Lingerie football: sport or porn?
June 20, 2012 by admin
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Lingerie football touches down in Sydney. Photo: Brendan Esposito
This past June my fellow Americans raided Australian shores and gave Sydneysiders and BrisVegas folks a taste of the “fastest-growing female sport in the world” – the Lingerie Football League (LFL).
Sex and gridiron football are two things I love. But so are lobster and peanut butter – it doesn’t mean mixing them will result in a quality product. Here are three reasons why I don’t consider LFL a sport:
Because sport is asexual
Sport is a time where male and female athletes can hug, slap a teammate’s bum, and put an arm around one another without any sexual connotation. There’s no gay, straight or otherwise… it’s about the sport. Even blokey onlookers hug and pat their mates during great moments of rugby, AFL, and cricket.
But the LFL? The touching and the tackling all while in lingerie is too much about sex, and it isn’t right. It doesn’t take Google long to highlight some of the sexiest moments of the sport, with its revealing panty-tackles. Is this sport?
Anita Palm, a former Olympian and President of Women’s Sport Queensland, doesn’t think so. “It’s demeaning to women, especially when you hear of women losing their pants on the field of play. If they just played ladies gridiron in full gear, nobody would be there watching. It’s entertainment for men, not sport,” she said.
“To see women playing in their underwear, brings us back years in sporting evolution.”
I tend to agree. And as men, we probably think about sex quite enough throughout the day. Sport is the one time where we can switch off to give that side of the brain a rest.
Because of Australian history
One thing I enjoy about Australia is the love that every individual has for sport. From Melbourne Cup days to our famous swimmers, tennis players, rricket, rugby league and AFL stars and union greats, our athletes are remembered as gods.
So is LFL a sport that could ever become part of Australian culture?
Sporting legends create memories and history for this country. Does LFL meet this criteria? I think not. LFL athletes won’t line up with Dawn Fraser, Cathy Freeman and Stephanie Rice as Australian greats, nor do we want our daughters at games declaring ‘Daddy I want to play in the LFL one day’.
I grew up in Chicago and graduated from the University of Notre Dame, so I know what quality gridiron is and is not. It’s a wonderful hard-hitting sport, and while the LFL girls are fit, fast, and hit hard, it’s a shame they strip down to nearly nothing.
Stripping isn’t part of Australian sporting history so the LFL shouldn’t be part of it either.
Because I am a man
First, let me say that I love attractive women and I also love sport. I just don’t think the two should be blended together and filling arenas. (And I really can’t see men coughing up large sums for a ticket to lingerie football when they can have a front row seat to ‘racier’ entertainment for free on their home computer.)
Darrin Mitchell, a Director of Gridiron Australia which has been operating since 1996, says the ‘sport’ is not doing any favours for the profile of gridiron either.
“It’s not true football. The girls in the LFL aren’t wearing mandatory equipment as stated by the NCAA (American regulators), so there’s a safety issue. There is room for women to play the sport – the true sport. But the LFL is merely entertainment,” he said.
With the Olympics approaching, some amazing female athletes will be out there proving why Australia is a sporting powerhouse, and they deserve better than that.
They really don’t need LFL out there belittling their achievements and turning more legitimate female competitions into some sort of sexual arena.
So lets give them all a sporting chance and consign LFL to the ‘stag party’ realm of mud and jelly wrestling.
Is Lingerie Football a real sport or soft porn with pads?
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Lingerie Journal Sees Social Media Success
June 20, 2012 by admin
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Equities.com – News
PR Web
New York, NY (PRWEB) June 19, 2012
With a combined social media following of over 5,000 buyers, press and consumers around the world, lingerie news site the Lingerie Journal witnessed exponential growth and reach in the last three months.
Paredes credits social media with the Lingerie Journal’s status as the most popular online lingerie trade publication in the United States according the independent website ranker Alexa.com.
“Almost half of our website traffic comes from Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest,” noted Luis Paredes, publisher of the Lingerie Journal. “The best part of our social media activity is how involved it allows us to become with our readers.”
Paredes explained that through the publication’s Twitter handle, @lingeriejournal, he and his team of writers keeps up a steady conversation with brands, retailers and consumers every day.
“It’s delicate balance of being informative, entertaining and engaged with our audience – an artform that we are constantly working at,” said Paredes. “Many of the exclusive interviews and news items we publish start with a Twitter conversation or follow.”
On Facebook, the Lingerie Journal’s Facebook page has seen tremendous success in helping lingerie brands and designers reach buyers by sharing the stories, videos, and photos the TLJ team creates.
“We are not a press release factory. We’ve been successful because we create great content, help retailers and brands with informative articles and share with the world our love of lingerie,” said Paredes.
A new addition to the site’s social media portfolio is Pinterest. “It’s a new site for us, but we’ve already seen a lot of traffic from the followers we’ve earned there,” said Paredes.
Paredes noted that because the Lingerie Journal relies so much on visuals to tell stories, Pinterest is naturally becoming a favorite amongst his team of writers to share photos with readers.
The Lingerie Journal shares content on LinkedIn and Google+ and on additional profiles for the publication’s lingerie trade show for Independent Designers, the Lingerie Designer Showcase and the publisher’s own personal twitter profile @LuisParedesTLJ.
Regarding his site’s global reach, “Our social media following only shows part of the story. We have a database of buyers, press and consumers from around the world tipping over 15,000 – and growing.”
Paredes promised to reveal new developments for the Lingerie Journal in the coming months to showcase the site’s growing influence and popularity.
About The Lingerie Journal
The Lingerie Journal is the number one online lingerie trade publication in the United States reaching hundreds of consumers, buyers, lingerie retail store owners, independent lingerie designers, wholesale manufacturers, influential lingerie bloggers, and other intimate apparel professionals (as well as those in related fields) on a daily basis. Follow and interact with the Lingerie Journal on Twitter to learn more @lingeriejournal
Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/lingeriejournal/socialmedia/prweb9619820.htm