Jan 15, 2012 - It's back. The MLB Fan Cave is back for the 2012 season. But it won't be the same Fan Cave experience we saw during the 2011 season. The process for selecting the participants is different. The number of participants is different. And there will be a Survivor-like elimination of participants as the season moves forward.
One unanswered question is whether the Fan Cave will continue to ignore nearly half of baseball's fan base: women.
Ten years ago, according to this Gallup Poll, 37 percent of women self-identified as baseball fans, compared to 49 percent for men. But the trends were moving in opposite directions, with women's baseball fandom increasing while men's fandom was decreasing. In the last few years, many media outlets have reported that women now comprise 45-47 percent of all baseball fans, making it the most gender-balanced of the four main professional sports.
Granted, women baseball fans come in all stripes. Some keep score at the game, while listening to the radio broadcast in their ears. Some have favorite players instead of favorite teams. Some can name every member of her team's 40-man roster. Some can't even name the starting rotation. Some love the Victoria's Secret-inspired team gear. Some wouldn't be caught dead in it, or in any gear that's pink or sparkly.
The 2011 version of the Fan Cave offered nothing for the score-keeping, numbers-crunching, roster-watching woman fan. Well, if you don't count insults to her baseball intelligence.
The Fan Cave kicked off on Opening Day with ... what else? A visit from Victoria's Secret supermodel Chanel Iman. Because when you think about baseball's Opening Day, you think racy lingerie, right? Perhaps it shouldn't have been a big surprise, given MLB.com's description of the two FanCave inhabitants -- Mike O'Hara and Ryan Wagner -- as the two Cavemen.
And on it went.
Take a look at the Fan Cave photo album for the 2011 season. How many women do you see? Now count the number of women who are not models or singers or actresses? In revealing clothing? Do you see any women baseball fans? Or women baseball writers? Or women baseball analysts?
How about the Fan Cave twitter feed? The Fan Cave was all about interacting with baseball fans through all forms of social media. Indeed, MLB proudly reported that the FanCave generated 100 million social media impressions throughout the season via Twitter, Facebook and the like. How did the "two Cavemen" stay informed on the goings on in baseball? Who did they follow on the Fan Cave Twitter feed?
As of this morning, the Fan Cave was following 1,283 people on Twitter. Only 130 of those are women, give or take a few that were hard to figure out. Of those 130, about 40 are women baseball writers, bloggers or radio/TV analysts, a good number but it could be much higher. I'd guess another 40 or so are women baseball fans. The rest? Five Playboy models. Five Miss USA contestants. Noted baseball aficionados Kourtney Kardashian, Paris Hilton, Martha Stewart, and Snooki from Jersey Shore. And so on.
It wasn't a Fan Cave in 2011. It was a Man Cave. And it offered very little for many women baseball fans -- you know, the fans who are rapidly increasing their numbers while male fans fall away.
Or maybe that's the point.
Maybe the Fan Cave is MLB's effort to stem the tide, to re-engage with male baseball fans, particularly younger ones, who've turned their attention to other sports and activities. If so, it's a worth goal. But the plan didn't need to be executed in a way that engages male fans and alienates women fans. That's just robbing Peter to pay Paul.
So what's in store for the Fan Cave in 2012? Changes are afoot. From the official MLB press release on Fan Cave 2012:
To increase fan engagement even further in 2012, fans will be involved in the process of selecting the [Fan Cave] contestants . . . . [T]he top fan-submitted videos will be posted [online] where fans will have the opportunity to vote for those they find most entertaining in order to select the 2012 MLB Fan Cave contestants.
-- snip --
[C]ontestants will begin the season in the MLB Fan Cave and watch every single MLB game each day while chronicling their experiences online through videos, blogs and social media. Along the way, they will compete against one another over the course of the baseball season in a series of challenges, with fans online helping decide who gets to stay in the Fan Cave and play host to the baseball stars and celebrities who will visit throughout the season.
Plenty of women baseball fans will apply. I've seen many of their application videos on YouTube looking for support even before the voting begins. And I'm sure MLB will select at least a few women as the top fan-submitted videos.
If voters select some women Fan Cave participants, what does Opening Day 2012 look like? A woman in the Fan Cave interviewing a Victoria's Secret supermodel about baseball? Or tweeting with Snooki about the starting lineups? Or planning a picnic ballpark lunch with Martha Stewart? What numbers-crunching, roster-watching, score-keeping woman baseball fan wants that assignment? Or watch that in video blog?
Unless the Fan Cave is really a Fan Cave in 2012 -- and not a Man Cave with a few more women baseball fans sprinkled in -- it will continue to engage male baseball fans at the cost of women baseball fans.
And that's not good for baseball.
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Comments
Can we start an sbnation fan cave?
Honestly, I’ve never considered even submitting an app, because I don’t feel as though it is a safe environment. Also, the insistence on the part of mlb to push Kings of Leon music in everyone’s face is bothersome.
