Calling Out the Heavy Hitters: What the Use of Performance-Enhancing Drugs in Professional Baseball Reveals About the Politics and Mass Communication of Sport

in International Journal of Sport Communication

Click name to view affiliation

Bryan E. Denham Clemson University, USA

Search for other papers by Bryan E. Denham in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Restricted access

In this essay, the author proposes that, in order to understand how the issue of performance-enhancing-drug use in professional baseball has been defined for mass audiences, scholars need to consider the political and economic interests of both baseball and the media companies that have covered the issue. Where performance-enhancing drugs are concerned, media characterizations have had a significant impact on the formation of public and organizational policy, and the author seeks to demonstrate that portrayals and perceptions of drug use in baseball can be understood through the media product that results from an intersection of normative standards with powerful influences on those standards. Calling out the heavy hitters in a culture of pervasive drug use is unfair to elite performers in that media reports sometimes give the impression that athletes have reached superstar status because they were willing to do what others were not; this is a basic falsehood.

The author is with the Dept. of Communication Studies, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634, bdenham@clemson.edu

  • Collapse
  • Expand
All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 2817 623 21
Full Text Views 67 22 1
PDF Downloads 102 35 1