The Global Convergence
of NHL Hockey
By: David Miller
Wednesday,
April 3, 2013
Keeping
consistent with my three previous blogs relating to the music industry, this
blog will revolve around the discussion of another form of popular
entertainment, that being the National Hockey League. It comes to no surprise that the National Hockey League, or NHL, attributes the
majority of its popularity to its Canadian audiences. Through copious amounts of clever marketing
techniques that are correlated with programming, Canadian networks like CBC
use hockey as a way of bringing an entire country together in a mutual love for
the game of hockey. However, the NHL has
transcended beyond its initial focus of entertaining Canadian and American
audiences, for they are now engaging in what Henry Jenkins believes to be
“Global Convergence culture.”
Global
Convergence is understood as being the cultural hybridity that results from
the inter-national circulation of media content (Jenkins, 2001). In relation to the NHL, media is used in
order to converge nations and acquire National Hockey League fans all across
the globe. This process has been made
easy due in part to the process known as the “global village.”
Marshall
McLuhan’s theoretical understanding of the global village suggests
that an electronic nervous system, the media, is rapidly integrating the
planet. Events in one part of the world
can now be experienced from other parts of the world in real-time, which is
what human experience was like when we lived in small villages (McLuhan, 1964). The NHL has tapped into this idea through
their strategic manipulation of mediated content. Through blogs and information on the Internet,
social media announcements, live games aired across multiple television and
radio channels, articles in sports magazines, etc. fans now have access to NHL content
at all times and in any place around the globe.
The results seem to be successful, for the NHL has risen beyond
acquiring fans all across North America, and has begun to develop popularity throughout Europe. Copious amounts of NHL
games have been played in European cities for the better part of the past decade-
specifically within Berlin, London, Stockholm, Helsinki and many more.
In addition to games being played in
Europe, the National Hockey League has quietly been considering expanding
within Europe by putting an actual NHL team in a large European city. This idealization, although simply a rumor at
this point in time, has been generating copious amounts of attention in the hockey world.
However, regardless of whether or not this expansion may or may not
happen, it only shines light on how NHL hockey has become an aspect of Global
Convergence Culture. If this idea does
in fact become a reality, one may begin to question what’s next for this
multi-billion dollar industry?
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