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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page report discusses how television has affected Major League Baseball and the economics of the relationship between television and the game. Television has undeniably changed the character and promotion of sports stars in all games. While many television and sports analysts claim that baseball and television are not a profitable mix, the fact remains that television revenues for baseball broadcasts are extremely significant. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWbase.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
for over a century. The advent of television coverage only made it more so. Farmers in rural Minnesota are able to keep track of the Twins while the
residents of New Yorks most inner "inner city" can follow the Yankees. Television, despite the typical bad rap it is usually given, has kept Major League Baseball alive and
healthy for the past thirty to forty years. And just like any other television stars, the attitudes of both players and fans have changed as television allows the viewer to
know the most intimate details of their baseball "heroes" lives. Far too many people, mesmerized by the fast-paced action of the National Basketball Association or the National Football League
have come to view baseball as a game far too slow, far too traditional in this era of hyper-edited music videos and trash-talking athletes. While many of the games most
ardent supporters might agree with its detractors that baseball is not a game suited for television coverage, the fact of the matter is that baseball is well-worth watching on television,
as surely as any other sport or any other of the hundreds of diversions that capture the imaginations of American viewers. To suggest otherwise is a disservice to the fans
and the game. Televised Coverage of the National Pastime No on will deny that television has changed the character and promotion of sports stars in all games. Throughout the
summer of 1998, even Americans "bored" with baseball or even anti-baseball were well aware of Sammy Sosa and Mark McGwires race to break the all-time home run record of Roger
Maris. Smith (1998) argues that baseball used to be a way of life, not just a diversion. And until about the last decade, most Americans agreed. Like jazz and Broadway,
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