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A Whole New Ballgame

By Robert Levine/MOLI

Who owns the news?

If you asked a hundred Americans, "Who owns the news?", almost all of them would look at you funny and repeat something they learned in civics class about freedom of speech. But that freedom is getting caught up in conflicting notions of what, exactly, news is. There are differences between protesting the war by singing "Blowin' in the Wind" and including that performance in a movie.

Usually such questions are settled according to what takes place in public. But what happens when everything does? And what about events that take place in public but are owned by a private entity – a category that includes concerts and just about any athletic event with a large following?

It's more than an incidental question. Today's New York Times asks, "Who Owns Sports Coverage?" The story starts off with an anecdote about bloggers, but that's only the beginning. The real question is whether a sporting event is news, like a political speech, or entertainment, like a movie. Most print journalists consider sports to be news. But the athletic leagues don't. That's why they earn the vast majority of their money by selling the television broadcast rights to games. Networks that pay broadcast the games, while those that don't report on the results.

The question is when reporting on the results crosses the line into infringing on what is, after all, an entertainment product. To Major League Baseball – or the NFL or NBA – a sporting event is a performance, just as a concert is. So while anyone may report on what happened, they have the right to control video and audio recordings.

If my tax dollars weren't paying for their stadiums, I'd have an easier time seeing their side of the argument.

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