It's not much of debate and it doesn't ultimately matter very much. The most recent controversy indirectly referred to by Serge above was only indirectly related to the sport/hobby issue and no one would have been very interested or concerned over which way it came out if it wasn't the tip of a much larger iceberg.
There have a been a few rather absurd comments (independent of the Brodak mess) about making it a "sport" so you could get coverage of a stunt contest on the local news, Wide World of Sports, etc. I can easily envision going to Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Fouts, at the time, sports director of KPIX, and telling him, "hey, Dan, you are going to have to cut that 49er/Giants/A's/Raiders/Warriors/Sharks/Cal/Stanford/San Jose State segment short, we have footage of middle-aged men playing with toy airplanes on strings on a ballfield somewhere. It's almost as good as watching paint dry!"
People want to imagine that stunt is something that is endlessly fascinating and that absolutely everyone would want to participate if they had the exposure and option to. That's absurd, it's an incredibly narrow niche hobby in a very narrow category, it will never have widespread appeal in the sense that even casual sports like tennis and golf have, no matter how you attempt to rebrand it.
There's absolutely nothing wrong with that, I am not sure why some people seem to get their feelings hurt when someone (or rather, anyone, given that you might have 5000 regular fliers in a world of 7 billion people) doesn't agree or want to do it.
Brett
Brett,
Of course I agree with you. At least for the most part! It certainly is exactly as you say. I would remind everyone however that it hasn't always been that way.
When I was a youngster growing up in the Midwest there was a widespread interest in Control line flying and a certain National awareness of exactly what it was. Most of my friends in school were involved in modeling to some degree and many to a large degree. Even those that weren't directly involved had at least a modicum of knowledge of what it was. No not in great detail as with the major American sports but still a wide spread awareness. Short spots on TV and Radio about the activity and people flying were fairly common. Disneyland even had a flying demonstration site that was fairly well attended. Several TV kid shows like Spin and Marty etc. had segments showing the activity as part of stories.
Then the Great commercial community lost all interest in it and it died away. Just no major money in it to promote. I sincerely believe that's what drives America and it's interests. Money and the Media. Only so much time for commercials and the interest goes where the money is!
It's not unique! Other activities have come and gone much the same way. Motorcycle racing was a great draw for a while and the media poured large amounts of time and money into it but soon the media and the general public found something new to promote.
Football, Baseball, and Basketball, especially the professional aspects of those sports, consume all of the media time today, and make all of the money for commercials. There are probably about as many talking heads on the boob tube talking about those three sports as there are people playing them. My how the money rolls in!!!
Then of course there is the constant assailment about politics and the politicians that consume whatever interest is left over! A lot of money rolls in there also, a great deal of it probably our TAX money!
It seems there just isn't enough interest or time left over for common enjoyments like modeling today!
Trust me all this "interest" is orchestrated and driven by the media and money, money, money! The money of course coming from commercial interests that simply want to sell something. Most often something expensive like automobiles or houses or trips around the world.
A long time ago Mr. Mac (short for McCleod) the proprietor of Ace Hobby and Crafts in Kansas City MO just up the street from Westport High School, yes I still miss the old Buzzard today, told me that modeling was a child of the Great Depression. People that were poor and could no longer afford to buy expensive cars, boats, clothes, and trips to Europe turned to making toy airplanes and toy cars etc. on their dining room tables. I believed him then and still do. It takes "Hard Times" for people, especially the sellers, to become interested in the simpler things!
Could be that will happen again. Or maybe not!
Is America a better place today? Personally I don't think so, but then I'm just one old curmudgeon!
Randy Cuberly