http://wvwnews.net/story.php?id=7518 #236
The National Football League (NFL) is as much a business as it is an entertainment organization. The NFL generates much more than $1 billion a year for its 32 franchises and the cities they play in and occupies a majority of the time that many people have on their Sundays.
Ratings for the NFL have never been higher, and the amount of money spent broadcasting games never greater:
“Currently, three American terrestrial television networks CBS ($3.73B), NBC ($3.6B) and FOX ($4.27B), as well as cable television’s ESPN ($8.8B) are paying a combined total of $20.4 billion to broadcast NFL games through the 2011 season for CBS, FOX, and NBC and through 2013 for ESPN.”
Black people make up 13 percent of the United States population, and yet they make up more than 65 percent of the NFL’s http://wvwnews.net/story.php?id=4061. Millions of people worship these athletes and form positive opinions based on the players they watch on Sunday.
Television has created the ultimate machine to induce positive images of people who the Nightly News Casts of most major cities would otherwise destroy:”I asked … prominent psychologists, partly famous for their work with hypnotism, if they could define the TV experience as hypnotic and, if so, what that meant. I described to each the concrete details of what goes on between viewer and television set: dark room, eyes still, body quiet, looking at light that is flickering different ways, sounds contained to narrow ranges and so on. Dr. Freda Morris (former professor of medical psychology at UCLA and author of several books on hypnosis) said, ‘It sounds like you are giving a course outline in hypnotic trance induction.’
“Dr. Ernest Hilgard, the author of the most widely used texts in the field (said), ‘Sitting quietly, with no sensory inputs aside from the screen, no orientating outside the television set is itself capable of getting people to set aside ordinary reality, allowing the substitution of some other reality the set may offer. You can get so imaginatively involved that alternates temporarily fade away. A hypnotist doesn’t have to be interesting. He can use an ordinary voice, and if the effect is to quiet the person, he can invite them into a situation where they can follow his words or actions and then release their imagination along the lines he suggests. Then they drift into hypnosis.'”
Black people love television and they love that white people watch so much of it and have fallen in love with sports, for Black people dominate both sports and crime in America, yet white people only acknowledge the former.
For this reason SBPDL is proud to discuss Michael Vick and the nearly universal support he has from Black people. Vick, the recently freed from jail and recently signed quarterback for the Philadelphia Eagles, once was on contract for more than $100 million.
He was a massively popular athlete and looked to be the genesis for merging of Black people and quarterback position once and for all.
That was before he was found guilty of being one of the heavyweights of dog fighting and sent to jail:
“Today (July 20,2009), however, Vick’s freedom is official as his 23-month sentence for his part in financing and operating the Bad Newz Kennels dogfighting ring comes to an end.”
Vick was always a polarizing figure, but his arrest exposed the reality of Black Unity for all to see:
“The racial divide emerged early in the case against the Atlanta Falcons quarterback, apparent at rallies filled with cheering – and overwhelmingly black – Vick supporters and at anti-Vick protests that are noticeably white.
“Vick’s opponents say the evidence against him is overwhelming. For many black supporters, that judgment evokes uncomfortable questions about race and guilt in America.
“White folks ‘been grindin’ on an ax … and that ax ain’t got sharp enough for them,” said Earnest Hardy Sr., who called the case a witch hunt targeting a successful black man.”
Vick was recently re-instated to play in the NFL and he and his new team – The Eagles – have seen how Black people have responded to this signing (glowing admiration):
“The Philadelphia chapter of the NAACP, the Black Clergy of Philadelphia and other local civil rights groups had planned a demonstration to support Vick.
http://stuffblackpeopledontlike.blogspot.com/2009/09/236-michael-vick-haters.html