Posted on 08/27/2020 9:31:00 AM PDT by Kaslin
Humanity is entertained by competition of all kinds. The pandemic has shown sports fans will find a new way to cheer and chant and boo.
It is sometimes underappreciated how new professional sports is as a dominant cultural phenomenon. For the vast majority of human history, sports has been overwhelmingly played by amateurs. And even in America, it is only in the past fifty years that this professionalized version of sport became a route to wealth. Baseball, which has the longest professional sports history in the United States, illustrates this: the average MLB salary is up an inflation-adjusted 3,000 percent since the late 1960s. Professional sports only became big money in the era of television, as a form of mass entertainment that did not require you to even go to the games to have a rooting interest, and for the multinational corporations to sell you beer and trucks and sugary gas-infused water.
This is not to denigrate professional sports or to suggest that the Olympics are more entertaining than the NFL. Pro athletes who play the games do incredible things. Pro sports is profoundly enjoyable as entertainment, and as human drama there are few things that can match it. But on a certain level, this Seinfeld comment may be his most true observation: youre rooting for laundry. The same player you loved in one uniform, whose strengths you valued and whose failures you dismissed as quirks of the trade, becomes nothing but a hated rival, a traitor, who took the money instead of playing for less while garbed in the proper colors.
But one thing we need to acknowledge is this: professional sports is not an essential good. It is a luxury good. Americans were satisfied for most of our history by sports that have little to no cultural impact now. And what this pandemic has taught us is that in a world of vast amounts of entertainment, if the entertainment isn’t there, humanity will go elsewhere. The explosion of esports during the lockdown is just one example of that – Twitch viewership has exploded, as the virtual arena never closed. Humanity is entertained by competition of all kinds, and professional physical competition is just one variety of that. If it diminishes in quality – if the show sucks – they will switch to another and find a new way to cheer and chant and boo. When the Super Bowl is over, you turn on Netflix.
One thing you cant turn to is the NBA. If you go to the NBAs website today, the top story there reads: NBA playoff games scheduled for Wednesday have been postponed, with players around the league choosing not to play in their strongest statement yet against racial injustice. Latest updates: Players demand change. If you follow the link to Players demand change, no changes are listed, nor are any in the offing. Yesterday, Stephanie Ruhle of MSNBC tweeted Well – there may not be have been games, but game plans are coming. I look forward to hearing her solutions.
This is a performative act on the part of NBA players, designed to gain praise from media quarters while denying their fans the respite they deserve. Sportswriters drive a misperception of athletes in part because, in jaded fashion, they devalue winning. The outcomes of games are not as important to them as to fans. They value drama and performance and good quotes – the matter of who wins and who loses is subsidiary.
Fans generally like players because theyre athletes. Writers like them when they become more than athletes, when they make for better subject matter. Surrounded by cooing media members who incentivize political statements, some athletes can be gaslit into thinking the world is different than it is. And then you get the James Harden vs. Lebron James problem.
Of course, it was James silence that became so symbolic last year as an indication of his lack of bravery on political issues that underlies all of this braggadocio now. The Athletics Ethan Strauss has been up front with his criticism of this, much to the frustration of other sportswriters, like this Slate writer who recently interviewed him.
I think its completely obvious to people who arent in the bubble. You have your most precipitous drop this last year after [the NBAs response to Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Moreys comments about] China. I mean an absolute free fall, where youre losing double digits on the national ratings, double digits on the local ratings.
And yeah, maybe youre never going to be able to prove it to a T that it had something to with China, but that is when the NBA is hitting the news for people who are not necessarily completely engaged. And I think that when you talk to a lot of people who arent within media, people maybe where their politics dont line up 100 percent with whats being evinced, yeah, a lot of people are turned off by it.
I think that it doesnt take a lot of imagination, really. I feel like Im being put in the position in a way of just explaining the obvious, that gravity exists. And I guess I would say to you, why wouldnt it have an impact?
Expect this NBA strike, and it essentially is a strike that could suspend permanently what has been a terrible season ratings-wise, to become an issue where woke sportswriters attempt to use it to create drama in other leagues. ESPNs hockey writer was already expressing her disappointment last night that the NHL would continue to play, as they are paid to do. It will be interesting to see if they try to badger the NFL into such denial of their fans. ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith and Max Kellerman are already calling the NFL to boycott. To what end? Well, the political preferences of the writers, obviously. Little else is of importance.
