Friday, August 17. 2007
Field of Schemes
Sonics co-owner: We wanted OKC all along - wait, are you writing this down?
August 14, 2007
"Throw another move threat on the fire: Yesterday, Seattle Sonics minority owner (and billionaire natural gas mogul) Aubrey McClendon told the Oklahoma City Journal Record that he was 'under a self-imposed gag order' regarding operations of the team - then yammered at length about it, including the statement: 'We didn't buy the team to keep it in Seattle; we hoped to come here. We know it's a little more difficult financially here in Oklahoma City, but we think it's great for the community and if we could break even we'd be thrilled.'" . . . | more
Continue reading "Stadium subsidy news from Seattle & New York"
Monday, July 9. 2007
by Dave Zirin
"You can't throw money at the problem." As a former public school teacher in Washington, I heard this cliche from countless bureaucrats. It was code for "Stop whining about ancient textbooks and prehistoric classroom materials, because there is no money." Imagine my shock when the city announced it would be spending more than $500 million on a new baseball stadium. Clearly when it comes to the needs of billionaire sports owners, there always seems to be money available to be thrown.
Continue reading "Stadium-building as a substitute for urban policy"
Monday, April 9. 2007
(League of Fans' Washington Post letter to the editor)
The City's Verizon Center Perk
Washington Post, Letter to the Editor
Monday, March 21, 2007; Page A12
Regarding "Wizards Owner's $50 Million Request Gets Initial Approval" [ Metro, April 4]:
If public investment in pressing city needs were to guarantee the District's elected leaders free luxury suites at sports venues, maybe such problems would actually get some attention.
Continue reading "Verizon Center Kickback for DC Officials"
Monday, April 2. 2007
(from the March 29 Domestic Policy Subcommittee, Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing: "Build It and They Will Come: Do Taxpayer-Financed Sports Stadiums ... Deliver as Promised for America's Cities?")
Witness Testimony:
Mr. Neil deMause, author of Field of Schemes: How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money Into Private Profit
Mr. Frank Rashid, waged an unsuccessful 10-year campaign to save Tigers' Stadium in Detroit.
Continue reading "Congressional testimony on taxpayer-financed stadiums"
Monday, February 5. 2007
The NFL has said it has had to inform some churches, theaters, schools, museums, casinos, hotels and other organizations of copyright limits placed on Super Bowl viewing parties. Yet sports bars and other businesses that televise sports as part of their everyday operations are exempt.
The NFL caught the attention of the media and drew nationwide resentment when they sent a letter to an Indianapolis church prior to Super Bowl XLI, demanding the cancellation of the church's party. The ramifications of such an organizational crackdown could be far reaching. Many churches across the country ended their Super Bowl party plans upon hearing the news from Indianapolis.
Continue reading "NFL uses copyright rules to sack Super Bowl parties"
Thursday, January 25. 2007
In his Edge of Sports column, Dave Zirin recognizes the significance of Tony Dungy of the Indianapolis Colts and Lovie Smith of the Chicago Bears "shattering one of sports' most formidable glass ceilings." For the first time, the head coaches of both teams in the Super Bowl are black.
Continue reading "Achievements of Coaches Smith & Dungy come in spite of NFL"
Wednesday, January 17. 2007
Leading up to the Super Bowl, an Online Journal commentary by Jason Miller compares the NFL to U.S. domestic and foreign policy -- and thereby football fans to the U.S. population -- in a challenge to the masses. He writes: "Arising from the same fetid bogs of spiritual decay that spawned the American Way, the NFL reeks with the stench of corporate tyranny, patriarchy, racism, superficiality, greed, competitiveness, and materialism."
Continue reading "The NFL, U.S. policy, and complicity of the masses"
Friday, January 12. 2007
Two recent articles from the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times examine the big business of college football and question the tax-breaks and non-profit status enjoyed by athletic departments involved in an arms race of spending on stadiums and coaches.
Continue reading "Tax breaks, non-profit status used for college football arms race"
Friday, November 10. 2006
In the Pennsylvania race for governor, pro football Hall of Famer Lynn Swann was easily defeated by incumbent Ed Rendell in the November 7 mid-terms. Swann's celebrity status and former position as chairman of the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports (2002-2005) couldn't carry him to victory as they did Arnold Schwarzenegger in California (Schwarzenegger was Chairman of the President's Fitness Council from 1990-92).
On this occassion, League of Fans remembers opposing Swann's peddling of junk food to kids while Chairman of the President's Fitness Council. At a vending machine trade group press conference on January 13, 2005, Chairman Swann was paid to appear next to a vending machine filled with junk food alongside elementary school kids.
Continue reading "On the occasion of Lynn Swann's Pennsylvania gubernatorial defeat"
Thursday, November 9. 2006
Victory! Voters in both Seattle, WA and Sacramento, CA went against sports team owner demands for corporate welfare in ballot measures on Tuesday, November 7. Field of Schemes has the breakdown:
Continue reading "Two big Nov. 7 victories against taxpayer subsidies for team owners"
Tuesday, October 17. 2006
(Letter co-signed by: Jim Bouton, former Yankee pitcher and author of Ball Four; Ralph Nader, consumer advocate and author; Neil deMause, co-author of Field of Schemes; Dave Zirin, columnist for SLAM magazine and author of What's My Name, Fool?; Robert Weissman, director of Essential Action and co-author of Corporate Predators; and Shawn McCarthy, director of League of Fans.)
Council of the District of Columbia
Dear Council member:
The District baseball boondoggle is swirling out of control at an ever accelerating pace.
Continue reading "DC Council Urged to 'Stop the Hemorrhaging' of the Stadium Project"
Friday, September 29. 2006
More teams scalping their own tickets. In a column titled "Yankees Show Contempt for Their Most-Loyal Fans," Scott Soshnick of Bloomberg News explains how the Yankees are policing ticket resale websites and revoking season tickets from fans who have sold their unused seats online.
At the same time, the Yankees are planning an operation called Pinstripe Marketplace, which the Yankees describe as "a new and exciting feature which will create a forum through which full season ticket licensees will be permitted to resell their tickets."
Continue reading "Yankees revoke season tickets from fans who resell; decide to scalp own tickets"
Thursday, August 24. 2006
George M. Steinbrenner III
Owner, New York Yankees
Dear Mr. Steinbrenner:
So you want to be the man who tears down "the House That Ruth Built." And for what? More profit.
Neither you, nor the city government you pressured, nor anyone else should ever do this to a place so rich in history and tradition as Yankee Stadium. Would the city ever tear down Carnegie Hall? Adding wasteful insult to senseless injury, you command hundreds of millions of dollars in public subsidies and primary neighborhood parkland to support a new impostor stadium.
Continue reading "Nader to Steinbrenner: Don't tear down Yankee Stadium"
Monday, August 21. 2006
Imagine the following scenario:
Your favorite team is very popular and sells out most of its games. The owners of the team like to take advantage by finding ways to collect additional revenue. They dislike ticket scalpers making money off of their team's popularity and getting away with it.
Continue reading "Cubs free to scalp own tickets, stick it to fans"
Monday, August 14. 2006
Sarah Moses of Indian Country Today reports that a joint petition with the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office was filed on August 11, 2006 for the cancellation of the Washington Redskins trademarked term, "Redskins." The petition was filed by six American Indian young people from across the country ranging in age from 18 to 24.
Continue reading "New petition to cancel derogatory 'Redskins' trademark"
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