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A REVIEW OF LITERATURE ON THE STATUS, EFFECTS, AND CAUSAL FACTORS INVOLVED IN THE DIFFERENCES IN MEDIA COVERAGE FOR MEN'S AND WOMEN'S ATHLETICS
Elizabeth Ann Gibler Student University of Missouri-Columbia, School of Journalism [log in to unmask] (816) 522-8330 8 Dorsey St. #3, Columbia, MO 65201
STATEMENT OF STUDENT AUTHORSHIP
This paper was written exclusively by Elizabeth Ann Gibler, a graduate student at the University of Missouri-Columbia School of Journalism.
ABSTRACT
In this paper, the literature on gender differences in sports coverage is examined for an understanding of the issue's current status as well as its causes and effects. Despite the continuing increase in interest and participation in women's sports, media coverage for female athletes has actually declined over the past decade. This unequal media coverage affects female participation and body image as well as the professional opportunities available to female athletes.
A REVIEW OF LITERATURE ON THE STATUS, EFFECTS, AND CAUSAL FACTORS INVOLVED IN THE DIFFERENCES OF MEDIA COVERAGE FOR MEN'S AND WOMEN'S ATHLETICS
It is widely understood that media coverage differs between men's and women's athletics. Since the 1972 adoption of Title IX, which set standards of equality among female and male collegiate athletes, there has been rising national interest in not only equal opportunity and participation for female athletes, but also equality in media coverage of women's athletics. The general belief held about sports coverage is that male athletes receive far more coverage than female athletes in the media. Beyond this are less widely held theories on the quality of media coverage for women's sports, the most popular being the sexualization of female athletes. Research in this area is designed to identify the problems in coverage and their causes, as well as demonstrate how this coverage can have a detrimental effect on the athletes, their audience, and society as a whole. Gendered media coverage of athletes is one of the most heavily studied topics in the area of sports media. The scope of the research in this area, however, could be much more comprehensive. Studies on the topic focus primarily on the perceived bias against women in the sports media. The majority of research is also confined to finding evidence on the status of media coverage for men's and women's athletics using content analyses to determine quantity and quality. There are slightly fewer studies that also examine possible causes for this phenomenon and even fewer studies that touch on its effects. This paper will examine the breadth of research available on coverage of athletes by gender to determine where research in this field currently stands, in order to discover where it would be beneficial for future research to go. First, the status of gendered media coverage lies in two areas, quantity and quality. In terms of quantity, it is clear the large majority of coverage is devoted to male athletics, although there are a few instances where female athletes reach or surpass their male counterparts in this arena. Furthermore, although one would assume the emphasis on female athlete equality would result in an increase in coverage, when examining the media as a whole, this is not the case. Regarding quality, there has been conflicting evidence found, especially regarding the use of stereotypical descriptors, but the emphasis on non-sport activities and sexuality in women's athletics is clear. The placement and production value of women's sports also reflects a possible bias. Next, this paper will explore the effects of sports media on the audience and the athlete through framing effects, participation, body image, the creation of role models, and endorsements and opportunities. The last aspect of research the paper examines is the factors affecting media coverage of men's and women's athletics including the gender of the media personnel, the gender of the audience, the source of media funding, awareness of inequity, traditional gender constructions of sport, and the market value of sexuality. By and large, these factors have been unsubstantiated in research or lie mostly in speculation. Finally, the paper will identify holes in the literature and provide suggestions for further research.
STATUS OF GENDERED MEDIA COVERAGE
The first step towards determining whether differences in coverage affect opportunities for female athletes, is to understand the way the media is covering the athletes differently based upon their gender. Coverage differs in two primary areas, quantity and quality. Quantity of coverage involves how much time and space is devoted to female athletes in the media compared to the time and space devoted to male athletes in the same media. Women are typically covered less than men except for in specific instances where a concentrated emphasis has been placed upon women, such as the 1996 Olympics, the NCAA News, tennis, and women's sports magazines. There are also significant differences in the amount of time devoted within the coverage of women's sports. The research in this area shows that while media coverage of women's athletics peaked in the mid-nineties, it has been declining ever since. The quality of coverage refers to the differences in media content when covering male and female athletes. Research in this area has focused primarily on the use of gendered descriptors and stereotypical feminine or masculine language, but it has also examined the general content of stories and photographs as well as the placement and production value of the media coverage. By and large the research on descriptors is inconclusive as a whole, but clear patterns emerge in the analysis of general content, placement, and production value.
