Beefymcfc wrote:Can anybody tell me why this isn't such a big story? Apart from a few write-ups in the media there has been little or no discussion on many of the radio stations; not sure about Sky?
I was listening to TS on the way back to work early hours Monday and as soon as the Moose mentioned it in the news round-up it was dropped in favour of the Kompany sending off. Listened for many hours since and hardly a peep. Why is that, this is one of the biggest stories for a while, even if it is only for them to talk about the proposed changes to current regualtions. This could shape the landscape for many years to come.
john68 wrote:Beefers,
I have just read a wonderfully enlightening PM from Cocacolajojo. It covered a major part of this very subject. I should address your question to him, he has his finger on the pulse of this issue mate.
No coverage of this story in the popular or sports media.
No reportage of the changes from European Cup to Champions League
No reportage of the topics raised in 4 4 2 magazine by pro footballers regarding drugs and match fixing in particular.
The list is endless....Some of this is serious shit. Very serious shit.
Beefymcfc wrote:john68 wrote:Beefers,
I have just read a wonderfully enlightening PM from Cocacolajojo. It covered a major part of this very subject. I should address your question to him, he has his finger on the pulse of this issue mate.
No coverage of this story in the popular or sports media.
No reportage of the changes from European Cup to Champions League
No reportage of the topics raised in 4 4 2 magazine by pro footballers regarding drugs and match fixing in particular.
The list is endless....Some of this is serious shit. Very serious shit.
Come on then, spill the beans Coke head.
Mancio4ever wrote:Once again Coke Head proves his smart.
That's bang on the money if anything ever was; it's a global trend that embrace every ambit of journalism and - sadly - reflect how far and worse the "culture/attitude" of maximizing profits throughout simple cuts of supposed "deadwoods" has infected the contemporary world.
The evidence that even the Leading News Media has gone through that path speak very sad volume.
I'd say, marketing/profit oriented conformity.
thanks for sharing Your brilliant considerations
Cocacolajojo wrote:It just occured to me that John might have been speaking about another PM. I'll post that as well.
[url]http://www.thedailyshow.com/full-episodes/mon-january-14-2013-roger-waters
[/url]
Does that one work then? It's the middle segment. Or does it perhaps have to do with the fact that I'm in Austria and you're in the UK?
Basiacally the clip shows how CNN scrapped their entire department for long term, investigative journalism last year. Then there's an interview with a news consultant, albeit cut to suit the agenda of the show, who clearly states that investigative journalism is not as lucrative as talking about news. I think that about sums it up for me and that's the main issue with football journalism as well.
Jamie Redknapp, Gary Neville, the Sunday Supplement, you, me,... I mean, we talk and talk and talk about football. The difference is that you and me don't get paid to think aloud about current football events. The football journalists do, and it's called news. Basically, just let the world happen and then talk about what just happened. It's easy, it's cheap and it's lucrative.
I think it was Simon Kuper that said that the average football fan nowadays spends a small friction of his or her time on watching the games of the supported club/s and the rest, the large majority of the time, on consuming football news and football talk. It think it's the same with news. Hence, football journalism is often a mere symptome of a bigger problem. And as you say, there's a large buck to be made by not asking too many questions and keeping the game the way the majority likes it. I.E, support the established clubs with the largest fanbases and fuck the rest, whenever possible at least. Make waves about the underdogs but then start dissing, albeit slyly, them when they actually start to threaten the establishment for real.
mr_nool wrote:Mancio4ever wrote:Once again Coke Head proves his smart.
That's bang on the money if anything ever was; it's a global trend that embrace every ambit of journalism and - sadly - reflect how far and worse the "culture/attitude" of maximizing profits throughout simple cuts of supposed "deadwoods" has infected the contemporary world.
The evidence that even the Leading News Media has gone through that path speak very sad volume.
I'd say, marketing/profit oriented conformity.
thanks for sharing Your brilliant considerations
This is where broadsheet newspaper should find their new niche, though.
They can't compete with selling "news" any longer. When the papers hit the stand, all the news in them are either obsolete or have been reported ad absurdum elsewhere. What they should do, is instead to focus on analysis, on in-depth journalism, on discourse, and on debate. Why they aren't is beyond me.
Mancio4ever wrote:mr_nool wrote:Mancio4ever wrote:Once again Coke Head proves his smart.
That's bang on the money if anything ever was; it's a global trend that embrace every ambit of journalism and - sadly - reflect how far and worse the "culture/attitude" of maximizing profits throughout simple cuts of supposed "deadwoods" has infected the contemporary world.
The evidence that even the Leading News Media has gone through that path speak very sad volume.
I'd say, marketing/profit oriented conformity.
thanks for sharing Your brilliant considerations
This is where broadsheet newspaper should find their new niche, though.
They can't compete with selling "news" any longer. When the papers hit the stand, all the news in them are either obsolete or have been reported ad absurdum elsewhere. What they should do, is instead to focus on analysis, on in-depth journalism, on discourse, and on debate. Why they aren't is beyond me.
Yet again, majority of people are not interested to in-depth going. it does not pay off anymore, marketing wise. That is why.
The current world is sadly ran by the polls. that is why and deffo not beyond a smart arse like You, Bud.... :-)
mr_nool wrote:Mancio4ever wrote:mr_nool wrote:Mancio4ever wrote:Once again Coke Head proves his smart.
