Great article but really not true; there are many players involved in the NPF that are not from the ...more
posted 08/26/14 at 1:28pm
on Softball Standouts Plourde and Prezioso Represent Atlantic 10, Exemplify Mid-Major Potential at Next Level
posted by Fair Game News
Friday, December 14, 2012 at 7:53am EST
Seeking equality on -- and off -- the field. The strong connection between organized athletics and power (political, economic, social) means sports have consequences far beyond the game. FairGameNews.com aims to challenge sex-stereotyped assumptions and practices that dominate sports -- and recognize that sports can be a tool for seeking equal treatment and fair play.
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By Ashleigh Sargent and Mariah Philips
Get ready, it’s game day!!!!! As you prepare mentally and physically, you want help getting into your zone.
Which songs pop up on the warm-up playlist? Chances are, messages of female empowerment and gender equality are not major themes in your favorite jams.
In fact, it might be quite the opposite. As two female college athletes, both with a competitive background in basketball, we have ample exposure to the warm-up playlist culture. Walking into a gym the first thing you hear is music from speakers. Basketball players like the playlist because it energizes them before competition.
But take a closer listen, and the words dropped into those catchy beats tell a much less motivational story. Most songs that have the type of sound (i.e. heavy bass and fast-paced rhythms) also call for female subordination. Think of the chart-topping “N****s in Paris” by Jay-Z and Kanye West in “I got that hot b**** in my home. You know how many hot b*****s I own?”
This hardly begs an explanation. If the music is not completely objectifying women, it’s presenting them as hypersexualized. Big Sean raps in his song Dance A**, “They pay me respect/they pay me in checks/and if she look good she pay me in sex.” Women are good for one thing only — or so it seems in these songs.
When players prep for competition, it should be a time to feel strong, not to absorb jabs at their gender. Sure, the songs are catchy – the main requirement of effective pump-up music. But isn’t it time we also paid attention to the message? When people attend college basketball games, they see accomplished and strong athletes. Younger girls aspire to be like them and yet, they watch warm-ups with shouted messages of female inferiority.
We think this needs to stop. We have compiled a playlist of equally motivating songs that include serious messages about equality and empowerment. Yes, it was more challenging than going to the fall-back alternatives, but isn’t it better to get pumped up without being put down?
Anthems to avoid:
Pop That by French Montana
Mercy by Big Sean
N****s in Paris by Jay-Z, Kanye West
Shake Señora by Pitbull
Clique by Big Sean
Dance A** by Big Sean
Instead play these:
Fighter by Christina Aguilera
Stronger by Kelly Clarkson
Gunpowder and Lead by Miranda Lambert
So What by P!nk
Survivor by Destiny’s Child
We are Never Getting Back Together by Taylor Swift
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Seeking equality on -- and off -- the field. The strong connection between organized athletics and power (political, economic, social) means sports ha...
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