More than mean: Powerful video highlights harassment of women in sports media

A new video shines light on one of the ugliest problems in sports.
 By 
Sam Laird
 on 
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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Women in sports media face a uniquely vile mix of aggression and harassment online. The problem is widely known -- yet how to stop it is more tricky. 

A new online video campaign starring two prominent reporters serves as a call to action and puts the harassment of women in media in stark perspective. 


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The four-minute video, called "More Than Mean," is embedded atop this post. It stars reporters Sarah Spain and Julie DiCaro -- both known for not backing down from trolls online. In the video released Tuesday, they sit down as men read real comments posted online about them to their face. 

The effect underscores a simple but powerful truth: The vile messages some men send women online are things they'd be far too cowardly to say in real life. 

But why is this such a prevalent problem in sports media? 

"That is a question that has yet to be answered through academic research, but the socialization of organized team sports as a masculine domain and rite of passage into manhood for many young boys probably plays a part," Edward Kian, a professor of sports media at Oklahoma State University, told Mashable in 2014. "In other words, many of the guys who sucked at organized sports and stopped playing at younger ages wrongly believe they are better than high-level female athletes in those sports. You see and hear this in the gym regularly, and it is laughably pathetic."

It's even more pathetic when you hear it online -- as the "More Than Mean" video starring Spain and DiCaro illustrates well. 

Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.


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Sam Laird

Sam Laird is Mashable's Senior Sports Reporter. He covers the wide, weird world of sports from all angles -- as well as occasional other topics -- from Mashable's San Francisco bureau. Before joining Mashable in November 2011, his freelance work appeared in publications including the New York Times, New York Times Magazine, Slam, and East Bay Express. Sam is a graduate of UC Berkeley and UC Santa Cruz, and basketball and burritos take up most of his spare time. Follow him on Twitter @samcmlaird.

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