I do not have the habit of being overcome by cynicism. But the little bit of cynicism in me is tempted to wonder if women's sports as we know them have nothing to do with sports or female athletes and are nothing more than a platform that has been manufactured to advance certain ideologies. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
In the US we have Title IX, a law that requires school athletic programs to offer as many opportunities for girls as for boys. I can't think of a more powerful way to promote respect for girls and women.
As for Women's Sports, or Men's Sports for that matter, who cares? I guess, given the state of our society, the case can be made that skilled, driven, and competitive women can act as role models for girls. — T Clark
Honest question here : why the obsession with gender politics? The last 3 threads I've seen you start was clearly and specifically about it. This is a philosophy forum. Obviously any gender politic issue can be thematized as a political philosophy problem, or a philosophy of sociology issue, but there's little of that at play in your posts.
I'm not trying to shame you, just wondering what is the motivation here. — Akanthinos
I don't know you and haven't read your other posts, but this doesn't seem like an honest question to me. — T Clark
4 out of the 10 last threads started by WisdomfromPOMO are about gender politics. Women also commit gun rampages. How women's sport is boring because of gender. So on and so on.
Clearly there's an angle here, I'm just wondering how it all relates to philosophy...? — Akanthinos
Get over yourself. You aren't a mod.
This has exactly nothing to do with political philosophy. — Akanthinos
Good post! The only point I have here is that capital-W/M sports are a business, and the participants are entertainers. Arguably they are and should be subject to the laws of the market place. — tim wood
And when you're attempting to sell a product, as you've worded it, that product needs to be worth investing in. You can come up with all the advertising, branding, and so on, but it's moot if what is actually watched is garbage. Maybe some people don't watch women's sports because they're sexist or something, but I'm not so sure. — Buxtebuddha
Well, there's Women's Sports and then there's women's sports. Or maybe girls sports. The important thing about girl's sports is the same as for boy's sports - children and young adults learning how to handle their bodies, work with others, get knocked around, compete, and win and lose. For whatever social, physical, and temperamental reasons, I think that comes more easily for boys. — T Clark
I'd say that the most watched and appreciated women's sports are those where the line between the genders is the least obvious. — Buxtebuddha
Of course women's sport teams are not going to perform the way men's teams perform. Men's athletics, standards of performance, levels of fan enthusiasm, money spent on men's athletics, etc. has a long history.
Major women's athletics is a fairly new thing. Large numbers of women athletes have not been celebrated, fussed over, had money lavished on their needs and so forth, over the last century. Given equivalent funding, institutional support, fan-base development, and all that, women's sport will eventually be more like men's sport -- not the same sized bodies, or testosterone driven athletes--but well funded athletes who have been working on their skills since they were in kindergarten.
I don't think professional sports is worth the amount of money expended on it, but if people like it, money will get spent. But be careful what you pray for.
Professional men's athletics do absolutely nothing for the health of 99.9% of fans. Professional women's athletics are going to do absolutely nothing for the health of 99.9% of fans, either. What is more important -- much more important -- is that athletic activity be democratized in grade school, high school, college, and in adult life so that more people participate in active life styles.
Focusing a lot of money and attention on 1/10th of 1 percent of the population to play professional sports and neglecting the other 99.9% just isn't a good idea. Better that millions of girls and boys have programs to help them find ways to be active and physically fit than always grooming the cream of the crop from little league on up to the major leagues. — Bitter Crank
By the way, the folderol going on in Minneapolis for the 52nd Super Bowl is a COLOSSAL pain in the ass. Massive traffic and transit disruptions not just on Sunday, but for the 10 days preceding the #$*&@#(@Q)$( thing. Security checks (backpacks, purses, open your coat please...) as one walks down the street. — Bitter Crank
I'm not a medical doctor or an athletic trainer, but if we want everybody to have an active lifestyle it seems to me that it is already available to everybody: step outside and start walking. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Fargo, ND — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Focusing a lot of money and attention on 1/10th of 1 percent of the population to play professional sports and neglecting the other 99.9% just isn't a good idea. — Bitter Crank
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