Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Lingerie Football, Legitimate Sport?

The Lingerie Football League is a growing league that is getting mixed reactions. Torkwase Fraser, a former pro sprinter who last season played for the San Diego Seduction, says that this league is full of competitors and says they are serious football players. The LFL has been criticized as "both a tawdry gimmick and blatantly sexist for its unabashed appeals to the base instincts of young male viewers." Fraser also said that it’s her choice to show her skin and she joined the league to show off her skills to a stadium audience and challenge herself physically.
Ryerson University sociology professor Nicole Neverson said the sport degrades women, exploits its unpaid athletes and is yet another example of the “sports media complex,” which reinforces gender stereotypes constructed around heterosexual male desires." The women may be athletic, Neverson said, but their athleticism is "not the hallmark of their participation in this league."
Fraser also stated that almost half of the women have played at least US college-level sports and about player in their underwear, "the get up isn’t much different than the two piece sprinting garb she wore at track-and-field meets."
All I can say is wow. This is definitally going to get some attention. I can defintitley understand the sexist part of the arguement but if the girls are not against playing in the lingerie then it is their choice. This falls into gender and sports when we talked about gender stereotypes on March 22nd when we brought in newspapers and our sexist ads. My only suggestion to this dillema is to put an age limit on the program so only adults older than 18 can go to the games and put a mature TV rating when it appears on TV.

Equipment Gap Hinders Some Teams




Sad to say but because of the economic crisis that we have entered her in the United States it has affected the low budget high school sports teams. Mainly baseball and softball have been affected the most because of all the equipment that is required for the players. Some schools only offer the jerseys and travel bags and require for the players to get their own bats, gloves, cleats, and other essential equipment to play. So players who may have great talent but because they can't afford the right equipment they will not perform to their potential and to the extreme may cause them to quit playing. Steve Garland who is the coach of East Hamilton's baseball team said "Economics play a big role in this game now and that’s a bitter pill to swallow for someone like me who loves baseball. I don’t want it to be a rich kid’s sport, like golf or tennis, but its gotten to the point with the expense of bats, gloves, cleats and private instructors that that’s what the game has become." High school is where kids should get the chance to play and the kids should not have to pay for anything. The parent are already suffering enough by trying to take care of their family and now they have to pay hundreds of dollars for baseball/softball equipment. That will not go over real well.
How the economy is affecting sports is what we talked about in class on March 15th and 17th. We talked about the prices that people have to pay to see/play for their favorite sports and how its risen.

Budget Cuts? Not in the Big 12

Fox Sports Group has agreed with the Big 12 to play football games for the next 13 years for a small cost of $1.1 billion. Fox networks will play 40 games each season and to satisfy the financial needs of the schools that decided to leave the league last summer. This will take effect in the fall of 2012 and will average $90 million a season. This might increase the payment by customers to cable and satellite providers for getting these Fox channels. The conference is also has an eight year contract with ABC and ESPN worth $480 million that runs through 2015-16. Their total TV revenue will average about $150 million per season for the 10 team league.
This is INSANE!!!! This is one of the main revenue streams for each school and it goes right back in the athletic department while the rest of the country is in an economic drought. We learned in class on March 22nd and 24th that rights fees have in fact escalated rapidly since 1960s. We also learned that sports depend very highly on media to broadcast them to the public or otherwise people will not know what is going on in the world of sports. People will pay their cable provider an outrageous amount of money to see sporting events. Which is why there are so many sports channels you can chose from.


http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/fb/fbc/7520352.html

Tiger Woods Video Game Sales at 14 Year High


After the whole Tiger Woods scandal, his sponsorships were dropping like flys. But there was of one of the very few that stuck with him that through the tough time. EA Sports decided to continue there video game as Tiger Woods as their cover boy. Tiger's deviant acts cost him lots of money and fans can tell it is really affected his golf game. EA Sports may not have gotten rid of him but they went a different route for the cover. Instead of the usual Tiger picture on the cover they opted with a picture of the course at Augusta. Last years copy suffered severely because of the incident and comparing it to this years copy, in the same week the sales grew 200%, and were the highest its been in the 14 year history of the franchise.
I certainly disagree with Tigers deviant actions but I do believe that he knows what he did was wrong and that he is a changed man. I do believe that he will win again and that it is just a matter of time. In the classes on March 29th and 31st we were taught about deviance and where it had occurred in sports. Tiger's behavior referring to the world of golf and brought negative nation-wide attention to the sport. I believe the video game will continue to be a success because even if Tiger Woods retired tomorrow he would still be considered as on the of the best golfers of all time.
Woods of the U.S. waves as he walks off the 18th green during final round play in the 2011 Masters golf tournament in Augusta

Kathy Switzer, Remembering 44 Years Ago

The 1962 Boston Marathon was a race to put in the record books, not because of who won or how many people competed but the first woman crossing the finish line. Registered under the name K.Switzer, she entered the marathon that had a rule that only males could compete. As she raced with a hood over top of her head so no one could tell that she was female, the wind pick up and blew her hood off her head. An angry official chased her down and tried to remover her from the race her former boyfriend, an All-American football player tackled the official. She then gathered up the rest of her strength and finished the race. She knew if she failed to finish the race it would set women back and prove that women can't do it. Even today this event is remembered as the initial start of women's sports and participation then skyrocketed.
Switzer spoke at Vassar College, which was founded as a women's college in 1861, of the importance of gender equity of sports and how that dreadful day became a major starting point in women's athletics. She made sure to ensure that the crowd that was listening to her when she said "Men are not better athletes than women, they are different athletes. Talent is everywhere; it's just waiting for an opportunity."
Kathy Switzer is not just an important person in women's sports history but in history in general. Just because of her run and how she made sure she finished the marathon inspired not only women athletes but also women who were not athletes. She showed that no matter what people say, you can achieve what ever you set your mind to. I am glad to have learned about Kathy in our class on April 12th. She is one of the greatest female athletes of all time and will continue be the role model for young women all around the world.
http://www.miscellanynews.com/2.1576/switzer-speaks-on-gender-equality-in-athletics-1.2541405?MMode=true

Meet Henry Jones

Winner of the Georgia Boxing Championship Lifetime Achievement Award, Henry Jones is now a DC Boxing Hall of Fame inductee. This may seem like no big deal unless you know the history of Henry Jones and why this man is a legend as a boxing ring announcer.
In 1988 his career started as the first ever black boxing ring announcer. He said he "didn’t even consider ring announcing at the time because he had never seen a black man famous for it." Jones started his career by doing the announcing for free just to get his name out there. He steadily earned a good reputation. But he feels he did not get the start he thought he should of got because of the color of his skin but in 1998 the first black World Flyweight Champion Mark Johnson demanded in his contract that Jones serve as his announcer in a fight that was going to air on ESPN. But sadly the discrimination continued, in 2008 he claims that even HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg discriminated against him. Even with tons of emails asking for Jones, Greenburg said he "was not interested" and asked Jones to tell people to stop sending emails because they were jamming his inbox. Eventually Jones replaced DJ Ed Lover as the announcer of HBO's "KO Nation" because Lover did such a poor job.
This is a very great story about doing something that you love doing and not giving up because somebody tells you that you can't do it. Sadly this also shows that discrimination still occurs today which is also we were taught on April 5th and 7th in class. As hard as it is to do, this world will always have some form of discrimination and the only way to try to cure this problem is in education. People need to learn that no matter what we look on the outside, we are all the same on the inside. We are all human beings.