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yjagyv's profile
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Biography In the stands, a baseball game is hot dogs, styrofoam hands and soft ice cream, what you eat out of a plastic baseball cap. Oh, and there are all the men trying to stab the twine cork here on the portal. When the movies do it, you cheer or boo. But on tv it's a different story - you adore the batter's eyes as the pitcher flicks one sign, then another, and then nods. He spits once, delivers, and the cinephile runs the risk of seeing the arc of a twisted ball. Batter swings and misses. And at the end it was commercial time. Television did little for baseball, only made it more kin and individual—a story instead of a shade for a sunny summer's eve. Other types of sports entertainment followed the same trajectory that was broadcast in the media. Football is full of color, cheerleaders and dancing in the end zone - this and much more customers are able to miss tv. What about annoying tv time-outs? And instant replay? And modify the game from a golf match to a punch bag toy? Good or not, but only thanks to television. For has television changed the sport we love? And how has television helped create these same types of sports entertainment? Keep reading to understand. Stories over sports Amateur turns pro Minor league death</>Rise of telegenic sports Time delay More colors Rules changes</> Instant replay Increase (but not decrease!) Participation 10: stories above sports at the winter olympics at the 2010 games, canadian figure skater joannie rochette delivered an almost flawless short program two days later, after her mother died suddenly of a heart attack. She went on to win bronze. In 1996, pro builders kerry strug won the us gold in gymnastics over the russian team, scoring 9.712 in another vault, on her ankle, which then required treatment for third degree lateral sprain and tendon damage. . And who can forget tonya vs. Nancy in the bitter rivalry between the skaters? Or brett favre's four touchdowns, 399 yards, and 154.9 passer rating in a football game earlier in the week the night after he lost his father? These fascinating sports stories only work if we understand fans of the game and you can more logically ask the players thanks to the magical tv features of close-ups, commentary and announcement videos. The man needs the famous teardrop mini-profiles of olympic athletes morgan freeman for the 2008 visa. We need to be aware that after the first jump, strug asked her coach bela karolyi: “do people need this?” To which events he responded: “kerry, people need you again. Many need you again for gold” [source: weinberg]. Television allows us to penetrate into the lives, families or minds of athletes, making sport as valuable for the individual as it is for the results. 9: an amateur becomes a professional Let's go back to the olympics again for a minute. Before the big tv deals, we saw low-funded athletes toiling around the tracks and rinks for no other reason than liking the sporting events and being able to compete at the very highest level. After major television contracts, figure skaters, gymnasts, skiers, sprinters, and just beach volleyball players became household names accompanied by advertising contracts. The same applies to college football and the steam weeks in early spring) college basketball. It's hard to think of such high-profile college athletes as amateurs when they're advertised on tv every day. 8: death of the minor leagues Before televised sports, when you dreamed of running into a toy, you had to follow it personally. Now with a choice, many fans are choosing to stay at home, dine on tv and enjoy movies of the best teams from around the planet. This tv trend has hit minor league baseball and activities below premier league football hard. Leagues. For what purpose do you watch aaa if you have the opportunity to watch mlb? And why watch maidstone united of the isthmian league if you can actually watch manchester united of the premier league? Focus on the major events of the college team.Would you rather wipe your pants in the stands to see how the local junior college plays, or would you rather watch ohio state play against nebraska? College teams compete not only for you, but also for recruits. Bowl shooter conferences also attract top talent. If the observer remained a top high school player, would you go to a local tech school, or would you subscribe to the big 10 dotted line, pac 10, sec, or big 12, expecting all the skills to be seen by millions of home bowlers across the russian federation? 7: rise of telegenic sports Average 36 percent of a television hour is video [source: marketing charts]. Time. Coincidentally, this is exactly in line with the pace of baseball, where advertising appears every 3 outs, plus pitch changes, plus stretching in the seventh inning. Plan? It's as if baseball players were invented for the camera, posing long enough for a long-lens lens to capture the drops of sweat dripping from a pitcher's nose. Not your usual sporting event, but also a cowboy movie. football is fine too, thanks to the rhythm of punts and timeouts. Basketball is a little trickier, but fouls and quarters break up the game enough to offer a certain length of time for commercials. If you're not sure, use the tv timeout! But not only other sports and hockey. How does a beer advertiser have to work with 45 minutes plus priceless hours of nonstop action followed by a hiatus during which time his contingent is almost certainly away from the screen? Add to that the nuance that the damn puck in hockey can't see, the nuance that the ball tends to go in every direction in football (which softens the possibility of strategic close-ups), and you're guaranteed the rise of telegenic forms of sports entertainment and the decline everything else. 6: time delay We want every successive time when this portal as well as delaying months and rebroadcasting sports competitions of well-known manufacturers, we are able to have it. Do you think that indian cricket and football are too terribly boring to even care about revisiting? You have to see only the general moments - they are amazing! This, meanwhile, creates more desire and popularity for exciting forms of sports entertainment. And said excitement fuels some substitutions - in the rules that our pastry chefs will look at later. The flip side of the time lag is the desire, if ever, to see the sport online. . You'll find that baseball games last all night in october on the east coast to draw viewers into prime time in european countries. It also means that there are 16 teams in the nba playoffs that are playing perfectly until june. If there is an audience that needs to be attracted, it will be on tv sports. 