Violence: That’s Entertainment!

DixieDestroyer

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Interesting article from Sherdog's Josh Rossen. I'd agree that many MMA "hardcore"/wanna-be fighter fans tend to overdo the "new MMA" stereotype (Affliction T's, tattoos, shaved head, etc.), but no more than the minion of thugs fans (of boxing, the NBA & (even) NFL) come with the endless TNB. To the limp-wristed cherries who claim MMA is too "violent", they've obviously overlooked all the recent mainstream (some watering down) transformation of NHB into MMA (via weight classes & a litany of in-ring rules), etc. To the MMA detractors (those who aren't trying to salvage boxing from becoming overshadowed), I guess polo or cricket would be more to their (candy@$$) liking.
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Violence: That's Entertainment

Tuesday, July 20, 2010
by Jake Rossen

A surprisingly balanced examination of violent entertainment appeared on CNN.com Monday. Inevitably, mixed martial arts was the center of discussion.

"Everyone loves a fight," Dana White was quoted as saying. "It's in our DNA. The example I like to use is that if you're in an intersection and there's a basketball game on one corner, a soccer game on another"¦"Â￾ Ugh. Nobody has gotten more mileage out of that sermon than White. (It's also more than a little silly: if there were an alien attack on another corner, people would watch that. Pointing out that we enjoy gross spectacle is not exactly helping the cause.)

The conclusion of the quoted poindexters is that audiences enjoy "taboo"Â￾ entertainment, something unseen in ordinary life and expressed as an extreme form of activity. But violence is really just the base level of drama and conflict, which virtually everyone finds amusing on some level: soap operas, movies, sports. No big mystery.

What stands out is White's assertion that the UFC is pristine from a medical standpoint: "We take pride in the fact that there has never been a death or serious injury, outside of a broken arm or leg, in the history of the UFC,"Â￾ he says. Cal Worsham's collapsed lung at UFC 9 would disagree. There's also the matter of the long-term traumatic brain injury that we're only now beginning to see glimpses of. Is the sport safe enough for public consumption? Certainly. Safer than boxing? Probably. Safe?

No. Not even close.

MMA's biggest problem is its skewed perception: it is neither as barbaric and slack-jawed as its detractors suggest nor as sterile and humane as its supporters would argue. The danger in mindless repetition of its safety record is that we continue to ignore some very real issues relating to neurological and orthopedic damage that aren't as obvious as a broken leg or unconsciousness. Getting punched and kicked in the head is not the brain's favorite way of passing time. It may let you know that at 25, or it may wait until 55, but it will eventually clue you in.

This ignorance is a product of the crusades of the 1990s -- both against MMA and the fans' struggle to keep it relevant. When your party line is a constant stream of rhetoric about how "safe"Â￾ something is, it's not likely to change even when the facts do.

Part of the blame goes on promotions, which encourage fighters to "be exciting"Â￾ and "aggressive."Â￾ Do any fighters interpret that as being more dynamic with their ground game? Not likely: that language is intended to give us an endless stream of Griffin/Bonnar clones, where fighters toil in stand-up even when it's hardly in their best cognitive interests. Somewhere along the way, Sean Sherk transformed from a devastating grappler to a guy winging undersized arms at opponents. He wants his bonus checks. He wants to stay employed. Treating the Octagon like an NCAA mat isn't the answer. And so we're getting more violent fights, where strikers who have little business striking are eating leather for round after round in a career that's not going to pay dividends later.

Is all this mayhem doing anything to us as a culture? Probably not. Every generation has its standards, and those standards are almost always throttled by the new, "offensive"Â￾ entertainment of the day. I imagine some parents forbid their children to watch the gunfights on primetime television in the 1950s. It's a story that just gets recycled over and over.

What MMA can be targeted for is the creation of the posturing cretin who stalks Vegas hotels in obscenely tacky t-shirts, invisible lats, and the confidence of someone who's taken at least five jiu-jitsu classes -- the same guy who finds blood and suffering amusing rather than galvanizing. My fear is not of a violent culture, but a tasteless one.

http://www.sherdog.com/news/articles/Violence-Thats-Entertainment-25766
 

Howard

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I like seeing people with MMA gear on. MMA is a fast growing sport and few people "over-do"it.I'd rather see someone with fight gear on then some white wigger wannabe with a LeBron jersey on.
 

DixieDestroyer

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Howard said:
I like seeing people with MMA gear on. MMA is a fast growing sport and few people "over-do"it.I'd rather see someone with fight gear on then some white wigger wannabe with a LeBron jersey on.

Ditto to that (if I had to "choose"). However, my favorite fighters are the more down-to-earth ones (tat-free) like Fedor, Lindland, Hughes, etc. I always pull for White fighters in caste match-ups, but my favorites are the "old school" kinda fighters.
 
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I don't like MMA! but i follow the sport, mma came along just as the wall in germany was falling, and that was no accident.

MMA was around through the 70's and 80s, but we had to put up with trash like Ali, the media didn't want us to see mma fights back then, and i don't want to see them now! we got good easteuro fighter in boxing now, mma is around now to pull young fight fans away from boxing.

ask yourself? why did Bob Arum call mma fans white racist???

they want to push white fans away from boxing.
so young white people don't see the best boxers too ever fight in boxing.

we are a lot closer to having a non-white mma star than a non-white heavyweight boxing champ.
 

whiteathlete33

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White MMA fighters rarely receive the same hype as their black counterparts. There are exceptions such as Fedor and St. Pierre but black fighters like Anderson Silva are made out as gods.

It's much harder to promote a caste system in sports like boxing or MMA because white athletes hold their own destinies in those sports. The one method the PTB have is to degrade white fighters through the media and over hype black prospects to further their agenda of black athletic supremacy.
 

DixieDestroyer

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Lost, unfortunately we do have non-White MMA champs like Jose Aldo (WEC) & Anderson Silva (UFC). However, Silva's reign may end against hardnose greco/G&P stud Chael Sonnen (a clean-cut, intelligent White fighter). The best fighters are still White...Fedor, GSP, Lesnar.
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