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Streaming the Formula 1 Rivalry

Sport and the Media in the Platform Age

by Raymond Boyle (Author) Richard Haynes (Author)
©2024 Textbook X, 202 Pages

Summary

Taking the global sport of Formula 1 (F1) motor racing as a sustained case study, Streaming the Formula 1 Rivalry examines how the relationship between the sport and the media has evolved in this new digital environment. Starting with a map of the political economy of F1 and its complex commercial relationship with sponsors, investors, and the media, shows how new media owners have aimed to use social and digital media strategies to deepen the global reach of a television sport previously thought of by many as in decline.
Drawing on original interviews with key stakeholders across the media and sports industry, including journalists, broadcasters, and those working within F1, this book places the sport within its broader historical context, identifying the central role that the media, particularly television has played in its history, structure, and governance. This book also explores the range of media representations and key narratives that the sport offers and how its relationship with other television genres, such as the Netflix series Drive to Survive is impacting the nature of the sport and its audience.
As sport enters a new age of digital engagement, this investigation of the intense relationship between F1 and the creative industries shows us not just how the media are changing, but also that what we understand by the term "sport" is also being altered.
This is a penetrating case-study of media-sport relations in the context of major technical, cultural, and economic change. Drawing on a wide range of sources, Boyle and Haynes offer a hugely informative but also enjoyable account of the challenges and the opportunities surrounding Formula 1 as it undergoes inter-related shift s in the terms of its organization and in the scale and character of its media visibility. The authors get ‘inside’ their topic with clarity and depth.
— John Corner, Professor of Communications, University of Leeds
Formula 1 has witnessed a huge transformation in recent years. Streaming the Formula 1 Rivalry successfully unpicks the way in which the changing global media landscape has both shaped and communicated the sport’s growth. Whether through the Netflix Effect or social media’s ability to turn any fan into a pundit, influencer or content creator, this book explores the complex factors impacting the way in which the narratives and storylines around Formula 1 are built. Streaming the Formula 1 Rivalry makes essential reading for any student of global sports media or Formula 1. Uniquely, it explains the media revolution which has taken place in one of world most sophisticated sporting competitions.
— Mark Gallagher, Formula 1 Executive and Managing Director, Performance Insights

Table Of Contents

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Re-inventing Sport
  • Chapter 1 Scene Setting: Sport, Media and the Platform Economy
  • Chapter 2 Racing History: F1 and the Media
  • Chapter 3 Digital F1 and Reinventing Sport
  • Chapter 4 Telling the Story: F1, Journalism & Media Representations
  • Chapter 5 Streaming F1, Media Rights and the Netflix Effect
  • Chapter 6 Consuming F1: New Patterns of Fandom?
  • Conclusion: Into Tomorrow
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • Series Index

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Control Number: 2023054701

Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek.
The German National Library lists this publication in the German
National Bibliography; detailed bibliographic data is available
on the Internet at http://dnb.d-nb.de.

ISSN 1080-5397
ISBN 9781433198182 (hardback)
ISBN 9781433198175 (paperback)
ISBN 9781433198151 (ebook pdf)
ISBN 9781433198168 (epub)
DOI 10.3726/ b21634

All rights reserved.
All parts of this publication are protected by copyright.
Any utilization outside the strict limits of the copyright law, without the permission of the
publisher, is forbidden and liable to prosecution.
This applies in particular to reproductions, translations, microfilming, and storage and
processing in electronic retrieval systems.

About the author

Raymond Boyle is Professor of Communicati ons and Director of the Centre for Cultural Policy Research at the University of Glasgow. He has writt en widely on sports, journalism and the media. He is Joint Managing Editor of the internati onal journal Media, Culture and Society.

Richard Haynes is Professor of Media Sport in the Division of Communicati ons, Media and Culture at the University of Sti rling. He has writt en extensively on sports broadcasti ng and journalism.

About the book

Taking the global sport of Formula 1 (F1) motor racing as a sustained case study, Streaming the Formula 1 Rivalry examines how the relationship between the sport and the media has evolved in this new digital environment. Starting with a map of the political economy of F1 and its complex commercial relationship with sponsors, investors, and the media, shows how new media owners have aimed to use social and digital media strategies to deepen the global reach of a television sport previously thought of by many as in decline.

