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I meant the seahawks, I try to keep my montana location on the dlCan you really bandwagon the Grizzlies though?
I meant the seahawks, I try to keep my montana location on the dlCan you really bandwagon the Grizzlies though?
I don't understand bandwagoning.
What do you get out of it? You just picked whoever was winning or has cool people on it and then what?
I'd rather suffer with the Vikings and Twins thank you very much.
You do whatever you want and enjoy.Is it bandwagoning if I'm from LA and a football team inherits a Stanford player so I root for them as long as my guy gets minutes? I need clarity here.
I don't understand bandwagoning.
What do you get out of it? You just picked whoever was winning or has cool people on it and then what?
I'd rather suffer with the Vikings and Twins thank you very much.
The reason it is denigrated is because the entire exercise of rooting for professional sports is an emotional exercise. That is the basis of rooting for a team. The idea of ignoring the shitty parts and only focusing on the good parts is absolutely counter to the definition of a being a fan. Again, it's like taking middle school history.I'm not ignoring it at all! I'm saying it's not better to have a specific emotional attachment. People who operate rationally and efficiently are not worse than those driven by emotion. They should be applauded, not denigrated.
I'm a Heat fan, and this is hilarious.
You get enjoyment. You're operating under the assumption that suffering through the bad times for your sports team means you enjoy the good times more; I am not at all convinced that's true. Maybe it is, but it also might just be a justification for your own behavior patterns.
It seems just as if not more likely to me that bandwagon fans extract the happiness/fun out of sports without suffering the sadness/frustration.
You would be a fan of that player, then. For instance, there were a metric ton of Ricky Rubio fans that started to follow the Timberwolves during his rookie year. I'm not going to disparage them, they're supporting a player they like. Just like I cheer for past Timberwolves who are traded to different teams.Is it bandwagoning if I'm from LA and a football team inherits a Stanford player so I root for them as long as my guy gets minutes? I need clarity here.
The reason it is denigrated is because the entire exercise of rooting for professional sports is an emotional exercise. That is the basis of rooting for a team. The idea of ignoring the shitty parts and only focusing on the good parts is absolutely counter to the definition of a being a fan. Again, it's like taking middle school history.
It is the consensus of sports fans that you are a crappy fan if you only come around for the good shit and run away when things turn south.That is your basis, personally. It is not the basis. Or, put differently, people experience emotions differently, and the way they experience them is not better or worse than your way. It isn't like rationality -- reason has discrete outcomes where certain positions are better than others. We could also look at this ethically, which falls somewhere in between (reasonable people can often reasonably agree on ethical decisions). Emotions, on the other hand, can manifest different ways for different people without there being a "correct" way to go about it.
Some people hear Beethoven's music and are emotionally lifted; others listen to the same piece of music and have a very different emotional reaction, if they have one at all. None of these are in themselves correct or better than any other, and I certainly wouldn't malign someone who has different emotional responses than I do.
Do you play all video games on the easiest mode and/or enable god mode so you only get to experience the good parts?
It is the consensus of sports fans that you are a crappy fan if you only come around for the good shit and run away when things turn south.
If you watch "because you enjoy the sport," then don't claim to be a Cards fan. I love college football, but I've never claimed a team. I watch it as much as any other sport. I vaguely root for Northwestern as it is my alma mater, but I spend just as much time making fun of them.
It's sort of a tricky question for me to answer, because my most played games by far are Chess and Go. However, the reason I play those games is because they are hard, so the answer is "I play them on the hardest setting I can," generally.
However, I typically play those games because they are intellectually stimulating; I do not enjoy escapism. I see where you're going with this, Branduil, but I happen to be a fairly unique case and I'm not a particularly good test subject for your point.
It's sort of a tricky question for me to answer, because my most played games by far are Chess and Go. However, the reason I play those games is because they are hard, so the answer is "I play them on the hardest setting I can," generally.
However, I typically play those games because they are intellectually stimulating; I do not enjoy escapism. I see where you're going with this, Branduil, but I happen to be a fairly unique case and I'm not a particularly good test subject for your point.
You get enjoyment. You're operating under the assumption that suffering through the bad times for your sports team means you enjoy the good times more; I am not at all convinced that's true.
Let's take a poll of sports-GAF, Opiate. Or even all Cardinals fans.
Nonsense. My assertion doesn't make the contrapositive true.And as stated in our previous discussion, if this is your operational definition, then you cannot claim to be a baseball fan. You aren't a baseball fan; you're simply a Braves fan.
Sure, but my point is, bandwagoners are almost always like people who use a game genie to beat Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles on the NES, and then come on GAF and make fun of someone who can't beat the dam level legitimately.
But why play games that are hard? Wouldn't it be more rational to play easy games? You would always win, and win quickly, so you would get your enjoyment and have spare time to do more productive things.
I'm seeing a single bandwagoner insulting the intelligence of sports fans by effectively calling us mindless neanderthals incapable of rational thought in the realm of athleticsDoesn't your analogy suggest bandwagon fans are coming in here and making fun of non-bandwagon fans? Or am I crossing wires here? You seem to be suggesting that the bandwagon fans (i.e. the people who beat TMNT with the game genie) are coming on GAF and making fun of non-bandwagoners (i.e. the people who do not use the game genie).
If that were to occur, I'd completely agree with you, but I'm seeing the opposite. I'm seeing the non-bandwagoners making fun of the bandwagoners, not the other way around.
Let's take a poll of sports-GAF, Opiate. Or even all Cardinals fans.