Quantity of Coverage Devoted to Men's and Women's Athletics Typically, men's sports receive far more coverage than women's sports regardless of the sport or the medium. Studies on the Olympics, the most popular single sporting event in the world, have found that aside from the 1996 Olympics, dubbed "the women's games", men's competitions have garnered far more airtime than the women's competitions. In studies of the 1992 and 2000 Olympics broadcast by NBC, not only did the men receive more coverage overall than the women, but men's team sports received more coverage than women's team sports, and when men and women placed equally in the same sport, the men still received at least twice the coverage of the women (Tuggle, Huffman, & Rosengard, 2002; Higgs, Weiller, & Martin, 2003). In a study of broadcast media sports coverage done by Messner, Duncan, and Cooky (2003), the three major network newscasts in Los Angeles were found to not only cover women less, but to give women virtually no airtime on weekdays, saving the bulk of women's coverage for the weekends. The same study also found that despite the lack of women's coverage on the networks, ESPN's SportsCenter was still found to air an even smaller proportion of women's sports coverage. SportsCenter, one of the top sports highlight shows in the nation, has been the subject of several studies for its extreme lack of coverage of women's sports. Over a one month period in 2002, SportsCenter aired 778 stories about male athletes, 16 stories about female athletes, and 13 stories focused on both genders. The boundaries of the study were designed to include ESPN's designated "Women in Sports Weekend", which produced only one women's story on SportsCenter (Adams & Tuggle, 2004). In a previous study by Tuggle (1997), SportsCenter and CNN's Sports Tonight were only found to give about five percent of the airtime to women's athletics. In terms of the print media, Sports Illustrated is the most widely read sports publication in the United States and it was found to only devote ten percent of its coverage to female athletes (Fink & Kensicki, 2002). Unlike national media outlets, market forces do not drive campus media, however, there is evidence to suggest that campus media organizations still follow the lead of the mainstream media in limiting the coverage of women's athletics. In a study of university print and broadcast news, Huffman, Tuggle, and Rosengard (2004) found that male athletes made up 72.2 percent of the stories in campus newspapers and 81.5 percent of the stories in campus news broadcasts. A study of university softball and baseball web sites in 1999 also found that women's teams received inequitable coverage during both preseason and in-season coverage of the sports (Sagas, Cunningham, Wigley, & Ashley, 2000). In terms of coverage quantity within the sports broadcast, Women's NCAA basketball was found not to generate as many lines of broadcaster commentary as the men's games during the broadcasts of the 2000 NCAA Final Four (Billings, Halone, & Denham, 2002). Although, a similar study the year before on NCAA regular season games found women's and men's teams generated equal amounts of commentary (Eastman & Billings, 2001). Although a measure of quantity, lines of commentary may also be an issue of quality, because the amount of time the broadcaster spends talking about the game likely affects the viewer's experience of the sports cast. The vast under-representation of female athletes that appears almost standard in the media does not apply across the board. There are instances where female athletes do take center-stage in the media. For example, the 1996 Olympics were dubbed "the Woman's games" and for the first time in NBC Olympic coverage, women received more television coverage than the men in same sport competitions (Higgs et al., 2003). NCAA not-for-profit media outlets are also often a showcase for women's athletics. In the NCAA News, for example, women receive coverage almost exactly proportional to the percentage of female athletes competing in the NCAA (Cunningham, Sagas, Sartore, Amsden, & Schelihase, 2004). The biggest equalizer in the disparate coverage of men's and women's athletics is found in the sport of tennis, both collegiate and professional. In internet coverage of men's and women's collegiate tennis teams on university sponsored web sites, women equaled and surpassed the men in both the presence of team information and the amount of in-season coverage (Cunningham, 2003). Female collegiate athletes are also more likely to receive coverage in tennis than any other sport on university newscasts (Huffman et al., 2004). Professionally, tennis is the only sport in which women challenge and supercede the men in either airtime or endorsements (Spencer & McClung, 2001). Women's sports magazines also give extra opportunity for coverage of women's sports. In a study by Fink and Kensicki (2002), women received more coverage than men in Sports Illustrated for Women. The women, however, still did not receive as much coverage in Sports Illustrated for Women as men received in Sports Illustrated. The gender bias in the quantity of media coverage is not confined to the proportion of men's and women's sports coverage alone. There are time and length discrepancies within the coverage of women's athletics as well. By far, women's individual sports receive more coverage than women's team sports. In 1995, individual sports made up 95 percent of women's sports coverage on Sports Center and Sports Tonight (Tuggle, 1997). Of the stories SportsCenter aired on