Thursday, October 17, 2013

NFL.com: What's in a website?


To learn more about my subculture, I have decided to take a look at the main online hub of professional football: NFL.com. It is an incredibly popular website, due to the popularity of the sport.  Each team has their own website, links to which are placed at the top of the home screen of nfl.com, marked with the team’s emblem.  Below that is a bar listing general terms including: fantasy, news, video, scores, schedules, standings, stats, watch games, tickets, and shop.  Scrolling over each, the visitor is given a quick snapshot of what each will entail if clicked on.  The NFL logo is to the left of this bar, along with a pink ribbon behind it for breast cancer awareness month.  The schedule of the upcoming games is listed below this bar, giving a two/three-letter abbreviation for each team and their opponent.  In order to understand several of these names you must be an insider of the subculture.
An advertisement for pizza hut is placed in the center of the top of the page, hard to miss.  Written on the ad is, “Score a Pizza Any Way You Want”, a play on the word “score” which is used specifically for this website.  A giant picture of two players reveals the main story of the website, the game that is on right now.  The caption underneath is “Ruling the air—Richard Sherman has owned Larry Fitzgerald in previous matchups.  Will his advantage continue? READ”.  “Ruling the air” is a statement that almost anyone outside of the subculture would not understand.  Most of the side article titles such as this would not make any sense to an outsider: “Rank’s 11 Sleepers: Graduation day for Keenan Allen”, “The new King of Corners?”, and “Drive the Jaguar”—just to name a few.
Scrolling down the home page, more advertisements for Pizza Hut are found as well as one for the NFL Shop.  One thing I noticed in particular about this website are the amount of pictures and videos compared to the amount of text.  There are so many forms of visual media and very small amounts of writing.  The subculture of professional football is not stereotypically known for being incredibly intelligent, so you would think they wouldn’t want to read much, but they like pictures.  One of the pictures at the very bottom of the page has the caption “Why do you love football” and it is a picture of a family (including a mom and daughter) watching football together.  I think it is interesting to note the infrequent appearance of women in the photos.  But, also to see when women are used and how they are used.  The next time something about a woman comes up, it is the ever-annoying ad “53 year old Mom Looks 27”. 
Fantasy leagues are the most directly fan-involved activities offered by nfl.com.  Here fans can interact with one another as well as play “make believe” with their favorite players.  I was not completely confident that I knew exactly how Fantasy Football worked, since I have never done it.  So, I clicked on the “Fantasy” link, then “Help” and under the “FAQ” headline was “What is Fantasy Football”. It explained very clearly, but without too much or too little detail.  The rituals of the “Fantasy” commitment involve deciding which players to keep on your starting lineup each week and then staring at each game to see how many Fantasy Points you rack up then, comparing your score to other fan’s teams. 
This website covers so much information, but it is very professional.  It looks like a lot of work goes into maintaining it and that the job is done by several people who do this for a living.  The NFL’s marketing specialists must work hand and hand with the website management due to the incredible number of advertisements.  This is definitely the main site for anything and everything professional football.  It is a wealth of information and could be used in a variety of ways.  I will definitely be coming back to check it out. www.nfl.com

2 comments:

  1. The NFL website! Love it! You really hit the jackpot in terms of content with this one! By your descriptions it sure looks like those marketing agents do a good job of appealing to their target audience. Considering this is such a popular sport in the US, the conveniently placed Pizza Hut ad and the picture/video reliant site says a lot about our culture, or at least the culture of Professional Football. I thought it was great how you described the fantasy football leagues as fans playing make believe. Usually playing pretend is seen as something of a phase that people tend to grow out of, but here we see that many adults too can get a good time out of roleplaying of sorts! There's something to be said here about the idea of growing up and what exactly it entails. All in all it looks like you did a great job of analyzing the digital landscape, keep it up!

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  2. What better place to go for an online response than directly to the website for the NFL? It's definitely full of information, and, as you said, plenty of visuals for the football fans to look at. I found it interesting that you pointed out that the website is directed at the stereotype that football fans are unintelligent, and I think that this speaks volumes about our culture. This along with the fact that the site is definitely geared towards men, as you pointed out. It's crazy to think about how male-dominated the sports world is, not even just football. It's clear from this website that for many people, football and the NFL can be quite the obsession.

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