Frank DeFord’s latest weekly segment on NPR, in advance of tomorrow night’s kickoff of the National Football League’s 2010 season, [URL=http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129706889]offers the scribe’s opinion[/URL] why the popularity of professional football continues to grow.
First, DeFord argues, America’s affinity for football has grown as our "success" in actual wars has declined. As he writes, “It makes me wonder if, ironically, football doesn’t provide us more with nostalgia for the way war used to be — with clear battle maps, focused campaigns, simple battle lines.”
He added, “And, of course, football games have neat conclusions — they’re simply won or lost. But our wars are precisely not settled that way anymore; their goals are vague and imprecise and they just drag on and on, without resolution.”
The other reason for the explosion in the NFL’s popularity is its violence according to DeFord, since “we prefer more violence in most all phases of our entertainment today.”
[URL=http://www.gamepolitics.com/2010/09/08/deford-war-and-violent-media-including-games-fuels-our-love-football][B][COLOR=#8e0505]Read More[/COLOR][/B][/URL][URL=http://www.gamepolitics.com/2010/09/08/deford-war-and-violent-media-including-games-fuels-our-love-football]read more[/URL]
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