Title: Week 8:
1Week 8 Sport and the media
- ? Introduction
- ? Key characteristics of the sport media
- ? Power relations and the sport media
- ? Sports media texts images, narratives and the
construction of sports - ? Sports media consumers media effects
- ? Sports media producers media professionals
- ? Conclusion
2Introduction
- Media are important in influencing how we see the
world the media dont tell us what to think,
but they greatly influence what we think about. - The media provide information, interpretation and
entertainment entertainment goals are likely to
have a higher priority than the others within
commercial media - Media producers encode info and we
interpret/decode it. They decide what camera
shots they want us to see.
3Key characteristics of the sport media
- Print media (old media form) this includes
newspapers, magazines and fanzines, books
catalogues, event programs and trading cards
words and images printed on paper and available
to many readers.
4Key characteristics of the sport media
- Electronic media this includes radio, TV, film,
video games, the internet and online
publications words commentary and images we
receive in audio and video forms - The real world itself is influence by the
artificial - The collapse between artificial, superficial, and
the real. (the matrix plays with this idea)
5Power relations and the sport media
- What we get to see (or not) is influenced by a
range of actors from producers, editors and
program directors to sponsors, owners and
government regulations. Coakley identifies 5
goals that such actors use in deciding how media
products are made (p.404)
6Power relations and the sport media
- Making profits-will it sell?
- Shaping values is it moral
- Providing a public service is it for the common
good? - Building their own reputations how does this
make us look? - Expressing themselves in technical, artistic or
personal ways is it good? - These goals may sometimes be in conflict with
each other - Power begins to shape these processes. People
usually emphasize images and messages consistent
with the dominant ideologies in society as a
whole. Thus the media serve the interests of
those who have power and wealth in society
7Sport and the Media symbiotic relationships
- The dependency of sport on media
- When sports exist just for the participants there
is little need for media - When sports become commercial entertainment there
is an increased need for media dissemination and
therefore increased dependency on the media - Sports require both coverage and news
- Sports discourse dominates sport compared to
other cultural forms
8Sport and the Media symbiotic relationships
- The media provide huge resources for sports and
enable them to reach worldwide audiences 715.1
millino people watched the Italy vs. France mens
soccer world cup final in 06 - It was one of the most viewed events in tv
history - Television companies are thus willing to spend
hundreds of millions of dollars to secure
exclusive rights to sports events - Fox paid 4.3 billion or 712.5 million a year
until 2011 to get exclusive rights to cover NFL
games
9Sport and the Media symbiotic relationships
- To accommodate the commercial interests of
television sports have changed the way they are
organized, packaged and presented - The schedules and starting times for many sport
events have been altered to fit televisions
programming needs - Game times are subject to change throughout the
season. Time changes are usually a result of
rescheduling to accommodate TV schedules and for
make-up games due to rain-outs.
10Sport and the Media symbiotic relationships
- The dependency of the media on sport
- Most forms of the media - film, books, and the
internet are not dependent on sport (these can
survive without sports) - But TV and Newspapers are now newspapers devote
25 of their content to sport
11Sport and the Media symbiotic relationships
- Sports have also become a major part of the
programming schedules for most television
networks - The high viewing figures can therefore translate
into higher premiums on advertising space a 30
second slot during the 2008 Superbowl cost 2.7
million - Cable and satellite networks in particular have
used sport to gain access to markets
12Sports media texts images, narratives and the
construction of sports
- The media do not simply relay reality to us,
unmediated as it happens even though this is
what is often claimed - but rather we are
re-presented with an edited version of what has
taken place which we, the audience, then attempt
to decode - This is what is referred to within media studies
as the encoding/decoding model of how signs and
media texts work - Semiology is the process of reading these signals
13Sports media texts images, narratives and the
construction of sports
- Signification refers to the way signs work within
a given culture - There are two orders of signification
- Denotation
- Connotation
14Sports media texts images, narratives and the
construction of sports
- Myth
- Texts can be open or closed
- An open text requires a number of readings to be
made simultaneously for its full richness to be
appreciated - A closed text has only one preferred meaning
15Sports media texts images, narratives and the
construction of sports
- Three main types of decoding readings or texts.
These correspond to the reader's response not to
the structure of the text - i) dominant-hegemonic
- ii) negotiated reading
- iii) oppositional reading
16Sports media texts images, narratives and the
construction of sports
- Success themes
- US sports programming tends to emphasize hard
work, domination, obedience to authority and the
big play - Competitive rivalries are played up and
competitive success becomes the master narrative
for coverage
17Sports media texts images, narratives and the
construction of sports
- Gender and sexuality themes
- coverage of women sports is not a high priority,
except for tennis, golf, and Olympics - Coverage given tends to be on sports that
reinforce traditional notions of femininity - Mens events remain unremarked by gender whereas
womens events are gendered the soccer world
cup vs. the womens world cup.
18Sports media texts images, narratives and the
construction of sports
- Race and ethnicity themes
- The focus on a selected number of sports gives a
distorted picture of black domination of sports - While black athletes have a high profile on the
field of play this is less so in the commentary
boxes, sports newsrooms and media executive
offices
19Sports media consumers media effects
- Audience research and fan behavior
- There is inconclusive evidence about the effects
of watching sport and actual physical activity - While coverage has increased since the 70s, so
has the rates of obesity and inactivity this
does not imply causation - Similarly there is little evidence to suggest
that coverage of sport on television affects
spectator rates in any uniform way (there may be
a short term increase in activity after major
sporting events.tennis after Wimbledon)
20Sports media producers media professionals
- Tensions between journalists and athletes
grounded in differences between background and
salary - Within the news media there are sometimes
tensions between those looking for exclusives
and those reporting the sports
21Conclusion
- Sports and the media have a complex, symbiotic
relationship - This mutual dependency has grown over the past 50
years, especially as companies have sought to
sponsor events and teams and advertise games - Not all aspects of the media are equally
dependent on sport and not all sports depend on
the media - Sports centrality to public discourse is linked
to its central place within the mass media
disproportionate to the actual numbers who play
sport
22Conclusion
- Not all aspects of the media are equally
dependent on sport and not all sports depend on
the media - Sports centrality to public discourse is linked
to its central place within the mass media
disproportionate to the actual numbers who play
sport. Sports are increasingly a central part of
celebrity culture