I’ve been thinking about this on and off since last season, with some of the same questions! Thanks for writing this – I haven’t seen it anywhere else.
FanGraphs should consider a venue for a Gallery Night... they could even serve a cake with a Win Expectancy Chart of the 7/7/11 Brewers' game etched in the frosting, and 7-up. Oh, yeah - and t-shirts that say "SABR-Friday." I'm totally there.
by Jess'HittheBall on Jan 15, 2012 10:07 AM EST reply actions
I've got a better question
Does anyone need the MLB Fan Cave?
by Josh Timmers on Jan 15, 2012 1:29 PM EST reply actions 3 recs
No, the Fan Cave was an abomination.
Let a man come in and do the Popcorn.
Crum-Bum Beat
by -ManBearPig on Jan 15, 2012 1:35 PM EST up reply actions
The term Fan Cave
Is annoying as all hell.
CJ Wilson is OUR douche now!
by ryanfea on Jan 15, 2012 1:52 PM EST reply actions
Last year's "cavemen" were two actors.
They may have been fans of some sort, but they were television personalities first. The whole thing was a sham.
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by DumbAndNerdy on Jan 15, 2012 2:09 PM EST reply actions
As far as the percentage of female fans,
it’d be good if they got their respect, but if you watch advertising during baseball games, it doesn’t seem like the sponsors really care too much about that demographic. Since the Fan Cave was really just a giant advertisement, the chances are that if there is a woman fan she will be chosen to appeal to that same demographic.
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Leading the Astros into the Future. Go, Go Astros!
by DumbAndNerdy on Jan 15, 2012 2:15 PM EST reply actions
Interesting re commercials
I’ve noticed that MLB.com runs quite a few commercials directed to women, many more than you would see during a TV broadcast. Seems like MLB knows more about its demographics, even if it doesn’t treat it’s fans equally all the time.
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by Wendy Thurm on Jan 15, 2012 2:31 PM EST up reply actions
This woman baseball fan doesn't even know what the "MLB Fan Cave" is
It definitely sounds like a sausage-fest.
by Aly Edge on Jan 15, 2012 2:24 PM EST reply actions
What are the odds that whatever woman who may make it into the Fan cave isn't subjected to:
“Make me a sandwich”, “It must be that time of month”, or “Tits or GTFO”?
I was a Darvish fangirl before it was cool
by andromache on Jan 15, 2012 2:51 PM EST reply actions
If a woman I meet likes baseball....
….let’s just say that I become very, very interested in her. I, for one, welcome our new female overlords. (Whenever they indeed get overlord status.)
by jdscott on Jan 15, 2012 3:28 PM EST reply actions
A real fan wouldn't be caught dead near the Fan Cave
…male or female.
"People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring". ~Rogers Hornsby
by nps on Jan 15, 2012 5:21 PM EST reply actions 1 recs
I would like to have a Female in the Fan Cave.
I have been following a female applicant for the fan cave on Twitter. @Alleycat17 is her handle. She is from Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada and a diehard Jays fan. She also writes on her own website about the Jays that are in the farm system on JaysProspects.com. This is her youtube video application http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jgBZ-Nq2yMw give it a view and see if you agree with me.
by Justin17 on Jan 15, 2012 5:50 PM EST reply actions
Interesting. I wish I could rec this.
Although I semi-followed the Fan Cave last year and also think that most of it was a bunch of entertainment, with the new format hopefully there will be better content and if a female could get in, that’d be awesome.
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by prettyinpurple on Jan 15, 2012 6:47 PM EST reply actions
Where are these Baseball loving women?!
I have met women from all walks of life, and while most detest sports, some like Football or Basketball, but I have NEVER met a woman with even an iota of interest in Baseball.
"All I saw was purple. No jerseys, no numbers, just purple." - Todd Marinovich
by bmxnw on Jan 15, 2012 9:13 PM EST reply actions
At the ballpark!
Baseball-loving women are at the ballpark. And here!
@hangingsliders
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by Wendy Thurm on Jan 15, 2012 10:08 PM EST up reply actions
You must be hanging out in the wrong places
My mother loves baseball (she really loves the Phillies), I love baseball, and I have taught my daughters to love baseball. Maybe it’s genetic?
"People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring". ~Rogers Hornsby
by nps on Jan 15, 2012 11:31 PM EST up reply actions
hey
my mom is the baseball fan in the family. my father doesn’t follow much sports at all.
"it's not easy being green"-kermit the frog
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by rexthejet on Jan 16, 2012 10:24 PM EST up reply actions
This.
by Curtis3331 on Jan 17, 2012 7:20 PM EST up reply actions
Can SB nation start a dating website....
…for guys interested in meeting girls interested in baseball?
by jdscott on Jan 16, 2012 12:07 AM EST reply actions 2 recs
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