scholarly journals KOMODIFIKASI SIARAN OLAHRAGA DI TELEVISI PUBLIK: STUDI KASUS LIGA PRIMER INGGRIS DI LPP TVRI

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-103
Author(s):  
Dhyayi Warapsari ◽  
Lintang Ratri Rahmiaji ◽  
Ade Armando

Sport and media have a long history of mutually beneficial relationship. Sport has become a commodity. Private televisions use sport programs to gain more profits through various methods, such as advertising and paid subscription. The potential benefits that media can gain from sport have driven the competition between broadcasters to get the broadcasting rights and thus drive the broadcasting rights fees higher every season. In 2019, TVRI with limited annual budget can acquire English Premier League broadcasting rights through partnership with Mola TV. TVRI as a public service broadcaster is not allowed to be profit-oriented like private televisions. This article investigates commodification of sport in Indonesian public television, TVRI, with study case of English Premier League. Data are collected from literature study and observation, then it is analyzed from a political economy perspective. It is found that TVRI use English Premier League to gain more audiences and profits through various sport programs - similar to private televisions, but with some limitations that public television has.

2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-19
Author(s):  
Matthew Hood ◽  
William Chittenden ◽  
R. Todd Jewell

The crowning of Leicester City FC as English Premier League champions in 2016 is arguably the biggest upset in the history of professional sports. The pre-season odds posted for LCFC to win the EPL were 5,000:1, worse than finding Elvis alive. In our model, they win just once per 70,000 simulations; thus, bettors could expect a return of just 0.071 of the stake when betting on Leicester City. This is similar to the expected return of betting on all of the long-shots in our simulations; however, the expected value of bets on favorites averages 0.864. We find that the betting market is segmented for favorites and long-shots; while the market for favorites resembles a normal betting market, the market for long-shots is like a lottery.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Cassidy ◽  
Niko Ovenden

Background: There is concern in the media and among public health professionals about the proliferation of advertisements for gambling and other risky products during sporting broadcasts and its potential impact on vulnerable groups including children and young people.Methods: An established coding framework was used to identify and categorize all instances of risky product marketing in six broadcasts of English Premier League football: three episodes of Match of the Day, a highlights program on the BBC (a public service broadcaster), and three full matches on Sky Television (a commercial subscription channel).Results: Gambling advertising occurred more frequently than either alcohol or hyperpalatable food advertising in both sporting highlights broadcasts on non-commercial UK television and full sports broadcasts on commercial stations. Overall, there was more advertising of risky products during highlights shows on the BBC than there was during live matches on Sky.Conclusions: Concern about the advertising of gambling, alcohol and hyperpalatable food has focused on commercial stations which include advertisement breaks in their broadcasts. However, this research suggests that public broadcasts of football highlights, which do not include advertisement breaks, are also saturated with gambling and other risky product advertising. Further research is needed to investigate how advertising impacts different groups, particularly children and young people.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 51-67
Author(s):  
Ohan Suryana

The objective of this research is to know the effectiveness of Public Service Mall development as the implementation of the Whole of Government (WoG) Practice and the application of e-government concept in Indonesia. This qualitative research is conducted by implementing literature study approach through which the researchers gathered various sources of information. In addition, researchers also used a textual approach to the implementation of the effectiveness of Public Service Mall, Whole of Government (WoG) Practice and e-Government Applications. The study begins with a history of WoG development, then a discussion of WoG transformation towards e-government implementation, followed with opportunities and challenges in implementing e-government to Public Service Mall as a manifestation of e-government implementation. The results show that the development of Public Service Mall as the implementation of WoG practices in line with the concept of e-government has been appropriate and supports the principle of excellent public services.  


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. 573
Author(s):  
Tommy Hamsund ◽  
Nicolas Scelles

The video assistant referee (VAR) in association football was developed to help on-field referees judge potentially game-changing decisions correctly by reviewing video evidence in real time. VAR was implemented by the English Premier League (EPL) ahead of the 2019/20 season. Despite its potential benefits, VAR also presents the risk of not being well perceived by fans. This article aims to investigate fans’ perceptions towards VAR in the EPL. Total of 1350 EPL fans from different age groups above 18 years old completed an online survey on their opinion of VAR and changes they felt would make VAR better. The majority of fans were happy for VAR to continue being used in the EPL, but expressed that changes need to be made in terms of how VAR is being used by on-field referees and to assess certain situations. All age groups were generally positive towards the idea of using technology in the EPL to support referee decisions and provide more information to in-stadium fans, but younger age groups showed significantly more positive perceptions than their older counterparts. Implications include advice for the EPL to make changes according to fans’ opinions and to develop frameworks for making changes with fans as stakeholders in mind.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Cassidy ◽  
Niko Ovenden

The master dataset of recorded instances of gambling, alcohol and hyperpalatable food advertising captured at English Premier League (EPL) football matches shown in three recordings of Match of the Day, a highlights show on a non-commercial channel, and three live matches shown on Sky Sports 1, a commercial channel. The data is used in the paper "Frequency, duration and medium of advertisements for gambling and other risky products in commercial and public service broadcasts of English Premier League football" by the same authors.


2016 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 615-632 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anirban Karak

The decade of the 1980s witnessed massive changes in the internal structure and functioning of English football.1 Several rules, instituted during the infancy of the professional game to limit profit-making, were overturned with remarkable rapidity within the space of a few years, culminating in the formation of the English Premier League (EPL) in 1992. In this paper, I engage with two questions. One, why and how was the century-old structure of English football so rapidly transformed and what were the consequences? Two, what sort of Marxian theoretical framework can we use to understand the historical trajectory of English football? With respect to the former, I follow David Harvey’s analysis of neoliberal strategies used to restore upper-class dominance to argue that the formation of the EPL can be interpreted as another instance of accumulation by dispossession, one among myriad attempts to solve the profitability crisis of the 1970s by creating an avenue for financial speculation in football clubs. Together with the deregulation of television, it converted football from a domain formerly regarded as “off-limits to the calculus of profitability” into a “business proper.” In terms of a theoretical framework, I propose that it is useful to think of football as serving global capitalism in a dual manner: as an avenue for accumulation (the accumulation function) and as a tool for legitimizing capitalist rule by producing alienated consciousness in society (the legitimation function).


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