Sports: Is It Just

MediaValues

This article originally appeared in Issue# 9

Why are television sports so popular? Is it because they gratify some very basic needs in each of us? And in our society?

It's an endless cycle.

Football now begins in July, just after baseball's All-star Game. By November, basketball and hockey are well underway -- the pros on the networks; local teams on independent and cable stations.

In between it's soccer and swimming, gymnastics and track, skiing, surfing, sailing, skydiving, skating and skateboarding. And every four years, the greatest televised sports marathon of them all — the Olympics — is broadcast, live, throughout the entire world.

Sports television is now Big Business. In fact, some say the whole face of professional and college sports has changed with the large revenues made possible through television. The pause for commercials and the needs of cameras and scheduling take precedence over the natural pacing of the game. Even the entrance of the teams is timed to the exact second of the director's script. Today sports may be more show biz than game.

At the same time, the financial stakes have grown enormously. The top two college teams each year can claim a cool minion for participating in a post-season Bowl game courtesy of the network covering the game. And Olympics contracts flow run into the billions of dollars.

Sports draw the largest audiences of any type of programming, have expanded to fill more time in the schedule and command some of the best technical performances by camera crews and technicians in the medium.

What makes sports, and football in particular, so popular on television? Often, when discussing the place of television in society the final, unanswerable statement made — either apologetically, defensively, or sneeringly — that "It's only entertainment."

Supposedly, common sense tells us that entertainment is something that should relax us, give us pleasure and lack ambiguity. The final arbiter of entertainment is an individual's taste and for that there is no accounting. But a serious look at light entertainment opens some areas for thought.

Just as we've discovered that common themes and treatments of comedy and variety series fulfill certain needs in the audience, the same holds true of sports. The common elements that entertain us in musical comedy, variety specials, the news, westerns and adventure stories come into play in the sports world, particularly in football.

Richard Dyer, lecturer in film for the universities of Keele and Birmingham in Britain, makes a case for entertainment as a utopian sensibility. He says:

"The notion of entertainment as in some sense utopian -- expressing ideals about how human life could be organized and lived --is implicit in what the most widespread assumption about entertainment, namely, that it provides 'escape.' Entertainment offers the image of 'something better' to set against the realities of day-to-day existence."

Expanding on Dyer's thesis, the accompanying chart identifies five categories of social tension and the utopian solution that humankind images in order to cope with each inadequacy. Developing these images in tens of television — sports and news — one can begin to understand why television-as-entertainment works so well, why so many millions of us will be glued to the set to watch our favorite teams, and then come back to watch it all again on the late-night news.


Social Tension Utopian Solution Football TV News
Exhaustion
Work as grind
Alienated labor
Pressures of urban life
Energy
Acting vigorously
Human power and activity
Vigor of game
Tackling, running
Fan reactions, cheering
Instant replays
Speed of series of short items
'Live' coverage of news events
Scarcity
Actual poverty
Unequal distribution of wealth
Abundance
The conquest of scarcity
Having enough and to spare
Enjoyment of sensuous, material things
Half-time activities
Color, bands
Cheerleaders
Sumptuous uniforms
High-salaried players
Technology of news gathering
Doings of the rich
Spectacles of pageantry or destruction
Dreariness
Monotony
Predictability
Daily routine
Intensity
Experiencing of emotion
Directly, fully, authentically
Without holding back
Competition
Limited time to perform
Teams face off for play
Action packed into short time frame
Emphasis on violence, dramatic incidents
Selection of visuals with eye to climactic moments
Manipulation
Advertising
Bourgeois democracy
Sex roles
Transparency
Open, spontaneous, honest communications and relationships
Love, sincerity
Team spirit
Fan loyalty
Player statistics and background
Color
"Folksy" style of newscasting
Focus on celebrities, politicians
Simplification of events to allow easy comprehension
Fragmentation
Job mobility
Rehousing, development
High-rise urban life
Community
Togetherness
Communal interests
Sense of belonging
Collective activity
Huddle
Cheers and songs
Crowds in the stands
Fans pouring onto the field
The world rendered as a global village
Assumptions of consensus

 
Author Bio: 

Michaela Conley, a former media instructor at St. Mary Center for Learning, Chicago, now lives in Salt Lake City. She is a freelance writer on media and television, and edits TVision, the newsletter or the Television commission of the Journalism Education Association, where this article first appeared.