Barry Jacobs is the Chairman of The Orange County Board of Commissioners. Orange borders Durham County and includes the town of Chapel Hill and the campus of the University of North Carolina.
Jacobs regularly writes about women’s sports. Recently he sounded off in response to the Duke lacrosse case and made linkages to things liberal/leftists like to call “the larger truths.” Here’s some of Jacobs:
Under the best of circumstances, collegiate athletic competition involving women--most often condescendingly called "ladies" or "girls" by the sports media--routinely commands second-class coverage. […]Jacobs serves up a lot more just like that and closes with:
The off-field excesses of the Duke lacrosse team (men's) [provide] a dark and hurtful reminder of larger truths about sex, race and privilege.
How must female athletes, black and white, look at their male counterparts after such an episode, or rather how must they imagine their male counterparts look at them?
And, if boys-will-be-boys is tolerated by athletic administrators, where does a woman turn for support? […]
But celebration of the ACC women's transcendent season was cut short by tales of racism, alcohol abuse and alleged sexual assault perpetuated (sic) by male Duke athletes. In this, too, the lacrosse team and its excesses served to victimize women.Jacobs' piece appeared in the Apr. 12 edition of The Independent, a free, weekly newspaper with strong social and political appeal to the region’s “progressive community.”
The Independent survives on advertising revenue. Some of it comes from restaurants, bars advertising happy hours, book stores, and such.
But a lot of The Independent’s revenue comes from what Jacobs could tell you is a special niche market. The Independent pretty much has the market to itself because most other publications avoid it if they can.
I wish Jacobs was here to tell us what he calls the market. We’ll just have to do with a few examples. These ads are from the Mar. 29 Independent:
TRAVELING HOTTIESThere are a lot more ads with titles such as BIG, SEXY & READY and PARTY, PARTY, PARTY. There’s even one that claims it provides “schedules, reviews & profiles” of other ESCORT SITES.
Introducing five brand new co-ed hotties to your area for the next three weeks only. Check out our pics online. Offering one-of-a –kind two girl shows. In or Out. Call: XXXX (no contact information will be provided in this post)
XXXX (ad title is also an internet address)
For the best of exotic dance, massage and entertainment try our ladies. Also selectively hiring
The Indy, as Jacobs calls it, has pages of ads with photos inviting readers to TRY IT and contact LOCAL DATELINE which bills itself as CASUAL, INTIMATE, and JUST FUN.
Speaking of bills, the ads often remind readers to have a Visa or Amex ready.
If you’re in Durham or anywhere else in the Triangle you can pick up a copy of The Indy most anywhere. The Indy must have at least 5 distribution points at Duke, including one in the lobby of the Bryan Student Center. Duke undergrads are a major target group for most Indy advertisers.
The Indy’s very popular at Duke. The other day I must have seen about 10 copies of it on desks and tables at the Divinity School.
In fact, it wouldn’t surprise me to learn the lacrosse players who hired the exotic dancers found their contact information in The Indy.
I’ll bet it wouldn’t surprise Jacobs, either.
Now a little advice for all of you. If you’re ever speaking before the Orange County Commissioners, for goodness sakes don’t slip up and call a group of women "ladies" or "girls."
You know how mad that makes Commissioner Barry Jacobs.
For Commissioner Jacobs everybody get up and shout, "Hip, hip, hypocrisy!"
I’m emailing Jacobs a link to this post. I’ll let you know if I hear anything back.
If you’d like to contact Jacobs his email is: barry.j@mindspring.com
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URL to full text of Jacobs' article: http://www.indyweek.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A30272
2 comments:
Hoist, meet petard.
Petard, meet hoist.
Beautiful.
-AC
Actually, another thought.
This maroon makes a classic lib mistake - it's about class, it's about race, it's about whatever.
It's about money. Welcome to America.
It's not "chick sports" that get no respect, it's non-revenue sports that get second class billing?
Does anyone thing mens field hockey gets a whit more respect than women's diving?
When did people start caring about women's soccer at UNC and Duke? When they become national champs and the ESPN trucks showed up.
Women's hoops? Ditto.
Duh.
-AC
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