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The Real Madness of MarchPosted on Apr 8, 2011By David Sirota Lowell Bergman is the rare skunk who regularly finds his way into the power elite’s garden parties. As tobacco executives celebrated huge revenues in the 1990s, he was the journalist whose reporting about cancer and nicotine addiction stopped the festivities. As credit card executives toasted their holiday-season profits, his 2004 New York Times investigation humiliated the lending industry by showing how it traps unsuspecting consumers in perpetual debt. So it was no surprise that as the sports establishment concluded its perennial orgy of profit known as March Madness, Bergman was at it again, this time exposing the corruption beneath all the school spirit. In Bergman’s damning special now available on PBS’s “Frontline” website [Part 1 embedded above, Parts 2 and 3 below], viewers are shown the side of “amateur” athletics that’s almost never discussed inside the beery bubble of sports media. We see, for instance, an NCAA that makes billions off television contracts, while student athletes receive only a tiny fraction of that revenue in the form of scholarships. We see coaches making millions off long-term contracts, while players remain perpetually at risk of losing their meager financial aid. We see, in short, an Athletic-Industrial Complex that turns schools into support systems for sports—rather than the other way around. Commenting on the perverse situation, fellow investigative journalist Michael Lewis told Bergman that the typical fan “shouldn’t care unless you have some weird obsession with justice.” But that’s not true in the age of strapped budgets and skyrocketing tuition. Fan or not, justice fetishist or otherwise, the scandal should concern every American taxpayer because we’re all paying a price. Today, the vast majority of college athletic departments run operating deficits. In 2009 alone, that meant “about $1.8 billion in student fees and university funds went to cover gaps,” according to USA Today—and much of those fees and funds are those of taxpayer-owned public universities. These deficits are particularly stunning considering that the NCAA is raking in so much TV cash and those NCAA revenues are tax exempt—i.e., tax subsidized—under higher ed’s nonprofit status. And federal taxpayers are additionally supporting athletic departments by classifying boosters’ donations as tax exempt. Advertisement The NCAA champion University of Connecticut Huskies exemplify the problem. The New Haven Advocate reports that as the school continues pleading poverty to justify raising tuition on the state’s residents, an audit found those student fee increases are annually backfilling $7.5 million of the athletic department’s budget. That public subsidy goes to pay the $10.5 million the university spends on coaches’ salaries, including basketball coach Jim Calhoun’s $2.3 million annual haul. And that’s on top of the millions taxpayers shelled out on the university’s football complex. As Bergman’s PBS report documents, UConn’s story is being replicated all over America. It’s a story of unbridled avarice that gives the NCAA basketball tournament’s “madness” motto a double meaning—a story you may not hear beneath the cheering throngs, a story you may not want an old-school gumshoe like Bergman to tell you about, but a story we’ll continue to pay for unless we wake up and end the insanity. David Sirota is a best-selling author of the new book “Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live In Now.” He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com, follow him on Twitter @davidsirota or visit his website at www.davidsirota.com. © 2011 Creators.com Watch the full episode. See more FRONTLINE. Watch the full episode. See more FRONTLINE.
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By Old Meathead, April 10, 2011 at 11:40 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Sorry to hear about your bad experience with
Meatheads Zonth. There certainly are a few around
but there are also plenty of student-athletes who are
doing worthwhile things in school and couldn’t have
afforded it otherwise (I’d put myself in that boat 25
years ago).
The Meathead moniker is not unearned and I really
enjoyed having a lecturer in 4th math/computing
asking if anyone was in the wrong room (looking at my
varsity jacket) but there were many others like me; a
big scary looking football player doing pre-med comes
to mind.
At the same time, there were many other students who
spent their university years partying and cheating.
I know who I think was worth the money.
My question though is about those carefully crafted
NCAA advertisements which say that they plow the vast
majority (I think they say 96%) of their revenue back
into scholarships and the universities. Do you
reckon this is just untrue or is there really no-one
making out like bandits in this scenario?
It would seem to me that something which brings joy
to millions of fans while providing a spectacular
opportunity to thousands of athletes is not all bad.
Peace.
Report thisBy zonth_zonth, April 9, 2011 at 7:33 am Link to this comment
Good article. I always remember the meatheads who would walk around campus like King Shit, whom did not reflect on their own future. King for 4 years, Fools for a Lifetime. Hell I sometimes think I did not know why I was there (only there because it was the next logical step according to my parents and the societal algorithm). For me personal edification didnt start until I began reading what I chose.
Report thisBig business Athletics is like most other things driven by the Americon consumer.
I agree this kind of big business athletics should be separated from education. Alas the universities presently are not realy houses for education, but for profiteering and mediums for certificates for the self perpetuating corporate system.
By samosamo, April 8, 2011 at 4:29 pm Link to this comment
****************
You know these university sports are well protected by probably
the universities’ own departments of public relations where the
students learn to sweep everything under the rug.
Much akin to how ‘spin’ was another name for lying but now the
marketing departments in colleges teach it as a way of doing
business as a tactic. That way opens a legitimacy of accepting
lies in advertizing in ways that make it appear truthful.
All in all it is just the unfettered part of grand larceny which has
Report thisfor obvious ostensibly created reasons to make grandiose events
or departments seem far removed from being illegal.
By einsteinstoe, April 8, 2011 at 3:50 pm Link to this comment
Another rotten scheme, ruining a good thing. Nice piece David.
Report thisBy MeHere, April 8, 2011 at 12:56 pm Link to this comment
There’s no question that the business of sports -literally, the business- has no
place in higher education. In general, sports should be community affairs. Let
wealthy investors create their own, separate “sports universities"if they want to but without a penny from taxpayers.
I once heard a parent say she didn’t mind the huge amount of money that went
Report thisinto building a deluxe gym at the public high school. She felt that sports kept her
son happy since he was no good at anything else. It’s all about the pursuit of
happiness, isn’t it?
By thebeerdoctor, April 8, 2011 at 7:44 am Link to this comment
“Everybody knows the deal is rotten. Old Black Joe is still picking cotton for your ribbons and bows, and everybody knows.”
Report thisLeonard Cohen