Television has always augmented its dramatic and variety
programming with sports. After covering wrestling and boxing
matches for several years, ABC added the hugely popular Roller
Derby between 1949 and 1951, and later, college and pro football.
Today, there is a multitude of pay and cable networks devoted
exclusively to baseball, football, golf, hockey, tennis,
ice-skating, and auto racing. Rather than focusing on live sports
broadcasts, however, this book chronicles the history of
sports-themed comedies and dramas, to see how our national fictions
have affected our authentic sports experiences, and vice versa.
Sports dominate the television landscape today, and still the
demand for more is so great that pay and cable networks continue to
find funding and success, even when devoted exclusively to a single
sport. But this is really nothing new: television has always
augmented its dramatic and variety programming with sports. Live
sports have had a tremendous impact on what we see on television,
and on how we see it. Rather than focusing on live sports
broadcasts, however, this book takes a critical look at
sports-themed comedies and dramas, to see how our authentic sports
affect our national fictions as well. From the character studies
that supplement Olympic coverage, to nightly highlight reels, to
reality programming on ESPN, sports both echo and help shape the
myths that pervade our culture. "Sports on Television" covers the
changing relationship between live sports broadcasts and television
dramas, as well as the important technological developments and
cultural shifts that have changed the way we view the reality of
sports.
In 1949, after covering wrestling and boxing matches for several
years, ABC added the hugely popular Roller Derby, and later moved
on to college and pro football, where humble beginnings have since
developed into a national obsession. In the early sixties Jimmy
Stewart played a disgraced baseball player in "Flashing
Spikes"-which was also one of the rare ventures into television for
veteran director John Ford. On HBO the Yankees have been the
subject of both "61*" - about Roger Maris's quest to top Babe
Ruth's home run record - and "The Bronx Is Burning," about the 1977
Yankees team. And there have been sports-themed TV sitcoms as well,
such as "Sports Night," Aaron Sorkin's critically lauded but
commercially unsuccessful project, which preceded his work on "The
West Wing." Meanwhile "American Gladiators"--a strange blend of
canned programming and authentic athletic endeavor that in effect
puts television audiences in an arena with what amounts to
professional athletes--is quickly becoming one of the most popular
shows on primetime. Here, Marill gives due time to all of these
unique projects.
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