The Times Australia
The Times World News

.
Times Media

.

'Girls please stay in the kitchen' — as skateboarding debuts at the Olympics, beware of the lurking misogyny

  • Written by Brigid McCarthy, Lecturer in Journalism, La Trobe University

Skateboarding will make its Olympic debut this year at the Tokyo Games.

The women’s and men’s competitions will both involve park and street events. In each, athletes perform optional skill sets within a time limit and are judged based on the combined difficulty and execution shown, similar to diving or gymnastics.

Skateboarding has been included at Tokyo[1] for the first time as part of a bid to make the games “more youthful, more urban [and] include more women”.

But gender equality in sports is not as simple as just scheduling a women’s competition.

My research suggests female athletes in Tokyo are likely to cop sexist abuse online, especially if they are competing in traditionally male events.

Read more: Alt goes mainstream: how surfing, skateboarding, BMX and sport climbing became Olympic events[2]

My research

In my recently published research[3], I examined nearly 4,000 comments posted to YouTube about women’s skateboarding competitions. The comments were collected from 14 competition live streams, from 2017 to the end of 2019. The competitions selected were high-profile skateboarding events with large prizes.

Given that YouTube comments can be added, edited or removed at any time, all comments were extracted at the beginning of the study to create a stable data set.

How Olympic skateboarding works.

‘Welcome to womanhoodsville’

Of the comments examined, 17% of those made on street skating competitions contained misogyny or abuse. While recent studies[4] have found sportswomen to be individual targets of online abuse, I also found frequent gender discrimination targeting women skaters collectively. This was often expressed through gendered gate-keeping of both skateboarding and sport.

Girls, please stay in the kitchen.

Many comments used aggressive language that dehumanised and sexualised women.

Give the bitches armor [sic] so they don’t skate like pussies.

There were also frequent anti-feminist sentiments posted, suggesting women were being granted a free ride for the sake of equality.

Welcome to womanhoodsville, where you get 1000x the attention with a 1000th of the effort.

Interestingly — and disturbingly — some of the abusive comments we observed seemed to suggest women’s inclusion comes at the cost of men.

These hoe’s [sic] should be greatful [sic] that men did all the work so they can just go around doing flatground kickflips and missing 5050s for $20,000.

Dude culture

Despite women’s sustained participation, skateboarding has long been perceived as a “dude” culture. The new TV series Betty[5], based on its actors’ real-life experiences, highlights the macho monopolisation of skate spaces. As creator Crystal Moselle explains[6]:

[…] skateboarding for so long has been set up as a male sport. So even just, like, going to the store to set up a board is intimidating. It’s a lot of intimidation.

A woman competes in a pre-Olympic skateboarding competition. Women have had to fight to be included in elite skateboarding events. Riccardo Antimiani /EPA/AAP

Women have also had to fight for competitive opportunities, including the sport’s “Billie Jean King moment[7]”, when women threatened to boycott the 2005 X Games to gain better access to practice time, coverage and prize money.

Meanwhile, some major skate events have only recently included full women’s programs[8] in the course of becoming Olympic qualifying competitions.

Beyond skateboarding

This is not just a skateboarding problem, unfortunately. There is a wider problem with misogyny in sport. The uninhibited online abuse we observed is similar to the explosion of sexist commentary that occurred around the formation of the women’s AFL league.

In 2019, trolls[9] flocked to an image of AFL player Tayla Harris kicking a football. The following year, the Herald Sun attributed[10] their decision to close comments on their coverage to “constant trolling, harassment and disgraceful commentary”.

And of course, sadly, it’s not just athletes — women working in sports journalism face this, too[11]. This year, American sports writer Julie DiCaro published a book, Sidelined[12], about the online vitriol experienced by women working in the field.

Online abuse is everywhere

Since this research was undertaken, the vilest comments have been slowly removed from the streams. But this is not enough — online abuse of women is ubiquitous[13].

And while moderation can remove comments calling women skaters “a bunch of broken dishwashers” or a viewer’s bucket list of sexual acts they’d like an athlete to perform, it can’t change attitudes to women’s participation.

