A journal of television and new media

Tag archive for ‘Sports’

<p></p><p>Xenofobia y Mitos en la Cobertura Televisiva de la Selección Nacional Mexicana

Xenofobia y Mitos en la Cobertura Televisiva de la Selección Nacional Mexicana

by: Jorge Alberto Calles-Santillana / Universidad de las Américas, Puebla
El fútbol es el deporte más popular de México y la transmisión de los partidos de la selección nacional
genera un ambiente emocional como ninguno otro
evento nacional. / Soccer is the most popular sport in Mexico, and its broadcasting develops a unique emotional appeal as no other national event.

<p></p><p>Watching TV Poker

Watching TV Poker

by: Mark Andrejevic / University of Iowa
Andrejevic considers the cultural logic of the recent surge in televised poker tourneys.

Football Talk

by: Jim McGuigan / Loughborough University, UK
Jim McGuigan examines why the ubiquitous presence of football chatter in the UK is a crucial source of pleasurable release.

<p></p><p>“You Got to Know When to Hold Em”: Notes Against the Academicization of Television

“You Got to Know When to Hold Em”: Notes Against the Academicization of Television

by: Walter Metz / University of Montana-Bozeman
The relentless pressure to be taken seriously must not prevent TV scholars from admitting that on occasion, like the average viewers, they do slack in front of the tube. Metz watches “Poker TV” or even the Simpson’s just for their saccharine appeals and for relaxation purposes.

<p></p><p>Women Watching Sports

Women Watching Sports

by: Janet Staiger / University of Texas at Austin
I knew something had changed when I called my then-mid-70-year-old mom in Omaha several years ago on a Saturday afternoon before Christmas to ask her about clothing sizes for gifts and she responded: “I can’t talk now. Texas is beating Nebraska for the Big XII Championship.”

Apology

by: Cynthia Fuchs / George Mason University
Apologizing is an art. And apologizing for TV is something else.