women in one month in 2002, nine were on French Open tennis, three were on women's golf, two were on the WNBA, one was on softball, and one was on track, 13 of 16 stories on individual sports (Adams & Tuggle, 2004). Although the Olympic games include more individual events for women than team events, the individual events still received a disproportionate amount of airtime in 2000 (Tuggle et al., 2002). Outside the individual event bias, women's sports requiring physical power or hard body contact also receive little to no coverage in the media (Tuggle et al., 2002). In contrast to popular belief, an analysis of the available research suggests that the proportion of coverage devoted to women's athletics in the media is actually decreasing. Coverage began increasing in the seventies with the introduction of Title IX and peaked in the mid-nineties, around Women's World Cup Soccer and the 1996 Olympics, before beginning the decline it is currently suffering from. In terms of Olympic coverage, women's coverage increased from the 1992 games to the 1996 games, with the biggest increases occurring in basketball, a 26 percent increase, and volleyball, a 69 percent increase (Higgs et al., 2003). Women's sports coverage declined proportionally, however, from the 1996 Olympics to the 2000 Olympics (Tuggle et al., 2002). In Sports Illustrated, a composite of studies spanning 40 years by Bishop (2003) found that there was no increase in the proportion of women's coverage for the entire time period. In fact, articles with a shared focus of men and women had decreased and the percentage of photographs featuring women also decreased. Despite its poor statistics, SportsCenter did manage to slightly increase the proportion of coverage it devoted to women from 1989 to 1999 (Messner et al., 2003), however, it experienced a decrease in the proportion of women's coverage from 1995 to 2002 (Adams & Tuggle, 2004), supporting the peak and decline analysis.
Quality of Coverage Devoted to Men's and Women's Athletics In sports media, female athletes not only receive a disproportionate amount of coverage time and space, they also often receive a different quality of coverage than male athletes. Literature in the area of quality examines a wide range of indicating factors including the use of gender and racially stereotypical descriptors, the context of the coverage, an emphasis on sexuality and femininity, and potential biases in segment placement and production. The majority of research regarding the quality of media coverage on women's sports deals with gendered descriptors. Typically, male athletes are more often referred to in terms of their physicality, athleticism, and commitment, while female athletes are referred to in terms of their personality, appearance, and background (Billings & Eastman, 2002; Billings et al., 2002; Higgs et al., 2003). This theory was supported in a study of the 2000 NCAA Final Four basketball tournament (Billings et al., 2002) and a study of the 2000 summer Olympics (Billings & Eastman, 2002). A similar study of the 1992 and 1996 Olympics found that the use of descriptors was prevalant in individual sports such as gymnastics and swimming, but much less significant in team sports like basketball and volleyball (Higgs et al., 2003). In coverage of the 1999 Women's World Cup Soccer Championship, an event touted in the United States as bringing an increase in popularity, coverage, and equality to women's sports, the women were described using both stereotypically feminine and masculine characteristics (Christopherson, Janning, & McConnell, 2002). The coverage also resembled what sports scholars refer to as the "essentialist perspective" which occurs when women's sports and female athletes are described as playing a "cleaner" game (Christopherson et al., 2002). Within woman-specific coverage like Sports Illustrated for Women, stereotypically feminine descriptors are still used (Fink & Kensicki, 2002). Racial issues are also more likely to turn up in women's games than in men's games. For example, in regular season women's NCAA basketball games, whites received more commentary than blacks, there were proportionally fewer black commentators, and there were more racially stereotypical descriptors used in women's games than in men's games (Eastman & Billings, 2001). This is likely because men's basketball is an older institution so the men's commentators have had more time and experience to work out unconscious stereotypical commentary. In addition, the commentators for men's games have likely been instructed to watch for racially biased commentary while the women's games are still primarily concerned with gender stereotypes at this stage. The context and type of the media coverage given to female athletes also hints at biases in the coverage of men's and women's athletics. According to Messner et al. (2003), coverage of women on SportsCenter and network newscasts in 1999, during the theoretical women's sports boom caused by Women's World Cup Soccer, women's stories were typically in the form of humorous features on non-serious women's sports. Although Fink and Kensicki (2002) found that Sports Illustrated for Women depicted women in more sports related settings in both articles and photographs, they also found that the men in Sports Illustrated were still featured more athletically than the women in Sports Illustrated for Women. Furthermore, 55 percent of the photographs of women in Sports Illustrated were in non-sport settings compared to 25 percent of male photographs. Bishop (2003) also found that the photographs