Topics Include: Golden State Warriors - Oklahoma City Thunder Game 6 Breakdown (0:45). Pittsburgh Penguins - San Jose Sharks Stanley Cup Finals Preview (13:10). Warriors - Thunder Game 7 Predictions (15:50). Real Madrid - Atletico Madrid Champions League Final (17:00). The Nice Guys Movie Review (27:35).
Topics Include: An Ode To Leicester City's Championship Run (1:15). Clayton Kershaw's Dominance (10:40). Tim Duncan's Possible Retirement (16:45). Warriors-Thunder Western Conference Finals Preview (19:10). The Growth of ESports (24:20). Game of Thrones Discussion (30:15).
Shaq squares off against Thorin on Inside the NBA.
As such a widely consumed vehicle of
entertainment, the film industry can encapsulate collective
norms, and shape how people look at race relations. Movies like 42 and Race explored established societal hierarchies and Hollywood’s
construction and reproduction of power relationships through character’s race. Some
film critics condemned the movies for their historical inaccuracies, dramatization of the facts, and historical omissions, such as the fact that 42 completely ignored that Robinson was not the only black player on the Dodgers roster in 1947 (pitcher Dan Bankhead was also on the team in Brooklyn). Films that attempt to rigorously portray
circumstances accurately can still obscure reality with a general untruthful
representation of racial opinions. On the other hand, dramatized and fictionalized
scenes in 42 and Race removed the independent identity of Jackie Robinson and Jesse
Owens, and embraced the role of the white savior coming to the aid of the black
athlete. Fictionalized creations of reality in these films also tended to imply a heroic
democratization of sports due to the actions of the athletes, which obscured
the maintained prevalence of systematic racism in society. 42 and Race became
problematic pieces of cinema, not from their factual inaccuracies, but when
their stories unsettled a truthful representation of structural racism and
removed the independent agency of the black athlete to instill their own place
in society
Despite accurately portraying the racist vitriol that Phillies
manager Ben Chapman shouted at Robinson, the film failed to deftly show the
subtle mechanisms of racial discrimination in the 1940s. By creating one of the film’s climatic
scenes around teammate Eddie Stanky confronting Chapman, the manager seemed
like the singular focus of white hatred against Robinson. In the New York Times, A.O. Scott mentioned how Chapman’s actions were “not an exception to the rule, but an especially ugly instance of it." The film underemphasized the systematic racism that black athletes faced by implicitly
creating a sole representative image of that racism.
Ben Chapman (played by Alan Tudyk) subjected Robinson to extreme racist vitriol.
Some of the film’s
dramatizations did reinforce truthful characterizations of Jackie’s independent
agency. Although the scene where Robinson was chased by a mob in Wendell
Smith’s car was not strictly accurate, he told him “I don’t like needing someone to be there for me.” Jackie’s expressionism
was not sullied by a need to show himself as the archetypical heroic figure that suppressed his black rage at the urgency of society. Unlike the rest of the film, Jackie was able to show
his raw emotions. The truthfulness of Jackie’s complex humanism was shown through artificial
manifestation of reality to symbolize that message.
Nonetheless, the movie largely fictionalized Robinson as a
manifestation of Branch Rickey, a player that embodied Rickey’s sentiment of having “the guts not to fight back,” rather than espousing his own identity. As
Robinson melted down in the clubhouse after hearing Chapman’s verbal abuse, it
was only when Rickey came as the white savior to restore order did the
seemingly helpless Robinson return to the field. By portraying Robinson’s
emotional breakdown away from the public spectacle, and returning him to
silent, individual suffering on the field, the film removed the truthfulness of
Robinson’s active attempts to challenge and subvert systematic American racism
as a black activist.
Branch Rickey (played by Harrison Ford) coming to "rescue" Jackie Robinson (played by Chadwick Boseman) and return him to the field for the Dodgers.
Similarly, when Pee Wee Reese put
his arm around Jackie during a ballgame in Cincinnati, a historically contested moment, the dramatized scene showed Reese giving Robinson the courage to
continue to play and the transference of agency to Jackie only through the
white athlete.
Pee Wee Reese (played by Lucas Black) putting his arm around Jackie Robinson in Cincinnati.
