Monday, September 26, 2011

Fantasy Football

Each week, when Sunday rolls around, my friends and I get excited for football, fantasy football. There are fantasy football leagues, and leagues commonly consisting of 10 people. Each player drafts a team of real NFL players in each position, and each team gains points based on how well their players do. My friends and I love fantasy football, and competing against one another, but I was thinking why? Fantasy football is a very common hobby, but how it came to popularity boggles me.

Why is it common to enjoy something that takes no effort at all. The competition between friends is one reason why this hobby has become so popular, but I think that the reason that this is so popular is because sports are built up so much in American society that when you can't become a professional, people choose the next best thing. Become a coach, and control the pros, and then when Sunday comes around, each game is meaningful and everything counts. Some people see it for what it really is, just a pointless game. They're probably right that a list of names on the internet probably doesn't mean anything, but I beg to differ. Its more than that, every Sunday, I become my own professional and each win is as great, and each loss is as tough.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

The Stories We Tell

Today in class we talked about the stories our country tells, such as: we are free, we are just, we can achieve anything, and so on. We then progressed to telling our own stories in the form of poetry. Most people, including myself, were trying to write beautiful lines of poetry describing themselves, but are these lines necessarily the truth? For example, one of the sub-par lines I wrote was, "I used to want to know, but now I'm afraid of what's around the corner." The meaning I was shooting for behind this line of poetry was supposed to be that nowadays most news is bad news. However, in writing this line I was trying to be as deep or artsy as possible, forgetting about the meaning behind the line. That made me think, are the stories our country tells even true?
As an American, I recognize that reputation means a lot to this country, and our stories will resemble our "good" reputation. Most of the stories we came up with in class for the most part weren't entirely true. One of the stories we came up with was that we are tolerant of other countries. However, in Iraq, we weren't very tolerant when we overthrew their government and implemented democracy. I believe that people, and even countries, get so caught up in reputation that they forget the values they represent. I saw myself lose focus with the meaning in my poetry, in order to sound "deep". America has certainly lost focus with the truth, or the entire truth in many of the stories it has told. Reputation is something that has become more and more important in everyday life. I miss the days when people could care less about what other people thought, whereas nowadays everyone is trying to live up to the persona they embody. Even our country is doing it, we have to be this beacon of light at the end of the tunnel, and we have to accept the fact that in some situations that just isn't true.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

The NFL: Winning?

Hello internet world! Griffin here with my first blog. As many of you may know, following the end of last year's football season, the NFL was in what many called a "lockout". What this essentially means is that the players and the owners had to come up with a new collective bargaining agreement for the upcoming season. However, this year the owners wanted to take a much larger portion of money from the revenue pool. The amount they initially asked for would cut the players' share by 18%, and the Players Association quickly refused this offer. As the first game of the NFL is tonight, Saints vs. Packers, the lockout ended, and the owners came to an agreement with the players in which the owners receive 52% of all revenue. After reading through the logistics of the lockout agreement, I began to think of how important sports, more specifically football, is to American society.
http://www.buffalosportsdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/nfl_lockout-224x300.png
There were far worse things going on in the world, and within our own country during the 2011 football lockout, but that was a topic that was repeatedly brought up over other important topics. It may be just that I'm in high school and a fantasy football fanatic, but the amount of debate this lockout received made it seem like a real American issue. It got me thinking of why this sport is so important to our country? To me the reason isn't that its fun to watch or that it is something to watch during the winter. I think that football means so much to Americans because our country loves competitiveness and coming out on top. Winning is such a simple concept, but winning can either make a day great, or not winning can ruin a day. To the roots of American history, our country has always strived to be the best. Whether it was the space race with the Soviet Union during the Cold War or Sunday Night Football, Americans always want to win. Until looking into the importance and obsession of the lockout, I hadn't noticed the obsession with being first, but winning and competition are two hidden, but important values amongst all Americans.