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The Price of Fantasy Episode | Open Source Radio

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For an hour every day, we’re using the Internet to talk about the world. Bloggers in Kenya, podcasters in the US Army on the Iraqi border, legions of wikipedia editors: we’re putting their voices on the air with the thinkers and writers who can help us make great conversation (and sense of the world). As we book our show, you’re tracking our progress at www.radioopensource.org, telling us who to call next. With host Christopher Lydon.

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The Price of Fantasy


The Price of Fantasy

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DATE : Mon, 22 May 2006 19:00:00 +0500
Entered in Database : 2006-05-22 14:00:00
length : 24966589
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baseball numbers

Magic numbers. [Jeff Muceus/Flickr]

56, .406, 755 -- baseball's record hit streak, batting average, and home run total: numbers at the intersection of history, myth, memory and, now, at the heart of a lawsuit between ball players and their fantasy fans. Because from these numbers has grown a side business: fantasy baseball now makes an estimated $1 billion a year. Fantasy baseball is the logical middle-aged move from armchair quarterback to armchair general manager. Once you realize that you'll never be able to hit -- or pitch, for that matter -- a 95 mile-an-hour fastball, once even the childhood fantasy of being able to do so seems remote, suddenly the prospect of maneuvering the people who can -- buying and trading real major leaguers in an imaginary baseball universe -- is better than nothing. Six million people seem to think so. Fantasy baseball only works because companies provide their customers with real names and real numbers: Albert Pujols and his 20 home runs, Pedro Martinez and his 70 strikeouts. (Every good fantasy relies on a dose of reality, it seems.) The case reaching U.S. District Court in September was brought by the fantasy sports company CBC, which is asserting it doesn't need to acquire licensing rights in order to use those names and numbers. This is pure public domain information, this is history, this is our national right, CBC argues. Major League Baseball and the Player's Association disagree. This case is not about ownership of stats, MLB lawyers point out; it's about the right of publicity. If you're going to make money from our players' names and achievements, you're going to have to get permission. And you're going to have to pay. The debate expands quickly past a first set of questions about home runs and ERA. When does performance become identity? Who owns a celebrity's personal persona? And, in the end, what are the commercial boundaries of fantasy?

Gary Gillette

Editor, The 2006 ESPN Baseball Encyclopedia Columnist, ESPN.com’s MLB Insider Co-Chair, SABR Business of Baseball Committee

Charlie Wiegert

Executive Vice President and co-founder, CDM Fantasy Sports

Russ Jones

Outside Counsel, Major League Baseball Players Association

Benjamin Kabak

Blogger, Double Play Depth

Sky Kalkman

Blogger, Skyking162's Baseblog


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