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sigmaprimus · 4 years ago
This is not just a female issue, I can testify that in my early teens I left competitive swimming due to how uncomfortable I felt in Speedos. Decades later I still feel the insecurity that was put on me by foul mouthed older teen girls ogaling me.

I do not disagree with the fact that many women are unfairly sexualized in these sports and am against that but I feel sometimes misandrious women criticize while giving just as creepy females a pass for commenting on football players butts, swimmers bodies, basketball players shoe sizes and so on...

vikiomega9 · 4 years ago
Does appearing taller win more points for gymnastics?

I've always found it weird that some sports have women wearing scant clothing compared to the mens events. Volleyball for example is a big one where it's unclear how bikini bottoms help over shorts.

CapricornNoble · 4 years ago
>>>I've always found it weird that some sports have women wearing scant clothing compared to the mens events. Volleyball for example is a big one where it's unclear how bikini bottoms help over shorts.

Athletics is just a convoluted exercise in product marketing. Sports attract eyeballs, sponsors pay for the sports so they can put advertisements in front of those eyeballs and hopefully generate additional revenue.

Sex sells. So female volleyball players have outfits that will attract additional male eyeballs. I'm sure the same goes for tennis, as another great example. Nobody was watching Anna Kournikova back in the day for her technical proficiency with a racket. They watched her bent over in a tiny white skirt.

Search on YouTube for "female long jumpers"...notice anything consistent about the thumbnails? Why do the cameramen at these sports events seem so adroit at focusing on the most callipygian of the ladies?

cyberdynesys · 4 years ago
>Nobody was watching Anna Kournikova back in the day for her technical proficiency with a racket.

Speak for yourself only, please; I watched for the tennis aspect. When all female athletes are wearing the same kind of clothes, it was easy to overlook the sexualization of it, at least until HD TV in the 2000's.

cbozeman · 4 years ago
> callipygian

I love that there's a word for "well-shaped buttocks".

pbalau · 4 years ago
There is beach volleyball that requires female athletes to wear bikini bottoms and there is regular volleyball that doesn't.
lazyant · 4 years ago
(somehow related) apparently wearing red is an advantage https://www.samford.edu/sports-analytics/fans/2017/Wear-Red-...
bigmadwolf · 4 years ago
If the team likes the new outfits (which look good) and are more comfortable in them, that's great. Likewise I see some other athletes have specified a preference for leotards which is also fine. All good as long as the athletes have a choice. Not sure I agree with labelling bikini-cut leotards as 'sexualized' though.
greenbamboo · 4 years ago
The sexualization happens downstream on social media. See for instance the pole vaulting videos on YouTube.
duxup · 4 years ago
So this is largely a concern tied to the internet?

Man I don't know what to think about that making folks change how they dress. It's their call but just not sure how I feel about that.

I saw some celeb announce that they were tired of nasty internet comments about their size and they wouldn't appear in any revealing scenes for now.

I'm all for their choice... but I couldn't help but think that there's some extent that they're engaging with / dictating their own choices based on some assholes on the internet who aren't going to go away...

bigmadwolf · 4 years ago
Yes that is what saddens me. I haven't seen those pole vault videos and find it disappointing that people would go to the trouble of making them.

Anyway, the fact these athletes have the choice to wear a competition uniform they find comfortable in the olympics without being penalized is a good thing.

nicbou · 4 years ago
Or publications sharing galeries of the sexiest athletes.
AnimalMuppet · 4 years ago
It's sexualized, or not, depending on why the choice was made. If the bikini cut was chosen because the media wanted them to wear it because it was causing more men to watch, that's sexualized. If the team chose it because it gave them higher scores, then it's not (unless the judges are judging on sexiness rather than technique, which, while possible, would be highly unprofessional).
peoplefromibiza · 4 years ago
In my opinion, there is more than one side to the story, I apologize in advance for such a long comment.

When I was a teenager I used to play volleyball, I played until my 20s, I was a decent player, but not tall enough to go anywhere, so I moved to beach volley and started coaching.

It was before social networks and the sport was having a boom all over the planet after indoor champions like Karch Kiraly (FIVB Best Player of the 20th Century together with my fellow Italian citizen Lorenzo Bernardi) made it highly popular.

The sport was born in California, by "cool" people for "cool" people. If you watch pictures of the time you'll see men wearing surf boardshorts, the ones with very long legs, and women tight bikinis. That's how the bikini became the "official" uniform for women in beach volleyball, they were "cool" and men and women playing beach volleyball wanted to look at their best. Technique was for indoor sports.

