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Does Having a Press Card Mean to be Unethical in the Sports World?

With the advancement of technology and living in a world that needs their information instantly, bloggers are now becoming 21st century journalists.  The days of applying to the New York Time or the San Francisco Chronicle to be a writer has passed with new innovative ways to break into this field.  Recently three bloggers had sued New York City due to the fact the Police Department denied them of press credentials because they had worked for online or nontraditional news outlets were ultimately issued credentials for the sporting events.  Each blogger had varied experience in the journalism all owing their own website that did some form of publication to various countries, audiences, and sports enthusiasts.

A press card simply carries two kinds of credentials: working press cards, for a “full-time employee of a news-gathering organization covering spot or breaking news on a regular basis,” and press identification cards, for journalists who are “employed by a legitimate news organization” but who do “not normally cover spot or breaking news events.”

Strike force, which is a subsidiary of MMA, has also had problems with denying reporters access and coverage for major fights.  President Dana White has been refusing access to all UFC events in recent years after the writers published stories that White didn’t consider worthy of his companies PR clip file.  Besides bloggers, Dana White banned ESPN and CBS sports from gaining access into the event.  This in a large part of certain information that is not censored or review before being released, this ultimately can damage the publicity of the athlete or organization.  It simple seems on who covers the team and how that can determine access and opportunity in the locker rooms.

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban feels that sports writers have become the equivalent of paparazzi rather than reporters.  Mark Cuban also stated “The last few years have brought about a lot of change in how people publish and receive information.”  Having reporters or journalists in the locker room asking questions that are not relevant to the game can be annoying for anybody.  I feel by laying specific ground rules on what can or cannot be said can be a roadmap of what ethics these reporters must go by.  If not the ramifications for this can be in a form of losing their press card for an extended period of time, or worse losing access to that organization completely.

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