of women in Sports Illustrated highlighted femininity instead of athleticism and often the women pictured were not even athletes. In contrast, women's articles in the NCAA News were more likely to contain factual information than personal information and in the photographs, women were more likely to be in competition than men (Cunningham et al., 2004). A major area of speculative research in the quality of coverage of women's athletics involves the perceived emphasis on sexuality and femininity. Many researchers feel the "Kournikova effect" of exploiting sexuality undermines the legitimacy of women's sports (Spencer & McClung, 2001). In an analysis of media coverage of women's sport in the nineties, Shugart (2003) found that the media often uses passive objectification and sexualization of performances in coverage of female athletes. Outside of sexuality, the large majority of print coverage of the 1999 U.S. Women's World Cup soccer players emphasized the fact that the players were women when covering them (Christopherson et al., 2002). The placement and production of athletic events, including the gender of quoted sources, says a lot about the perceived importance of that event. In the coverage of the 2000 Olympics, male sources outnumbered the female sources (Tuggle et al., 2002). In one month on SportsCenter and Sports Tonight, however, more men were quoted on the shows, but a higher percentage of the women's stories used quoted sources (Tuggle, 1997). In terms of placement, when the men's and women's stories were on the same sport, the men's story typically appeared first (Tuggle, 1997), and in Adams and Tuggle's study on SportsCenter (2004), no female story involved a reporter or appeared in the first two blocks. In the NCAA News, however, women maintained preferential treatment by receiving more prominent placement in the paper than the male athletes (Cunningham, et al., 2004). Although SportsCenter and Sports Tonight have a bad record for giving women unequal coverage, there is no difference in production value between their male and female stories (Tuggle, 1997). In NCAA Division I basketball, however, researchers found a difference in the types and length of camera shots. Men's games had more court level and full court camera shots and more on-screen graphics, while the duration of close-ups were longer in the women's games. This type of production makes the men's games appear more exciting and action oriented while asking viewers of the women's games to identify with the personal aspects of the players and coaches (Hallmark & Armstrong, 1999).
EFFECTS OF UNEQUAL COVERAGE ON THE AUDIENCE AND THE ATHLETE
The lack of gender balance in sports media coverage is only important if it generates positive or negative effects on the audience, athlete or society. So far, research suggests that the absence of equality in coverage affects all three interest groups. In terms of academic theory, researchers are most concerned with how the absence of women's coverage frames women's sports as less important. The tangible effects on the viewers and society are most notably available when looking at increases in sports participation among young women, the effects on body image and eating disorders, and the development of role models. For the athletes, an increase in media coverage can mean more endorsements and more opportunities for women to compete at an elite or professional level.
Framing Theory Effects The most common theory used to explain the possible effects of gender biased sports media coverage is framing. The lack of coverage for women's athletics implies to the audience that women's sports are marginal and unimportant (Adams & Tuggle, 2004). Under this analysis, the less women's sports are covered, the less there will be an audience demand for them, and the more the media outlets can get away with not covering them and not putting them on the public agenda. Giving society the impression that women's sports are inconsequential can have detrimental effects on the development of women's sports programs and the opportunities women and girls have to participate in athletics. The media also frames women's sports by telling them what type of sports participation is appropriate and acceptable for females (Huffman et al., 2004). According to the current coverage, the audience is being told that it its acceptable for women to participate in individual sports and sports that allow for traditional roles of femininity but not to participate in sports with traditionally masculine roles such as ones involving physical power and hard body contact.
Effects on Participation Since Title IX was put into place in 1972, and a corresponding emphasis was placed on female athletes in the media, there has been a dramatic increase in participation in women's athletics. According to the National Federation of State High School Athletic Associations, from 1971 to 2001, women in high school athletics increased from 300,000 to 2,800,000 (Adams & Tuggle, 2004). There was a 25 percent increase in participation of females from the age of six and up in basketball from 1987 to 1997, during the same decade in which women's professional basketball leagues were created and gained prominence (Spencer & McClung, 2001). According to Women's Sports Foundation Executive Director Donna Lopiano, the nineties saw a 37 percent increase in women's high school softball participation and youth softball teams increased from 1.3 to 1.85 million (Spencer & McClung, 2001). These are the same time periods in which media coverage of women's sports was increasing.