Fast forward almost 30 years, nobody wear the surfing shorts anymore, they impede your movements, unless you are a champion the like of Kiraly is, you are better off wearing regular shorts.

I've trained a few different female teams and all of them said the same thing: the bikini uniform is more comfortable because there are less places were the sand can end up.

My experience matches the words of many women players, as an example this is an article of few days ago, but I'm sure you will find many more researching the topic on Google

https://www.today.com/news/why-do-women-s-beach-volleyball-p...

> Would shorts be worse than a bikini bottom?

> It’s totally a personal choice. It wasn’t comfortable for me. Way too sweaty and too much sand. But, in certain situations leggings could be a good option — just not in the heat. There are also certain times of the month that wearing a bikini isn’t always such a comfortable option, especially when you’re on TV. So it’s important to have the freedom to choose what works best for you. Players should be able to wear what they want and what makes them perform the best — and for me it was a bikini.

I'm sure many men would wear speedos for the same reason, if they weren't considered "uncool" on a beach.

On the other hand: technical gear can give athletes an unfair advantage even if the arguments around wearing this or that kind of uniform appear to be reasonable.

For example: in 2008 Speedo (the brand) created a record breaking full body swimsuit, that were subsequently banned for professional swimmers because some fibers can reduce the drag to the point that it's like floating in the water with an outboard motor.

Same goes for beach volleyball, athletes are competing on the sand, directly under the Sun, if you cover up too much in some isolating fabric, you could be receiving an unfair advantage by not feeling the scorching sun on your skin. And even if there's a net between the teams, the teams should look the same, allowing two members of the same team to wear different uniforms could hypothetically translate to an unfair advantage.

Volleyball is also the sport that introduced tight uniforms because the loose uniforms of the late 90s were causing too many unwanted net invasions.

I'm not advocating for playing naked of course and I've never looked at sports in a sexual way, no matter how much naked skin was visible, but I think it's something to think about before deciding the rules for everybody.

There is another point: we are fully in the 21th century now, the image rights of popular people have an enormous value, especially for sponsors.

Imagine Nadia Comăneci, one of the greatest athletes ever, today, on Instagram.

How much would her image be worth?

We'll never know, but we know for sure that at her times her image was property of her country that used it as a propaganda tool. You won't find pictures of the young Comăneci not competing or training. It's like that's all she did (probably also true). In any picture you will find, she's wearing the colours of Romania.

Now that she's older and enjoys the freedom she deserves, she takes picture of herself on the beach wearing two-piece bathing suits, because that's what she probably wanted to do when she was younger, but she couldn't.

What's my point? My point is that today there's an overexposure of images and, of course, brand images, driven by the idea of "monetizing" content, more often than not, by people who do not own the rights to publish that content.

Sportswomen and men historically had their image on display only when they were competing and, especially if they were at the top, they could draw the attention of the media and brands. But their performances were more important than their looks anyway.

Now many athletes begin a career as brand models way before their sport career is over, I will go as far as to say that for some of them the two paths move at the same pace. Anna Kournikova is an example of being both a top ranking tennis player and a model.

Recently Berrettini have become the first Italian to reach the final at Wimbledon, it boosted his popularity to unimaginable level, he's moved from mostly unknown outside the tennis circuit to sex symbol in a week. I won't repeat what Italian women wrote about him on social networks, bu I guess you can imagine.

That kind of popularity means a lot of money flowing through.

I can obviously understand why athletes want to protect their image in ways that let them decide when to show their abs and when not to.

The body of the athletes has become commercial space, the more you cover it, the more you can put something on display on it. In Formula 1 even shoes and gloves of the pilots are full of sponsors, because there are special cameras that point to their hands and feet. Of course a pilot can't drive without shoes and gloves, but what about marathon runners? They actually wear so light because every gram saved is a gram less to take to the finish line, but their uniform is made of what my girlfriend calls "snail slime". If they were full body there would be much more space to put ads on and people would see them for 2 hours.

So in the end I am all in for freedom of choice, but as a former sportsman I also think that we should be vigilant and monitor any abuse that could come up by hijacking perfectly valid points. Maybe I've become an old cynical, but there's too much money involved to not imagine a dark side emerging sooner or later.

stkdump · 4 years ago
The ability to choose and go back and forth on these kinds of thing at will is the perfect expression of freedom. Being forced into one or the other option no matter how they feel about it is the opposite of freedom. Now some sports might define rough regulations about the minimum and/or maximum to wear, and that is fair too, as long as it is open for change as well.
rayiner · 4 years ago
Maximizing freedom for the individual doesn’t necessarily maximize freedom for the group. If there is a concern for example that judges give higher scores to women wearing skimpier outfits, then a more restrictive rule could lead to an outcome that better comports with what the majority of the women find more comfortable. (It’s like the minimum wage. Yes in a sense not having one maximizes freedom. But that’s not the only way to look at it.)
mc32 · 4 years ago
It’s interesting to see these attitudes go in cycles.