Doesn't your analogy suggest bandwagon fans are coming in here and making fun of non-bandwagon fans? Or am I crossing wires here? You seem to be suggesting that the bandwagon fans (i.e. the people who beat TMNT with the game genie) are coming on GAF and making fun of non-bandwagoners (i.e. the people who do not use the game genie).
If that were to occur, I'd completely agree with you, but I'm seeing the opposite. I'm seeing the non-bandwagoners making fun of the bandwagoners, not the other way around.
I'm seeing a single bandwagoner insulting the intelligence of sports fans by effectively calling us mindless neanderthals incapable of rational thought in the realm of athletics
.
I think the simplest way to put this (knowing you're skeptical of the notion) is:Right. Why is that bad? That's called being intelligent. It's just entertainment -- why would I want to suffer lows?
The implication that you are being rational while the rest of us are not is why you garner a strong reaction, Oppy.I'll repeat it one more time for extra-super emphasis; it's completely fine to be a non-bandwagoner. No one can be completely rational all the time. We're human. However, that doesn't mean that being a non-bandwagoner is good or better than the alternative.
Listen, you are the only person in the world who thinks that bandwagoning is something to be admired, you're wrong. Face it.
I think the simplest way to put this (knowing you're skeptical of the notion) is:
Would a great success like a championship would leave less of a mark on a fan who only casually latches onto the team rather than on a fan who lives and dies with the team year after year? That former fan will certainly enjoy it in that time and moment, but are they going to really enjoy that memory as much as the latter fan?
This is not exactly a one-to-one comparison, but someone young like Lorde winning a Grammy would be dramatically different than someone who's had a Downey-esque slump to his/her career without the climax.
This isn't a philosophical argument. It's an argument over the definition of a fan, which we have and know. It is not a shifting or transitional subject.I find it bizarre that you're simply doubling down on the argumentum ad populum.
A) Lots of people think this.
B) This is an argumentum ad populum, which is invalid argumentation.
A) No, a whole lot of people think this.
B) Which is still an argumentum ad populum.
A) You don't understand. Almost everyone thinks this.
Do you think the argument becomes less invalid because you double down or even triple down?
I think it's fine to be a bandwagoner, a purchased ticket/logo'd item is a purchased ticket/logo'd item.Listen, you are the only person in the world who thinks that bandwagoning is something to be admired, you're wrong. Face it.
Doesn't your analogy suggest bandwagon fans are coming in here and making fun of non-bandwagon fans? Or am I crossing wires here? You seem to be suggesting that the bandwagon fans (i.e. the people who beat TMNT with the game genie) are coming on GAF and making fun of non-bandwagoners (i.e. the people who do not use the game genie).
If that were to occur, I'd completely agree with you, but I'm seeing the opposite. I'm seeing the non-bandwagoners making fun of the bandwagoners, not the other way around.
If my goal was purely escapist pleasure, I would completely agree. It's why I'm not a particularly good test subject; I attempt (attempt, at least) to derive intellectual value out of Chess and Go.
The implication that you are being rational while the rest of us are not is why you garner a strong reaction, Oppy.
There's no rule saying that bandwagoners can't become decent fans down the road.One of the biggest bandwagon franchises of all time calling out fans of other teams as bandwagoners...
The premise of this thread is mockery of bandwagoners. I have explicitly, repeatedly and deliberately insisted that it's fine to not be a bandwagoners.
Right here.
And right here.
And less directly right here.
I'll repeat it one more time for extra-super emphasis; it's completely fine to be a non-bandwagoner. No one can be completely rational all the time. We're human. However, that doesn't mean that being a non-bandwagoner is good or better than the alternative.
why do people even like sport
there are a lot of unbearable sports fans of all stripes.Yeah, you can argue about rationalism, but the distaste for bandwagoners almost always comes from the empirical experiences of fans. No one would care if bandwagoners would just be quiet, it's the ones who don't shut up that provoke antipathy.
There's no rule saying that bandwagoners can't become decent fans down the road.
'80s-'90s bandwagoners got to suffer through Chandler/Curry.
Because it hurts us, beats us, depresses us and then gives us a slight glimmer of hope before crushing it yet again.why do people even like sport
Well I certainly can't speak to your personal anecdotal experience. It's entirely possible that the people you know that aren't "good fans" are jerks.
I don't think there is such a thing as "just sports." If you're a fan, it's a part of your life. I can tell you that when I sat there in the stands screaming until the last second when Wake Forest shut out FSU at home, I was in a really bad place. It was not "just sports." It's about being passionate and truly caring. Typically, bandwagon fans don't ever experience the same level of this since they're only there for the good.Exactly my sentiment. What's the problem with this? They're just sports.
I'll back up cdy on this. The real reason we hate on bandwagoners is because of the bandwagoners we meet in real life who are unbearable asshats.
It's the huge amount of bravado despite knowing nothing about the goddamn team that is insufferable. Hello, 2000s Pats fans.
Cheer up the Jaguars have won 4 out of 5.
As a passionate sports fan, (and many of you are comparing this stuff to things that are not sports which is apples and oranges) the worst for me are the people who root for your home teams rival while being born and raised there. Attention whores.
Yep, the Rangers in particular have benefited a lot from this in the past few years. I don't actually have that much of a problem with bandwagoners, but it still feels disingenuous.I think it's fine to be a bandwagoner, a purchased ticket/logo'd item is a purchased ticket/logo'd item.