Effects on Body Image and Eating Disorders Researchers often worry about the images in the media because of the impressionability of the children and teens watching. It is relatively well known that sports participation is directly related to better self-esteem and body image among women (Bissell, 2004), and if media coverage increases participation, then an increase in media coverage could indirectly improve the body images of the nation's female youth. A study by Bissell (2004) also suggests that just the exposure to sports media promotes better body image among females. Increases in media coverage can also directly affect the audience's body image and tendencies towards eating disorders as well. Bissell (2004) found that women who view women's sports are less likely than women who watch men's sports to have tendencies towards eating disorders. The media also gives women polarized body images of the strong athlete and the skinny super model, making it difficult for young women to identify the ideal role model (Christopherson et al., 2002). Christopherson et al. (2002) suggests that the potential for female athletes to be good role models and gain popularity comes from having both feminine and masculine characteristics.
Effects on Endorsements and Opportunities Endorsement opportunities increase for athletes as media coverage increases for that athlete or that sport. The more endorsements that are available to women, the more chances women have to compete at an elite or professional level in sports, which in turn increases the likelihood of coverage of women's sports. Currently the only sport that women have equality with men in endorsements is in tennis. This also happens to be the only sport in which women receive equal media coverage with men (Spencer & McClung, 2001).
FACTORS AFFECTING SPORTS MEDIA COVERAGE
If improvements are ever going to be effectively made in the coverage of women's sports, scholars, media personnel, and sports personnel will have to have a greater understanding of what factors cause the lack of coverage and what factors will improve the equality of coverage. The gender of media personnel, although a popular focus of this research, has not been found to have an effect on coverage. Instead, more market-driven factors like the gender of the expected audience, the type of media funding, and the marketability of sexuality are more supported in research. Other factors include the awareness of inequity, and socio-cultural issues like the traditional gender constructions of sport.
The Gender of Media Personnel The gender of media personnel has not been found to have any effect on the coverage of women's sports. In 1995, even though SportsCenter had a higher percentage of women on staff than Sports Tonight, SportsCenter still aired a lower percentage of stories on women (Tuggle, 1997). In collegiate basketball, the gender of the commentator was found to make no difference in the quality of the commentary (Billings et al., 2002), and in coverage of Florida high school athletics, no association was found between media staff gender and quantity or quality of sports coverage for women (Pedersen, Whisenant, & Schneider, 2003). The female and male sports staff wrote virtually the same percentage of articles about females and males (Pedersen et al., 2003). In addition, the gender of the athletic director, as an agenda-builder, was also found not to be a factor in the perception of coverage that should go to women's athletics (Whisenant & Pedersen, 2004).
The Gender of the Audience The gender and gender preferences of the audience is often used as an excuse by media executives for providing unequal coverage of men's and women's athletics. As of 2003, Sports Illustrated's readership was 78 percent male (Bishop, 2003). In 1995, Sports Tonight had a 44 percent audience makeup of women and SportsCenter had a 22 percent audience makeup of women (Tuggle, 1997). The actual proportion of coverage of women's sports is significantly lower than the female audience in each medium. ESPN executives argue the content is market-driven. The audience wants to see mostly coverage about men and wants women's coverage to be non-serious and sexual (Messner, Duncan, & Cooky, 2003). ESPN has also said it will increase coverage to meet market demand. According to ESPN Senior Vice President and Managing Editor Bob Eaton on On the Basis of Sex June 22, 2002, SportsCenter's job is to cover the sports that our audience is interested in because that's how we get the most people to watch. As women's sports have increased in importance, and interest has increased… we cover more of that… We can't generate the interest on our own – the audience has to tell us what they want… Our first job is to generate the highest rating we can for the program, and to do that, we're going to put on the sports that more people want to see (Adams & Tuggle, 2004). But, although ESPN says it increases its coverage to meet the increasing audience interest, there has been a decrease in the proportion of women's coverage on SportsCenter (Adams & Tuggle, 2004). In addition, even when the audience is expected to be mostly female, the coverage still does not compare proportionally. NBC executives expected the 2000 summer Olympics audience to be a majority of women, however women's coverage still decreased from the 1996 games (Tuggle et al., 2002). Plus, although Sports Illustrated for Women, a magazine designed for women, covers more women than men, it still does not give women the same proportion of coverage that men receive in Sports Illustrated (Fink & Kensicki, 2002).