In the 70s this was seen as sexual freedom and it was conservative religious movements which were aghast at women flaunting their sexuality. And today women are adopting similar but not the same position as the conservatives of yore. Covering themselves to avoid the sexualization that those conservatives of yore warned about.

Now, to be sure, they are not coming from the same place, but they are arriving at similar expressions.

In any case I agree with them. Rate them on gymnastics rather than sexiness.

httpsterio · 4 years ago
There's a difference between having the option to wear something less covering (be it to show off, for its' functionalities or whatever) versus being forced wear something that is skimpy by design.
alanwreath · 4 years ago
Agreed. The similarity I see between these two (which is what I think at least partially mc32 was getting at) is freedom of choice. Both are/were fighting for their freedom to choose. For better or worse it is always better to let freedom of expression be allowed. I’m not watching the olympics this year (not sure why) but I appreciate the Norwegian team’s expression: focus on my merit not my body. By threatening disqualification and/or fining they are denying at least some potential olympians from expressing themselves at the olympics. In essence they are being denied the ultimate “freedom of expression” of the human body - to compete in the olympics.
pyuser583 · 4 years ago
When you’re talking about team uniforms, there isn’t always a choice.
wegs · 4 years ago
Sex sells. The Olympics is fundamentally about eyeballs.

Is it okay to have strip clubs? Is it okay to hire scantily-clad women for ads? In movies? Where are the lines?

I'm not sure where we want the lines, but:

* I don't like the lines drawn based on one-off issues going viral. I'd like a consistent set of lines.

* I feel like it's unreasonable to expect organizations to not follow the Smith's free hand of capitalism. "Good" organizations are out-competed by "bad" ones.

Is this a place where we might have a serious discussion about a new regulatory regime, or otherwise changing market forces and incentive structures?

I feel like that might be a slower, but more comprehensive, more equitable, and more sustainable way of landing on fair ground.

- More comprehensive: Reworking structures effects everyone, and not just Olympics. I'm at least as concerned about thousands of "Hooters girls" as about elite actresses and athletes.

- More equitable: Good businesses don't get punished. Bad ones don't get rewarded.

- More sustainable: Market forces should push for the behavior we want. Otherwise, it's like fighting the ocean.

abhorrence · 4 years ago
I think it's important to note that some of these sports organizations are _requiring_ specific uniforms for women that are far more revealing and sexualized than that for men.
ekianjo · 4 years ago
This may be also driven by more people (in this case men) watching when women athletes wear more revealing stuff? It would be strange if event organizers did something that hurt their bottomline.
Barrin92 · 4 years ago
>they are not coming from the same place

which is a very important point. Modesty as an expression of personal choice is not the same as modesty enforced by a culture (created explicitly not by the people it covered up, and also expressing arguably a different thing, namely chastity).

shrikant · 4 years ago
Uh yeah, that's sort of a BIG DIFFERENCE to hand-wave away.

OP might as well have said "it's interesting how China's and UK's fertility rate is almost the same" while ignoring how each country got to that level...

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aaron695 · 4 years ago
> Now, to be sure, they are not coming from the same place

It is the same place. And years of ridiculing conservatives doesn't make it less true.

We are burning books and art, we are making sex a big deal again, computer games now affect real life, I even saw heterosexual conversion therapy the other day.. . actually it was conversion therapy on homosexuality to non binary

Own it. It's ok the conseratives were partially right. Religion didn't just pick things out at random. Or start to reevaluate the current woke.

mc32 · 4 years ago
This is true. The results we see are the same, but the forces and ideas behind them differ. It is quite interesting to see the reversal though.

Movies, TV, Videogames, Books and Music supposedly didn't influence behavior, but now supposedly they must given the pushback given certain genres of the above.

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bookofsand · 4 years ago
Conservative and women are not mutually exclusive categories. Almost half of conservatives are, in fact, women.
rayiner · 4 years ago
The sexual revolution was driven in large part by men and women are retrenching parts of it now that they have more independent political power. Yes it’s conservative in a sense and that’s fine. (I find conservatives opposing things like MeToo and lower bars for Title IX violations to be bizarre. Sex is dangerous and should be subject to social regulation and rituals to prevent abuse. That’s a fundamentally conservative notion.)

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