Even if the film accurately reflected Robinson’s devotion to Ricky and his promise that, “I won’t let you down,” it still created an
untruthful narrative of Robinson lacking his own independent agency. For example, years
later, Robinson exalted the black power salute of track athletes Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968
Olympics, saying that he took delight in the fact that they were proud to be black. Ultimately,
the movie dissociated Robinson from a collective black experience, implying
that his internal emotions were an external construction, and making him, as A.O. Scott argued, “the least interesting character” in the film.
In the movie Race, director Stephen Hopkins did a commendable job of
establishing Owens’s self-defined identity. The movie gave considerable thought
to depicting Owens not merely as a product of the projections of his external
environment, but based upon how he decided to present himself.
Jesse Owens (played by Stephan James) won the 100-meter dash, 220-meter dash, the 220-yard low hurdlers, and the long jump at the NCAA Championships in both 1935 and 1936 under Coach Snyder (played Jason Sudeikis).
Race still lacked a truthful representation of the violent strand
of racism present in the 1930s. As Race
conspicuously displayed, a film can tell a factually correct story, and yet, still be
devoid of an overall truthful illustration of the black experience. Although
the movie accurately showed Owens being forced into the back of a bus, and
showering only after white athletes, the film treated the racist behavior
towards the black community as a mere inconvenience, rather than as a
systematic repression. As the crowds wildly cheered for Owens during the movie,
it obscured the "unforgivable blackness" of Owens.
At the end of the movie, when a young white boy
asked Owens for his autograph, the film implied that the future of race
relations was changing simply because of Owens’s victory, although his own
future was later constrained by a segregated American society.
On June 30, 1962, Sandy Koufax threw the first of his four career no-hitters for the Los Angeles Dodgers against the New York Mets. Recorded baseball was so primitive at the time that only a
single radio version of the game remains today for fans to relive the experience. More than 30 years later, when NBC cut away from game 5 of the Rockets-Knicks NBA Finals to follow the O.J. Simpson car chase in 1994, nobody outside of the arena knew what was happening on the court.
However, the technological revolution of the 21st century has created a more accessible viewing experience for fans at the game, and for
those watching at home. The availability of sports data has allowed for more
inclusive online sports fandom, and social media and massage boards have contributed to the continual
reproduction of the sporting spectacle. Despite individuals increasingly
feeling associated with an online sporting community through social media, sports in
the digital age remain reliant on the construction of heroic sporting
narratives. While social media does not ostensibly exclude fans from the
sporting sphere as much as it did in the past, it upholds a groupthink ideology that marginalizes opinions
outside of the collective norm. Overall, social media and new sporting technology have
allowed fans to establish a connection with each other and better understand the game, and for the players, new data has emphasized certain sporting techniques to perform at a higher level, but created ambiguity over who controls, and releases, technological data. The data
revolution has allowed sports teams to use wearable technologies to track
player movement and apply health standards to regulate their physical activity. Teams have attempted to use data
analysis to improve performance and keep players healthy, and biometrics have
allowed players to use the data as a reference point for their physical
activity. Player Position Tracking is penetrating all the professional sports, especially basketball and soccer, because the technology has given athletes
a way to monitor themselves.
The Seattle Sounders use wearable tracking devices to monitor their players during practice.
In 2012, players on the Miami Heat wore hoodies to show support for Trayvon Martin.
