October 21st Weekly Post
This week, gender equality in sports media stood out to me, especially after reading Venus Williamsâs letter. There has been a lot of talk about pay and coverage for womenâs sports again, mainly because so many leagues are growing but still donât get the same media attention as menâs leagues. I also noticed more stories calling out how women athletes often get treated as an âadd-onâ instead of being covered with the same seriousness. Both of these trends connected strongly to what Venus wrote and to what weâve discussed in class about power, visibility, and who gets to control the narrative in sports.
From the reading, three main things stood out to me. First, Venus talked about her own fight for equal prize money in tennis and how long it took for tournaments to finally change. Second, she explained that sexism is not only a womenâs issue, just like racism is not only a Black issue. She made it clear that men have to take part in fixing the problem or nothing will change. Third, she pointed out that equal pay in one sport doesnât solve the larger problem. There are still huge gaps in smaller tournaments, in other sports, and in the way media covers women athletes. Even with progress, the gap is obvious in how often womenâs sports get overlooked.
One thing that was confusing to me is how slow change still is, even with athletes like Venus constantly speaking out. It made me think a lot about why equal pay isnât enough on its own if media coverage and investment donât grow with it.
Discussion question: If top events like Grand Slams now offer equal prize money, but media coverage and sponsorship still favor men, what should sports organizations and media focus on next to actually move toward equality?
From the reading, three main things stood out to me. First, Venus talked about her own fight for equal prize money in tennis and how long it took for tournaments to finally change. Second, she explained that sexism is not only a womenâs issue, just like racism is not only a Black issue. She made it clear that men have to take part in fixing the problem or nothing will change. Third, she pointed out that equal pay in one sport doesnât solve the larger problem. There are still huge gaps in smaller tournaments, in other sports, and in the way media covers women athletes. Even with progress, the gap is obvious in how often womenâs sports get overlooked.
One thing that was confusing to me is how slow change still is, even with athletes like Venus constantly speaking out. It made me think a lot about why equal pay isnât enough on its own if media coverage and investment donât grow with it.
Discussion question: If top events like Grand Slams now offer equal prize money, but media coverage and sponsorship still favor men, what should sports organizations and media focus on next to actually move toward equality?