Media is already comparing Lebron to Muhammad Ali. Ali, you recall, was facing jail time for his act of protest. Lebron faces no negative consequences whatsoever. This matters. People turn on athletes when they refuse to play – sometimes vociferously, but more often by just turning to other things. And then the corporate sponsors and the people with television contracts to honor start to get antsy.
But its the fans who miss it the most. Yesterday, right after the Milwaukee Bucks announcement that they would not play their playoff game, an older man named Larry called into DC sports radios The Fan. I thought I could get away from politics by listening to sports but now … its no escaping politics. I’m a Democrat but theyre gonna make me become a Republican if they keep doing this stuff.
"I feel like I can get away from politics by listening to sports, but now, there's no escaping politics."
We hear you, Larry.
"I feel like I can get away from politics by listening to sports, but now, there's no escaping politics."
We hear you, Larry.
I hear you Larry. The times of great strife in American history when professional sports brought us together more than it tore us apart were good. But for now, at least, those times are just a memory. Well see if they come back.
Sports media cheers on the canceling of the very events they cover in order to earn their paychecks.
Just can’t fix that kind of stupid.
White America could cripple pro sports if they chose to do so. Just saying ...
That’s one way to get those hugh contracts under control..
All those poor multimillionaire athletes.. so abused..so.. so.. soon to be unemployed.. permanently.
this idiot exited tennis tournament..now she is going to play
unfair to Mertens her opponent
https://sports.yahoo.com/naomi-osaka-exits-tennis-tournament-161850204.html
This fan walked away years ago when thugs replaced athletes.
These sports professionals now start a game by effectively laying down our flag and taking an open poo on it, then say their effort was a protest against whites for blacks, for which on the field are black.
I know it is instead our National Anthem and the flag is raised, but the butt turning towards the flag or people looking away in shame is not much different.
These people, and the entire sports industry, are £@^.
Just to compare the athlete of old to the “superior” modern athlete: a 100 meter race between Jesse Owens and Usain Bolt on the same track, with the same shoes, and the same starting blocks, would be exceptionally close (it would be Bolt by less than a step, according to most analyses). Throw in the same dietary “supplements” or lack thereof, and you might have it the other way around.
Sports have outgrown their role and their usefulness. They are bloated, and COVID-19 is deadly to that sort of thing.
I cant ignore the NBA any more than I do.
How long before they figure out that we watch sports to get away from the political crap, not have it rubbed in our faces?.............................
I’m cheering them on too. I hope that pro sports, as it’s been known during the last 60 years, disappears. It wouldn’t bother me in the slightest.
Hoping the NHL still remains nuetral-
Hey NBA racist thugs.
You are ENTERTAINMENT.
Nothing more.
No one needs ENTERTAINMENT. No one wants to be lectured to while paying for ENTERTAINMENT.
And the entertainment industry is HIGHLY competitive.
You run up and down a court chasing a ball.
You had no idea how good you had it.
Dumb mutherf+ckers.
They were getting a lot of flack, being mostly white, for not following the leads of the NBA and MLB. Of course, the NBA has already backtracked.
Yahoo Sports shut off comments. Then have sports columnists pontificate about how racist and hateful each sport is. I assume it will continue until after the election is over, then they will turn comments back on again. I am not going back to reading their web page.
So looking forward to them finding out about “get woke, go broke” the hard way.
The trend I see is white people "going Galt" when it comes to pro sports. We're just walking away from it all.
The next few years are going to be problematic for the business of professional sports. Up until 6 months ago, their business models were based on double-digit revenue increases ad infinitum.
The only way for owners to recoup dollars lost this year is expansion. Of course, that will dilute the talent of their teams, which we've seen before.
The left wing idiots at CBS Sports want everything shut down - NBA - College Football - NFL - isn’t that where they make their living? Dennis Dodd on CBS Sports was cheering when the Big 10 & Pac 10 shut down fall sports - Why?
I saw where athletics were headed when I taught at a major university many years ago. Some of the players in my classes failed each semester. After I submitted the grades, who knows what happened. They played.
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