However,
social media has allowed fans to interact with others that confirm their
opinions, rather than challenge them. Cohen said, “On Twitter, each basketball fan gets to curate their own assemblage of voices.” The ability of an individual
to tailor thoughts to a specific audience paradoxically allows them to interact
with a specific subculture, and yet, still secludes them from experiencing
dissenting opinions through a conscious social media filtering. Just as fans
were once objectified by the television experience, as Montez said, “There is an objectified status of television sports fandom,” fans have lost their
individuality by allowing groupthink on Twitter to formulate their
subjectivity. As an argument solidifies itself on Twitter, and a mob mentality
justifies the prescribed conventional wisdom, thoughts outside of the
collective norm become ostracized. As sports media members tweeted their disdain over Cam Newton’s post-Super Bowl press conference, conformity to that
opinion became the standard judgment, rather than an individual appraisal of
the situation. Twitter facilitates an arena where the first opinion
becomes sanctified as fact, regardless of how individuals conceive of that
viewpoint. Sometimes first is not always best. Moreover, due to the feeling of impunity online, social media has
become a vacuum for societal negativity, such as when Michigan punter Blake O'Neill received death threats for his costly fumble against Michigan State. The growth
of sports documentaries in recent years has reflected a demand for stories that create a heroic
imagery of the athlete in the digital age. ESPN staffer Connor Schell advised, “Sit people down and tell them a good story.” Documentaries like ESPN’s You Don’t Know Bo have consciously told a story that glorifies
the sporting subject to compel the viewer towards classifying athletes as
mythic paradigms. The conflation of reality and heroic narrative is not
confined to modern day, as Michael Oriard said in his book Brand NFL, the original “NFL Films has sustained a sense of mythic grandeur in decidedly antimythic times." However, television networks today have even more incentive for documentaries that create a mythical athletic identity because they need a compelling story to fill their air time. These stories have reproduced the sporting spectacle to create an athletic
pageantry infused with a dramatized, and often masculine, narrative of success.
American racial concretizations have
constructed a racially polarized society, where self-identification has become
classified based upon individual categorization into a black or white
constitutive group. Sports act as a reflection of society, and the narrative
surrounding athletes and sporting institutions has similarly been focused on
conceptions of identity along a black-white paradigm to avoid pluralistic
understandings of race. However, the sporting experiences of Latino athletes,
a racially ambiguous ethnic group through the lens of the black-white identity binary, have shown the arbitrary
nature of that very racial binary, and the fragility of racial boundaries. During the
age of US Empire, non-white others delicately manipulated racial perceptions to move beyond black exclusionary sporting practices. However, Latinos were never
accepted as occupying the same sphere as white athletes, and racial standards
forced the players to dissociate themselves from their ethnic backgrounds. The
continued recognition of Latino “otherness” has proliferated throughout the sporting
world today, and the sporting community has marginalized their self-identity
and ethnic orientation. While sporting figures existing outside of the
black-white paradigm have been able to transverse racial boundaries and slip
into sporting leagues, their racial ambiguity has forced them to be identified
as outsiders to the game, lacking any real agency beyond the playing field. In
the early 20th century, Latino baseball players could negotiate the
fluid understanding of race in America by defying the racial binary. Latino
ballplayers transcended the black-white paradigm because American racial
standards were based upon individualized racial consciousness. The very first Latino players in
the major league, like Louis Castro and Frank Arellanes, began to blur the
color line. Teams allowed for the presence of non-white others in the sport
by implying that they did not directly challenge black exclusionary practices to take advantage of cheap Latino labor.
Through the racialization of the Latin athlete, Latinos were prescribed a
racial identity not based upon their ethnic background, but in comparison to
American racial standards. In his fantastic book Playing America's Game: Baseball, Latinos, and the Color Line, Adrian Burgos said, “Latinos like Castro secured admittance in organized baseball, but this passage to acceptance did not necessarily translate into being accepted as a fellow white.” Latinos were only
able to play in the big leagues because of their non-black status, but their
foreignness was still pronounced because their identity was conceptualized merely
as a differentiation from blackness. Burgos said Latinos “did not wholly reside in the same racial camp as fellow major leaguers,” and Latinos lack of holistic
acceptance in baseball implied their lack of accepted whiteness. Thus, Latinos
had to distance themselves from their ethnic backgrounds, and as Marcos Breton said in his article "Fields of Broken Dreams: Latinos and Baseball", lie about their African ancestry" to associate their racial identification separate from blacks. The only way Latinos could remove their
inherent differentiation was through an Americanized process of racialization
by distancing themselves from anything that would cause suspicion to the
public’s racial perceptions. Latinos could play in the majors based upon their
orientation along “Americanized” ethnic standards, but they were never truly accepted, and as Breton said, “they were treated like novelties.” While the slew of current Latino baseball players (Yasiel Puig,Jose Fernandez, Yoenis Cespedes, Miguel Cabrera, Robinson Cano, Felix Hernandez, Adrian Beltre, Jose Bautista, Yadier Molina, Carlos Gonzalez to name just a few) have been able to paradoxically transfix racial
boundaries by starring in the major leagues, sporting discourse has constantly alienated
their identity. Whereas Latinos in the past quietly slipped into the big
leagues and failed to alter public sensibilities, Latino ballplayers today
often play with a cultural flare while actively displaying their ethnic pride.
