
Frances received a strange e-mail and told her dad, which made Davi feel good
knowing they will tell him anything strange. "There's a balance between
educating them and fear," he says. "A little fear is good."
For Davi, it all goes back to education,
so children can learn to make choices – the right choices – by themselves.
"It comes down to character building," he says. "There was more
of a visceral understanding of shoplifting. There would be an immediate moral
compass that they were guided by. That's really the first firewall. Temptations
are a constant, but if they're given some sort of moral compass of which to
make choices on and consequences for those choices, I think that helps."
Many parents feel safe because they've
installed computer-monitoring software, but while Davi feels that it may be
some help, it's not enough. "These kids can hack around anything," he
says. "I'm sure that's some kind of deterrent. But it's still not
affecting the hearts and minds of the kids. It's almost like a Band-Aid."
Davi offers another reason why he feels
i-SAFE should be in every classroom: "You're not going to get 100 percent,
but if it's in a classroom situation, you can get 75 percent of the kids. Being
able to communicate, it's very hard with families with two jobs."
Kids are very trusting of who they are
talking to the on the Internet. "That's why you have to put that little
bit of fear thing in them," says Davi. "I started with a visceral
thing saying, 'Can you help me find my puppy?' And then I would get them in the
car and say, 'OK, I've got you. You're never going to see your Mommy and Daddy
again.'" Though Davi does admit it sounds harsh, he says it affected them
so they're just a little leery. Says Davi, "They're still very warm kids,
but they're not [apt] to fall for 'Come for a ride on the red wagon.'"
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