James looks up to all of the boys on the Corner, but Chicken Man is his favorite. Chicken Man is "completely incoherent when he is drunk, but when sober he is one of the chief philosophers of the corner" (146). When James gets fired from his job, he wants revenge and suggests violence. Chicken Man becomes serious and gives two words of advice, "Forget it." He does not want James to end up in jail and on the Corner. He always has James's best interest at heart, unlike James's friends back in New York.
The most important lesson Chicken Man teaches James is about education. James knows each man on the Corner is intelligent (including himself), but still he continues to flunk out of school. Chicken Man tells him no one will beg him to go back to school. He recognizes his failures in life and urges James to work hard and receive an education. He wants James to be a more active role in his own life and tells him, "If you want to drop out of school and shoot people and hang on this corner all your life, go ahead. It's your life!" (150). When he spends summers on the Corner, James witnesses the consequences of a lack of education, the tendency to drink or use drugs, and the use of violence to resolve situations. He gains the motivation to apply himself in school and become successful.