Edrick wrote:1. Few competing sources of sports entertainment in the area
2. Winning
3. Playing competitive teams
4. Nice venue
#1 is most important and its not even close. Its also why people are absolutely crazy by completely average programs like Ole Miss in states like Mississippi, which are virtual deserts for entertainment sources. All you need is a pulse to get those people with the unsatisfied demand.
FenwayFriar wrote:Question for the Creighton folks- since they are the only non-pro sports city (with Providence being basically an extension on Boston)- how important are pro sports to the average fan in Omaha? If important, who do most root for? What's spoken on sports radio/tv mostly? I would imagine college football but honestly curious what the scene is like out there.
SJHooper wrote:BluejayBuff wrote:SJHooper wrote:When I say homogeneous I mean Creighton is presumably 80%+ white students who were born here, have parents who were born here, grandparents who were born here, and have pretty common backgrounds mostly centered in the midwest. PC is the same but more focused in the northeast. I know I felt more connected to Marist (which had a student body much more similar to where I grew up) than St. John's in terms of school culture. Everyone has their preferences and I'm not one to judge either way, but my point is that there are communication, values, and cultural breakdowns when your student body is very diverse. Growing up in this country, college basketball is a big deal if you go to a big name basketball school. The less assimilated you are, the less likely you are to embrace college hoops IMO. From my experiences as well (again not all, don't want to stereotype) but strictly anecdotal, the international students seem more focused on their academics and then going home. They don't seem to "stick around" as much for basketball games so I guess that's part of what I was trying to say bluejaybuff.
Gotcha - thanks for clarifying.
For the record, CU is 72-74% white, depending on the year.
Thanks for yours as well...this is our breakdown:
0.2% American Indian/Alaskan Native
14.8% Asian
14.8% Black/African-American
13.6% Hispanic/Latino
4.1% Multi-race (not Hispanic/Latino)
0.4% Native Hawaiian/ Pacific Islander
42.8% White
9.3% Unknown
When 10% are "unknown" you know it's truly diverse I should have done this study while in grad school. I also think it's funny that in our commercial that airs during games on FS1, they don't show one white male student. That speaks volumes regarding what populations we are trying to attract if you can read between the lines...might be unintentional like a Freudian slip of sorts, but when marketing a big university I'm sure some planning went into it. I know some of this stuff is uncomfortable, but it's very interesting. I'm a psychologist after all so I'm always looking for reasons why things happen/don't happen!
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