The following two videos and commentary in blue font is a post featured on one of the blogs that I follow Vivaville ,briefly discussing the Lingerie Football League (LFL). I decided to write my own response to this post.
These girls play rough!
"American Football has the most gender barriers. Women do not have many or any options to play football scholastically. The L.F.L. in its inaugural season will definitely draw male fans & women that are interested in football. Can this league evolve into something better where people will view it just to watch football?"
"Do you think this league is here to stay or a one hit wonder?
Vivaville does not discuss in detail the positive or many negative aspects of the LFL, which leaves me to do the task.
To reiterate, it would be another ploy used to show that women can only make changes by shedding some layers. And we know that that is not the case with influential women like Rosa Parks, Hillary Clinton and Oprah, all of whom have made the most important changes.
After watching several videos on their website, I could see that this isn’t their goal at all. Mitch Mortaza, founder of the league, wanted to mix the world of modeling and sports mainly for what he says is, “purely entertainment value” and to become mainstream.
We have the same assets that men have
Not enough protection
Dangerous eye candy
The effects on women
We have to think about how the LFL affects other women because the players themselves are women. The LFL’s goal is to become a mainstream professional women’s football league, which I and others hope will open up the doors for other leagues. It hopefully will allow females to play as little children, in high school, in college, then professional. Gayla Harrington, who is a co-owner of the LFL and interestingly also a member of the Independent Women's Football League(a real women's league) says, "It could be positive or a negative".It could be that people still don't take it seriously or it could help."
I know that when I was little I wanted to play football, and actually start my own football league! But what kind of message is it showing to girls when watching the LFL? Is it a message that says that any girl who likes football will one day get the opportunity to play? Or that you must look a certain way to play football, do it for the attention of guys, and always use your looks to be successful?
For the minor women’s professional football leagues that have surfaced throughout the years such as the WPFL, IWFL and NWFL, the women do not look anything like these LFL players. They are obviously much more muscular and wear the complete gear and attire. The LFL players on the other hand all look like models, again another example of unrealistic images of women! And if I was a professional female football player or just played football regularly, I would feel completely misrepresented by the LFL.
Passion for the game
This video below is from the Women’s Football Alliance.
This is a video from the Lingerie Football League.
Do you see the difference? In the second video, although the women of the LFL actually have the skills, it is not mentioned once! And I’m certainly not playing the devil’s advocate because you can easily find many more videos just like this. TV hosts, anchormen, and sports analysts all making perverted jokes about the league and their “tight end”, which the LFL website itself proudly displays in their playlists of videos!
Nicki Ghazian , LFL player responds to criticisms about her league
“The most common question I get from men after they realize I play for the LFL is “So do you guys practice in your lingerie?” While I find this amusing, as it makes apparent the laughable yet endearing qualities of the male psyche. I also find myself burdened, on a subjective level, having to break the mental mold the mass public has about the league on an individual basis. Yes – we play tackle football in our Lingerie. Yes I am a model, and some of my teammates are as well. However, the truth is that we are out there putting our bodies on the line, wearing drastically meager padding in comparison to our male counterparts in the NFL or NCAA. We have had broken bones, just in our last game I played the entirety of the game with a broken finger. Last week in the game between Dallas and Denver a player had her tooth knocked out. Many of the teams in the LFL play indoor and playing in lingerie only leaves you open to more turf burn. The truth is, we aren’t scared. We are out here putting our bodies on the line, playing a sport which in my opinion, takes the strength of a modern day Gladiator, and doing so only because we love the game and want nothing more than to prove that beautiful women can be strong and athletic.
There have been many times at practice that little girls have come by our field, and watched in admiration, and at times even started doing push ups next to us. I’m a law student, one of my teammates is a nurse, and many of my other teammates are successful business women. This is why I find it hard to believe that there has been so much feminist criticism drawn to the league, as I see it, what we are doing is a form of turning the tables around on society. It is an ingenious clockwork that founder Mitch Mortaza has come up with, he has allowed us women to manipulate our physical stereotype, using it to our advantage as an attracting tool, but allowing our skills as an athlete to awe and captivate our fans. Whether Mr. Mortaza knows it or not, I believe he is owed a ‘thank you’ by female athletes and feminists everywhere because he is enabling us to prosper on a level that has never been done before.
My response to Nicki Ghazian
It’s great that the league shows that beauty and strength can coincide, but why does the view on beauty have to be so narrow? These women still don’t look like most of the women I see on a daily basis, that I consider beautiful. They look like everything we are used to seeing in magazines, which we already know is not representative of most women in America. This factor often seems to go unnoticed when talking about beauty.
Ms. Ghazian needs to realize the flaws within her industry and there is nothing that any feminist needs to thank them for. And although she and her teammates have an inspiring and positive outlook on the purpose of the LFL, realistically her founder Mitch Mortaza and supporters do not share the same view but rather a chauvinistic, business oriented one.
2) “Niki Ghazian, bravo I got goosebumps while i was reading your article.you brought up so many important issues regarding women’s broad abilities which are being deliberately ignord by a male dominated society. Mr Mortaza as you mentioned coupled with the effort of your leaguemates team acknowledging women’s strengths is a way that will help build a strong foundation for a modern society.keep doing what you are doing.”
Women have fought way too hard to see changes going backwards instead of forwards. We don’t need to be told to shut up, look pretty, dress skimpy, and go to the kitchen (or field). Whether you’re female or male, the errors here should be clear to see.
PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT EVERYONE ON THIS TOPIC. I NEED TO KNOW WHAT YOU ALL THINK ABOUT THIS TOPIC!
~{Acts of inequality can easily be masked as revolutionary and unfortunately often goes blind to the victims of the injustice - Zesty Gabriel}~