Marketability of Sexuality Female athletes are often marketed on sexuality because "sex sells" (Shugart, 2003). In 1999, Anna Kournikova was second in endorsements for women's tennis with 11 million dollars in endorsements without ever having won a major tournament (Spencer & McClung, 2001). This was possible because of her strong sex appeal. According to Spencer and McClung (2001), sex and scandal get viewers to tune in for better or for worse.
How the Media is Funded The gender of the audience and the media's emphasis on sex appeal are both market-driven explanations for coverage. Any market-driven media outlet follows these preferences. This is why the mainstream media is far more likely to give women inequitable coverage when they feel the audience is primarily interested in men's sports (Higgs et al., 2003). This is clear in the status section of this paper in terms of the quantity value of Olympic coverage, network sports casts, cable sports shows, and mainstream magazines. Women receive far more equitable coverage in not for profit media because the coverage is not market driven and has the freedom to be more fair with its coverage (Cunningham, 2003; Cunningham et al., 2004). This was especially apparent in coverage by the NCAA News and university tennis web sites.
Awareness of Inequity The NCAA is not just a leader in equitable coverage for male and female athletes. It also leads the way in media inequity awareness and education. Awareness of inequity is, at the very least, an important step in improvement of coverage, however, in an analysis of the available research, it also appears to be a factor of its own in promoting more equitable coverage. The NCAA regularly holds Title IX seminars on gender equity in the media, promoting awareness of what problems exist, and as a result, the NCAA News and many university web sites are far more equitable in their coverage than the average media outlet (Cunningham, 2003; Cunningham et al., 2004).
Traditional Gender Constructions of Sport Some factors affecting gender bias in the media are not entirely market-driven. Research suggests that there has been an emphasis on "socially acceptable" sports for women. Individual sports may receive the majority of women's coverage because they allow for more traditional roles of femininity (Spencer & McClung, 2001). In addition, the fact that there is virtually no coverage of women's sports that require physical power or hard body contact is likely because these are traditionally masculine roles of sport and do not fit within stereotypes of femininity (Tuggle et al., 2002). The emphasis on femininity has also been suggested to come from the "lesbian taboo" in sports, where there is a stigma in elite female sports that the athletes are homosexual. Because of this, women are covered in the media in terms of their heterosexual characteristics to debunk the taboo (Christopherson et al., 2002). Shugart (2003) refers to this media practice as "vigilant heterosexuality". In these cases, the coverage of the sport is determined by a cultural comfort zone held by both the audience and the media.
SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH
The majority of the research in the area of gendered media coverage has been confined to content analyses of either the quantity or quality of media coverage of women. This focus has left investigation of the factors to primarily two areas, the gender makeup of the media, and the traditional socio-cultural ideas of sport and femininity. The first factor is regularly disproved and the second factor is often no more than speculation. I would suggest that future research would be best served trying to determine specific problem areas in the effects of sports media, especially in terms of the gender of the viewer, the gender of the athlete, and the type of sport. It would also be immensely valuable to have research in the available audience of women's sports. Several questions need to be answered in order to argue that women's sports coverage should be increased including "is there a large audience with the desire for more coverage?" and "will the audience demand increase to meet or exceed an increase in coverage?" These are important in order to prove to the market-driven media that women's sports coverage can be profitable. Further research is necessary to improve the situation in sports media for the female athlete. At current standing, women's sports receive proportionally less coverage than their male counterparts. Although interest and participation in women's sports continues to increase, the amount of time and space devoted to the female athlete in the media has begun to decrease over the past decade. Quality of coverage appears to be improving for the female athlete at a better rate than quantity, however, market forces are perpetuating the emphasis on femininity and sexuality. There are significant benefits to pursuing more equitable coverage including improving female sports participation and body image and increasing professional opportunities for female athletes. However, without further evidence that change is needed, what changes are needed, and why they are needed; tennis, intercollegiate sports media, and women's magazines will remain the only even playing fields for female athletes.
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