Although so called "baseball traditionalists" like Goose Gossage ostensibly criticize foreign players for disregarding baseball’s unwritten rules, their underlying antagonism has been
rooted in their lack of acceptance of Latinos, and their fear of foreigners
taking over the American game. Since Dominican outfielder Jose Bautista’s now
famous bat flip in game 5 of last year’s ALDS against the Texas Rangers in one of the craziest innings of baseball I have ever seen, Bautista has been defending himself against
claims that he was showboating or disrespecting the game. (Russell Martin hitting Shin-Soo Choo's bat throwing the ball back to Aaron Sanchez in the top of the 7th, the game being played under protest, fans in Toronto throwing stuff onto the field, the Rangers making errors left and right in the bottom of the 7th, an interference review, and Bautista's home run all happened in one inning).
Topics Include: Teams
Fulfilling Or Transcending Their Reputations (2:45). The Coach K-Dillion Brooks
Incident (5:15). Great Sports Gamesmanship Moments (11:45). Quality Of Play Of The NCAA Tournament (18:00). LeBron James Unfollowing The Cavs On Twitter (26:40).
Jason Day's Win At The WGC Match Play (29:30). The Adam LaRoche Controversy
(32:00). The State Of United States Men's Soccer (34:40). SoundCloud Podcast Homepage: https://soundcloud.com/ctellallsports
Sports
are often identified as a utopian medium for escapism and entertainment, and
yet fans still widely recognize that the romantic “love of the game” can be infringed
upon by the murky political and economic realities of the business. For nearly
a century, baseball owners have meticulously constructed the composition of their
audience by tinkering with the public’s accessibility to the ballpark, as well
as the affordability of the tickets to the game.
At the beginning of the 20th
century, baseball, a self-prescribed democratic sport that valued all social
and economic groups, was directed towards the white-collar fans that
could access the stadium (there is also a lot of hypocrisy in a so called democratic sport that excludes players based upon their race). However, in the 1920s, society glorified extravagance and
social amusement, and sports spectatorship became a spectacle for
mass consumption. Attempts were made to bring all-black baseball teams to the
country’s major urban centers, although baseball still lacked its
self-purported democratic basis because black teams remained reliant on renting
white major league parks, and having games set up with white semi-pro clubs. More pronounced even today than in the past, baseball
stadiums are no longer a place to merely watch a game, but are commercial
enterprises that are divided based upon class, rather than being open to the democratic
masses for communal gatherings.
While
baseball still ostensibly acts as a symbol of American democratic values,
baseball attendance today is highly restrictive to wealthy Americans, and caters
to those that have the finances to access the luxurious stadiums. As teams
have become increasingly preoccupied with short-term profit rather than with
long-term fan loyalty and democratized consumption, the upper class has become the only group that can attend games on a regular basis. Season tickets for the New York Yankees Legends Suite in the eight row of Section 014A cost just under $50,000 for a single seat (not to mention the extra expenses that are inevitable with going to a ballgame like buying team merchandise). Fans need to have a sizeable disposable income to be a regular at sporting events in a major city.
The Party Pool at Chase Field, a site of controversy in 2013 when the Dodgers players jumped in the pool after clinching the NL West Title.
Marlins
Park aquarium seats are too expensive for the ordinary fan, yet taxpayers publicly
financed the stadium, which happens so often in sports unless the team is owned by Stan Kroenke, in which case he will just pay for the entire thing. In his piece on "The End of the Retro Ballpark" Barry Petchesky commented how, for ballparks, “excess is the new excess." Stadiums are no longer traditional sporting venues
that produce nostalgia and communal formations, but are regarded as sporting exhibitions
of ostentatious modernity for an upper-class audience.