5: more color Before television, tennis balls were white, the nhl center line was hard and uniforms were almost uniformly dull. But the white ball was hard to see, as was the solid center line. And who plans to see the old uniform of the cleveland browns close up? Color reproduces well on tv, so color has become the new normal. Television allows colors to shine brightly not only on the podium, but also in the stands. Think about a nation of raiders or thugs at lambo field. Television allows you to see close-ups of like-minded people and fans, but not pawns fighting for a place in the outfield. Players and fans become characters in an event that, from a formal point of view, is not only sports, but also history. And this includes not only adding literal color to the project, but also figurative color - dancing in the end zone. And slam dunks were conceived as direct detailed advice for the evening review [source: zoglin et al]. 4: behind rule changes Sporty look is not only different because of the big tv deals and the omnipotent influence of the close-up, but tv has torn apart the very fabric of the universe on which the sport is based. Television has changed the rules. For example, golf has evolved from a shooter to a match to a hit card to ensure that famous golfers are at full function when some are watching tv. And during the 1970s, the tie-break appeared in tennis, which replaced long and boring two-man shooters. The nfl for the first time has shortened the break between breaks, in order to become a reliable helper for games to be in time for two and a half hours.Later they went the other way: tv timeouts increased the average nfl game from two hours 57 minutes in 1978 to three hours and 11 minutes in 1990 [sources: harris and zoglin et al]. In his seminal book sports events amongst, jay coakley points out five goals for changing principles in residential sports options: Speeding up action Increasing points Ensuring competitive balance so results remain uncertain Maximum dramatic moments Providing commercial breaks</>It's not hard to see the influence of tv on this list! 3: cheerleading group The birth of the organized drug addict group took place in november 1898, when university of minnesota student johnny campbell led the crowd, shouting "ra, ra, ra! Scoo-o-mar, hooray! Wow!" [Source: kennedy center]. Then, before world war ii, male "screaming captains" appeared at all sorts of events. There were enough of these cheerleaders to get a buzz in the stands.However, have you ever seen cheerleaders from high seats in the stands?Is not as direct an experience as watching similar cheerleaders up close, either from a high or low angle. Modern knowledge of cheerleaders is a product of television. 2: instant replay The first instant replay was the winning touchdown in a 1963 college football game between the army and navy. However, this is just how potential customers feel about the game - more controversial and likely having more impact on the games themselves is the editing of replays by officials.Repetition is most extreme in rugby, where the referee on tv helps the referee in place to make a quick decision. Or remember the red card given to zinedine zidane when he headbutted an opponent in the chest during the 2006 world cup? The judge completely lost sight of profitability until he noticed replay in theaters. Of course we can see the quarterback's hand in super slow motion from almost every angle imaginable, the best way to find (almost) definitely a start whether the hand rise forward when the ball is popped. But should we? Yes, even in instant replays, the results of games are affected by less bad predictions. But the outdated theory was that bad calls were part of the sport - just like the ball bounces. 1: increase (but not decrease!) Participation When television is the main vehicle for the development of sports, the bigwigs of these sports were worried about two problems: that fans would stop attending the games, because this leads to empty stands, and the many rule that we would rather watch sports, but not need to online, thanks to what american descendants will be able to fat and barely crawling. . Of course, as a nation, americans are two pounds leaner, but that's not the fault of sports television. People report that the love of sporting events rises when films are watched by great sports fans, and young people report that they want to emulate their sports heroes on the resource [source: coakley]. Instead of imprisoning citizens in front of their networks, sports tv inspires people to get involved online themselves. Finally, television itself had a hand in designing the future of big sport that it shows. For more relevant and useful information, navigate to the addresses on the next page. 10 ways to make your plasma look more like the real one 10 tv shows that gained a global audience 10 ways to change the dvd movie industry Home theater quiz Are big-screen tvs killing the movie industry? What was the first contest shown in the media? How did dvd change the length of the tv show? Cokeley, jay. "Sporting events in the medium: faults and controversies, eighth edition". Mcgraw hill. January 1, 2004 Harris, richard jackson. "Cognitive psychology of mass communication". Routledge. May 21, 2009 Kennedy center. "1898: give me u! Give me m!” November 2002 (april 11, 2011) http://artsedge.Kennedy-center.Org/arts-days/november/02.Aspx Loosemore, sandra. "How television changed figure skating". Cbs sportsline. November 15, 1999 (april 10, 2011) http://www.Cbssports.Com/u/ce/multi/0.1329.1579842_10946.00.Html Marketing charts. "About an hour-long tv show is 36% commercial." May 7, 2009 (april 11, 2011) http://www.Marketingcharts.Com/television/average-hour-long-show-is-36-commercials-9002/ Sandomier, richard. “Professional football; sports on tv changed when the nfl chose fox." New york times. December 17, 2003. (April 10, 2011) http://www.Nytimes.Com/2003/12/17/sports/pro-football-sports-on-tv-changed-when-nfl-chose-fox. Html?Src=pm Verna, tony. "Instant replay: the day that changed the sport forever". International creative book publishers. September 15, 2008 Weinberg, rick. "51: kerry strug fights pain, helps us win gold." Espn. (April 11, 2011) http://sports.Espn.Go.Com/espn/espn25/story?Page=moments/51 Zoglin, richard etc.. " Commercials the greatest takeover of television". Time. March 26, 1990 (april 11, 2011) http://www.Time.Com/time/magazine/article/0.9171.969697-1.00.Html
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