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Date

2014-06-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

International Review for the Sociology of Sport

This article applies a qualitative framing analysis to the first three seasons of the television series Friday Night Lights, focusing particularly on its incorporation of heavy drinking into narrative representations of the player whose character is most consistently central to the game of football as fictionally mediated in small-town Texas over the course of those three seasons. The analysis suggests that over the course of that period Friday Night Lights embeds nuanced social meanings in its framing of alcohol use by that player and other characters so as to associate it with multiple potential outcomes. Yet among those outcomes, the most dominant framing works to, in effect, reverse a progression through which media representations historically evolved from a heroic model toward an antihero model, with heavy drinking central to that narrative process of meaning-making in such messages.

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Keywords

cultural analysis, football, Friday Night Lights, masculinity, meaning making, mediated sport, social construction, sports media, television, Texas football

Citation

Kerr, R. L. (2014). A beer a minute in Texas football: Heavy drinking and the heroizing of the antihero in Friday Night Lights. International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 49(3-4), 451-467. doi: 10.1177/1012690213495535

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