Drawing on original interviews with key stakeholders across the media and sports industry, including journalists, broadcasters, and those working within F1, this book places the sport within its broader historical context, identifying the central role that the media, particularly television has played in its history, structure, and governance. This book also explores the range of media representations and key narratives that the sport off ers and how its relationship with other television genres, such as the Netf lix series Drive to Survive is impacting the nature of the sport and its audience.

As sport enters a new age of digital engagement, this investigation of the intense relationship between F1 and the creative industries shows us not just how the media are changing, but also that what we understand by the term “sport” is also being altered.

This is a penetrating case-study of media-sport relations in the context of major technical, cultural, and economic change. Drawing on a wide range of sources, Boyle and Haynes off er a hugely informative but also enjoyable account of the challenges and the opportunities surrounding Formula 1 as it undergoes inter-related shift s in the terms of its organization and in the scale and character of its media visibility. The authors get ‘inside’ their topic with clarity and depth.

— John Corner, Professor of Communications, University of Leeds

Formula 1 has witnessed a huge transformation in recent years. Streaming the Formula 1 Rivalry successfully unpicks the way in which the changing global media landscape has both shaped and communicated the sport’s growth. Whether through the Netf lix Eff ect or social media’s ability to turn any fan into a pundit, infl uencer or content creator, this book explores the complex factors impacting the way in which the narratives and storylines around Formula 1 are built. Streaming the Formula 1 Rivalry makes essential reading for any student of global sports media or Formula 1. Uniquely, it explains the media revolution which has taken place in one of world most sophisti cated sporting competitions.

— Mark Gallagher, Formula 1 Executive and Managing Director, Performance Insights

This eBook can be cited

This edition of the eBook can be cited. To enable this we have marked the start and end of a page. In cases where a word straddles a page break, the marker is placed inside the word at exactly the same position as in the physical book. This means that occasionally a word might be bifurcated by this marker.

Contents

Acknowledgments

As always thanks to those who have helped with this book along the way. In particular, to our colleagues in both the Centre for Cultural Policy Research (CCPR) at the University of Glasgow and the Division of Communications, Media and Culture at the University of Stirling. Although we have worked together on articles and book chapters this is our first co-authored book project in over a decade and also our first book-length return to the area of media and sport. Much has changed, but much remains recognisable about the terrain and we argue that taking a longer historically informed view of the sports media relationship remains important, not least when academic myopia appears to be on the increase. There was a sports media culture that predates the internet.

Thanks to Larry Wenner, Andy Billings and Marie Hardin for commissioning us for their Communication, Sport and Society series. This type of empirically grounded research is completely reliant on getting access to key stakeholders across the sports and media industries. Hence a heartfelt thanks to all those who agreed to speak with us on the record for this book or helped more generally with the fieldwork process. In particular thanks to: Ben Anderson, James Bareham, Andrew Benson, Matt Bishop, Rebecca Clancy, Amanda Docherty, Mark Gallagher, Maurice Hamilton, Ian Holmes, Ben Hunt, Bradley Lord, Jess McFadyen, Stuart Morrison, Ellie Norman, Liam Parker, Craig Slater and Richard Williams. We also acknowledge the use of previously unpublished material from an oral history interview with the late motor sport commentator Murray Walker and television producer Peter Dimmock conducted as part of a British Academy small grant project ‘Behind The Mic’ in 2008.

A special mention to Stuart Morrison, Head of Communications at MoneyGram Hass F1 team and former University of Stirling student (who one author even taught, way back when) and has gone on to enjoy great success in the media, communications and motorsport industries both in the UK and the USA. Thanks for helping to open a few doors.

Details

Pages
X, 202
Year
2024
ISBN (PDF)
9781433198151
ISBN (ePUB)
9781433198168
ISBN (Softcover)
9781433198175
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433198182
DOI
10.3726/b21634
Language
English
Publication date
2024 (March)
Keywords
Sport media Formula 1 platforms digital fandom televisión sports journalism media rights Streaming the Formula 1 Rivalry Sport and the Media in the Platform Age Raymond Boyle Richard Haynes
Published
New York, Berlin, Bruxelles, Chennai, Lausanne, Oxford, 2024. X, 202 pp.

Biographical notes

Raymond Boyle (Author) Richard Haynes (Author)

Raymond Boyle is Professor of Communications and Director of the Centre for Cultural Policy Research at the University of Glasgow. He has written widely on sports, journalism and the media. He is Joint Managing Editor of the international journal Media, Culture and Society. Richard Haynes is Professor of Media Sport in the Division of Communications, Media and Culture at the University of Stirling. He has written extensively on sports broadcasting and journalism.

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