Chicago Sun-Times

‘ NO FUN LEAGUE’ STRIKES AGAIN

Socialmedi­a edict on game- day video especially clueless

- Nancy Armour narmour@ usatoday. com USA TODAY Sports

It’s one thing for the players and media to grumble about the NFL and its viselike grip on, well, pretty much everything. When the league’s teams are protesting — even if it’s being done in highly entertaini­ng and creative fashion — the micromanag­ing has run amok.

Vontaze Burfict can continue to be a threat to player safety, and Cam Newton gets mauled on a regular basis. But it’s Antonio Brown’s touchdown twerks and GIFs of Ezekiel Elliott hurdling Crying Jordans that will bring about the ruination of the NFL!

Hypocrisy aside, the NFL’s overzealou­sness in cracking down on end- zone celebratio­ns and limiting game- day video content on individual teams’ socialmedi­a accounts is stunning for its shortsight­edness. As TV ratings continue their free fall — last weekend’s overtime game between the Indianapol­is Colts and Houston Texans was the lowest- rated Sunday night game in almost five years — the league should be actively trying to appeal to younger fans, not reminding them of why the NFL is mocked as the No Fun League.

The NFL might think it is protecting its broadcast partners or its own brand by barring the 32 teams from posting their own video highlights or using them to create animated GIFs. But when there’s an endless array of entertainm­ent options and what’s hot can change in a

nanosecond, touchdown dances, highlights and cheeky GIFs can help expand the audience.

They create chatter and attract eyeballs, and that, in turn, raises interest. Look at the NBA, which has embraced social media with the enthusiasm of a 14- year- old.

Teams are encouraged to share highlights and personaliz­e them, the thought being that someone who sees a slick pass or a monster dunk will turn on the game in hopes of seeing more. And what do you know? The NBA’s ratings were up last year, for both the regular season and the playoffs.

Fortunatel­y for the NFL suits on Park Avenue, most of the teams’ social media accounts are run by folks who understand this. Since the edict came down this month, along with the threat of up to $ 100,000 in fines for repeat offenders, teams have gotten increasing­ly imaginativ­e in mocking the NFL’s cluelessne­ss.

Instead of a clip of Derek Anderson’s pass to Kelvin Benjamin, the Carolina Panthers posted, “Anderson To Benjamin. gif.” The Philadelph­ia Eagles and Cleveland Browns made their own “highlights” using pieces from a board game last played in 1979.

And, in the ultimate troll, the Texans recapped Sunday’s overtime win using a dubbed clip from the Eddie Murphy masterpiec­e Coming to America.

With the country laughing at the NFL and its outdated approach, it’s no surprise that the new policy has found its way on to the agenda for this week’s owners meeting. While they’re discussing that, they’d be wise to rethink the ban on touchdown celebratio­ns, too.

The NFL has always taken itself far too seriously, acting as if it ranks somewhere between curing cancer and rocket science.

Sure, it’s a $ 13 billion industry that dominates the U. S. entertainm­ent landscape. But peel away the seven- figure paychecks and the TV rights fees, and it’s no different from what kids are doing every day in their backyards or neighborho­od parks. It’s a game, and fun is supposed to be at the center of it.

So Brown twerked after a touchdown and Odell Beckham Jr. has an unusual affection for a kicking net. So what? Give me that kind of joy and exuberance over dour Bill Belichick any day.

“Everything you do gets fined nowadays, right? Me seeing the tape of what not to do — and I get it, rules are rules — but I thought it would be funny to do that and troll the whole situation, so that’s what I did,” Browns receiver Andrew Hawkins said after celebratin­g an Oct. 9 touchdown by doing the robot.

“I was glad everyone on the Internet interprete­d it the right way,” Hawkins added, “because I wasn’t sure if they were going to get the joke.”

Oh, we get it all right. It’s the NFL that doesn’t.

 ?? GEOFF BURKE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Steelers’ Antonio Brown was penalized for his twerking celebratio­n after a touchdown catch vs. the Redskins on Sept. 12.
GEOFF BURKE, USA TODAY SPORTS The Steelers’ Antonio Brown was penalized for his twerking celebratio­n after a touchdown catch vs. the Redskins on Sept. 12.
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