"The Worm," as he was nicknamed during his days as a ferociously effective rebounder for the Detroit Pistons and Chicago Bulls in the '80s and '90s, has become, over the intervening decades, sort of a dictionary definition of what happens when you struggle with alcohol addiction. Rodman, for much of the past decade, has been playing a stereotype of himself -- the brash, unpredictable provocateur. He's had a series of reality TV appearances -- including on Donald Trump's "Celebrity Apprentice" -- and, earlier this year, checked himself in to an alcohol rehab center.

Rodman has only been relevant in any meaningful way in politics during his seeming long, slow fade from celebrity with repeated trips to North Korea to meet with his self-professed "friend" Kim Jong Un. Rodman was lambasted for these trips in the past, accused of being used as a tool for a murderous dictator. He has responded, Rodman-like, badly -- savaging his critics including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton

Which brings me to Monday night -- and Rodman's interview from the Singapore summit between Trump and Kim, with CNN's Chris Cuomo.

I'm not sure if it was my own admittedly low expectations or Rodman's performance -- or some of both -- but I found him not only totally compelling, but sympathetic as well.

(Nota bene: Yes, I work for CNN. And, yes, I know Cuomo. Make of that what you will.)

My re-assessment of Rodman actually began before he even appeared on screen. It came when former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said this about Rodman : "He is a unique person since he has a relationship with both Kim Jong Un and with Donald Trump and obviously has great rapport with Kim Jong Un, who is a basketball fanatic himself. So I think that there is potential here to engage Dennis Rodman in a serious way in promoting this relationship."

I did a double take. I actually rewound the TV to make sure I heard it right. The former head of the DNI touting The Worm's diplomatic prowess? Whaaaaa?

Then the Rodman interview began. And, yes, he was sort of all over the place. And, yes, he was undoubtedly flacking for a sponsor -- which appears to be a sort of Bitcoin for marijuana.

But then Rodman started to recount his attempts to convince former President Barack Obama of Kim's willingness to make a deal as long as five years ago. And he started to cry. Here's the passage, from "Cuomo Prime Time:"

"It is amazing, it is amazing, when you said those things, when I said those damn things, when I went back home, I got so many death threats. I got so many death threats. I was sitting there protecting everything. And I believe that North Korea and when I went home, I couldn't even go home. I couldn't even go home. I had to hide out for 30 days. I couldn't even go home. But I kept my head up high, Brother. I knew things were going to change. I knew it. I was the only one. I never had no one to hear me. I never had no one to see me. But I took those bullets, I took all of that. I took -- everybody came at me and I'm still standing. And today is a great day for everybody, Singapore, Tokyo, China, everything, it's a great day."

Now. Simply because Rodman got emotional doesn't mean everything he said is accurate. His relationship with Kim is not even close to the relationship the average North Korean citizen has with Kim. In traveling repeatedly to North Korea pursuing basketball diplomacy, Rodman, with his actions and his words, seemed to cast a blind eye on the human rights violations and atrocities committed by and under Kim. That's not up for debate.

And yet, the Rodman on TV Monday night was someone who desperately wanted to be seen, heard and acknowledged. Who believed he has something to give. Who, in his own flawed way, wanted to help.

In short: There's more to Dennis Rodman than the caricature he has cultivated both during and after his basketball career. No, that doesn't absolve him of his past comments or his past behavior. And, no Rodman isn't going to be leading our efforts to de-nuclearize the Korean peninsula.

But neither should he be solely the butt of jokes either.

"I saw a Dennis Rodman that I have never seen before on the course of that interview, and you drew that out of him," Clapper told Cuomo after the Rodman interview. "A lot more depth there than I think meets the eye and he does understand Kim Jong Un, and all the rest of us, pundits, were kind of amateurs and haven't had that direct contact like he has."

Agreed.