That's bang on the money if anything ever was; it's a global trend that embrace every ambit of journalism and - sadly - reflect how far and worse the "culture/attitude" of maximizing profits throughout simple cuts of supposed "deadwoods" has infected the contemporary world.
The evidence that even the Leading News Media has gone through that path speak very sad volume.
I'd say, marketing/profit oriented conformity.
thanks for sharing Your brilliant considerations
This is where broadsheet newspaper should find their new niche, though.
They can't compete with selling "news" any longer. When the papers hit the stand, all the news in them are either obsolete or have been reported ad absurdum elsewhere. What they should do, is instead to focus on analysis, on in-depth journalism, on discourse, and on debate. Why they aren't is beyond me.
Yet again, majority of people are not interested to in-depth going. it does not pay off anymore, marketing wise. That is why.
The current world is sadly ran by the polls. that is why and deffo not beyond a smart arse like You, Bud.... :-)
The majority of people aren't buying newspapers anymore, either. That's why the whole industry is bleeding.
Ergo, they need to find a new niche to survive. You are probably correct in assuming that the general public isn't interested in in-depth going, but that's at least a niche where they can compete. When it comes to news-reporting, there're countless of competitors (internet, TV, teletext) that offer the same product much faster / instantly and much cheaper (or even free of charge).
We start this morning with an interesting perspective by sports economist Stefan Szymanski on the subject of Financial Fair Play.
Writing in The Times today, Szymanski puts forward the following.
"Adopting Uefa’s rules will only make it harder for small clubs to break into the elite," he claims.
"Manchester United, Spurs, Liverpool and Arsenal are quietly lobbying the chief executive of the Premier League to limit the spending power of Chelsea and Manchester City. It is no surprise that some of the big clubs advocate the adoption of Uefa’s Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules. Clubs are struggling to be profitable and insolvency is rife.
"Under FFP, clubs have to maintain solvency and must not spend more than their football income — the so-called break-even rule — which restricts the ability of owners to cross-subsidise the team from other business income. According to Uefa, this would “protect the long-term viability and sustainability of European club football”. Worthy goals indeed, but the rules may have less virtuous consequences.
"Given that the more successful teams generate the largest incomes, the only way lesser teams can challenge them is for someone to inject money from outside. It’s no coincidence that the only teams to break the dominance of the established clubs in the past 20 years have been Blackburn Rovers, Chelsea and Manchester City, all of whom had “sugar daddies”. FFP would make it harder for upstart clubs to challenge those already at the top.
"Uefa presents itself as a benevolent regulator with the best interests of football as its sole objective. But it has a financial interest as well. According to its 2010-11 accounts it generated €1.4 billion from the sale of rights, primarily to the Champions League, and paid out €1 billion to clubs, thus keeping 28 per cent to spend as it sees fit. The relationship is analogous to that between a car manufacturer and its dealers, a brewer and the pubs that sell its beer or a newspaper publisher and the corner shops that sell papers.
"EU competition law prohibits companies competing in the same industry from making agreements that restrain competitive behaviour. This protects consumers from conspiracies to raise prices or lower the quality of goods and services, and protects workers from employers ganging together to cut wages.
"Restrictions imposed from above can be good for consumers if they ensure that the product is delivered to them in good condition. Joaquín Almunia, the European Commissioner in charge of competition, appears to have approved FFP, thinking that it will benefit fans. This may be true when it comes to requiring clubs to pay their debts (including players’ wages) and maintain solvency. But by appearing to endorse the break-even rule the European Commission is failing to uphold the best interests of the fans.
The likely effect will be to ossify competition and maintain the dominance of established clubs (ironically, Chelsea and Manchester City may be the greatest beneficiaries, having already paid to join the elite). Less competition will reduce the pressure to spend on players’ salaries. While few may shed a tear for multimillionaire footballers, the quality of competition will also fall, as owners funnel their income into profits, not players.
"The Premier League case seems even simpler. Chapter One of the Competition Act prohibits agreements between undertakings that “have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the United Kingdom” and this applies to agreements that “limit or control production, markets, technical development or investment”. This move by some of the Premier League clubs would appear to be an open-and-shut agreement to limit investment, and therefore illegal.
"To those who say that these rules are necessary to preserve the fabric of English football I would ask how many professional clubs have gone out of business in the past hundred years. Of the 88 members of the Football League in 1923, 85 still exist today, most still in the top four divisions (the exceptions being Aberdare Athletic, Merthyr Town and South Shields). Insolvency and restructuring of the limited liability companies that own football clubs are commonplace but should not be confused with the termination of the club, which almost never happens.
"English football is healthier than it has been for decades — the quality of the game has risen immeasurably in the past 20 years, attendances have almost doubled despite astronomic increases in ticket prices, upwards of £2 billion has been invested in stadiums. The Premier League is a global phenomenon, generating as much money from selling rights overseas as at home. And foreign investors have flocked to put their money in.
"Having thrived in a competitive environment, why on earth should the big clubs now be allowed to end that competition? If they manage to persuade the rest of the Premier League to adopt FFP it will be time to call in the Office of Fair Trading."
john68 wrote:[highlight]This is one battle we HAVE to win, Losing is NOT an option.[/highlight]
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