Read more: The Tokyo Olympics are supposed to be a 'landmark in gender equality' — are the Games really a win for women?[14]

Abusive, sexist language posted on online spaces where the sport is now consumed by global audiences may also shape perceptions of skateboarding as neither inclusive nor safe for women. And this occurs at a moment when women skaters are poised to become more visible than ever, providing opportunity to inspire further growth at the grassroots level.

My research is yet another example of how social media can reveal the deep entrenchment of misogyny in a society where women are still seen as interlopers and threats to certain areas of public life.

References

  1. ^ at Tokyo (olympics.com)
  2. ^ Alt goes mainstream: how surfing, skateboarding, BMX and sport climbing became Olympic events (theconversation.com)
  3. ^ research (journals.sagepub.com)
  4. ^ recent studies (www.tandfonline.com)
  5. ^ Betty (www.theguardian.com)
  6. ^ explains (www.npr.org)
  7. ^ Billie Jean King moment (www.theguardian.com)
  8. ^ full women’s programs (www.prnewswire.com)
  9. ^ trolls (www.abc.net.au)
  10. ^ attributed (www.heraldsun.com.au)
  11. ^ face this, too (www.genvic.org.au)
  12. ^ Sidelined (www.chicagomag.com)
  13. ^ ubiquitous (www.plan.org.au)
  14. ^ The Tokyo Olympics are supposed to be a 'landmark in gender equality' — are the Games really a win for women? (theconversation.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/girls-please-stay-in-the-kitchen-as-skateboarding-debuts-at-the-olympics-beware-of-the-lurking-misogyny-161883

The Times Features

HOYTS Gift Cards are coming in hot this festive season

With a hot selection of blockbuster movies coming to the big screen this summer, avoid the crowds and enjoy some movie magic at HOYTS with discounted gift cards—perfect for stuff...

Top 10 holiday houses across Brisbane

As Brisbane gears up to become an Olympic city, the Sunshine State capital is seeing a surge in new residents, luxury hotels, and major developments including The Star Brisbane...

Australian small businesses set to win big as many brace for a bumper holiday season

With the holiday sales season in full swing, new data from the Commonwealth Bank reveals small businesses could be set to receive a much-needed end-of-year financial reward...

BeerFest Sydney at Darling Harbour Tumbalong Park

Sydneysiders’ ultimate summer party is here! BeerFest Sydney is making its triumphant debut at Darling Harbour’s Tumbalong Park on 6–7 December, bringing together NSW’s best bo...

The Importance of Regular Roof and Gutter Maintenance for Adelaide Home

The Importance of Regular Roof and Gutter Maintenance for Adelaide Homes Your roof and gutters can be integral to maintaining the structural integrity and aesthetic appeal of yo...

Designer Wardrobe reports surge in pre-loved wedding gowns

As Australia’s wedding season approaches, and amidst a challenging cost of living backdrop, new insights from Designer Wardrobe reveal that Australia and New Zealand (ANZ) brid...

Times Magazine

How to Optimize Your Dust Collector’s Performance with the Right Filter Cartridge

The filter cartridge is one of the critical components of your dust collector system, and the efficiency of your system depends largely on it. The type of cartridge used in the dust collection system can significantly influence its performance, cos...

JOLT, Australia’s first free electric vehicle charging network

Seedooh charges up with JOLT   JOLT, Australia’s first free electric vehicle charging network, has partnered with purpose-built technology platform Seedooh to verify all advertising campaigns running across its new 100% Digital Out of Home netw...

The AI Revolution in Local SEO: Your Personalized Concierge to Customer Connections

Gone are the days of generic "near me" searches and basic keyword optimization. Today's local SEO landscape thrives on deep personalization, hyper-local relevance, and real-time understanding of customer intent. And driving this evolution is none o...

Streamline Your Writing Process with the Help of Writing Apps

Writing apps are computer programs that are designed to help users create and edit written material. With the rise of technology, writing apps have become a popular tool for individuals and businesses alike. They can help streamline the writing pro...

Why Is a Website the Most Important Part of Digital Marketing?

Your website is the most important digital marketing tool you have, even more so than social media, content marketing, email marketing, traditional outbound advertising, and printed materials. All of your marketing activities will likely lead users...

IT Support for Sustainable Business Practices

In a contemporary business landscape where sustainability transcends mere rhetoric to become a fundamental operational imperative, IT support emerges as a crucial facilitator in guiding enterprises toward environmentally conscious practices. This d...