The New York Times Magazine - USA (2022-05-01)

(Antfer) #1
11

on the fi eld or court but on a hand-held
device. We see one man’s eyes widen as
he watches his smartphone, indiff erent to
the game of pool he’s playing with friends.
Another plants a celebratory kiss on his
phone’s screen. Another swivels restlessly
as a barber takes a comb to his hair. Place
your bets, the ad suggests, and even the
salon might become a site of enrichment.
But the commercial also rests on the sur-
prising assumption that sports are often, in
and of themselves, boring. We see two spec-
tators at a baseball game grow cartoonishly
long beards, as FanDuel promises to ‘‘make
America’s pastime feel like less of an end-
less passage of time.’’ The pro golfer Jordan
Spieth appears, ready to sink an easy putt:
‘‘Make golf more... ’’ our narrator begins,


before politely trailing off in deference. The
solution to this boredom — sports’ failure
to satisfy our diminished attention spans or
the modern expectation that we somehow
be involved in everything we watch — lies in
the gamifi cation of ‘‘every drop, jab, hook,
hit, steal, save, knuckle, meat,’’ as the narra-
tor proposes, pitching a degree of interac-
tivity greater and more remunerative than
fantasy sports ever could.
These platforms’ infi ltration of our
experience of sports goes beyond ads.
Only six such spots, for instance, are per-
mitted to air during individual telecasts
of the N.F.L., which was an outspoken
opponent of legalized online betting until
2018, when the Supreme Court overturned
a federal ban that prohibited the practice

in most states. Last year, though, the league
announced partnerships with three diff er-
ent sportsbook companies, all while taking
pains to reassure skeptics of the game’s
integrity. (In March, the wide receiver Cal-
vin Ridley was suspended for the upcom-
ing season for betting on N.F.L. games.) On
N.B.A. pregame shows, experts now advise
gamblers on their wagers; increasingly,
betting lines appear onscreen during the
telecasts themselves. For a time, Uber Eats
off ered gift cards for placing bets with Cae-
sars. And every Thursday, you can stream
Fan Duel’s half-hour show ‘‘More Ways to
Win,’’ in which the week’s spreads and
moneylines are parsed for optimal value.
The studio setup looks familiar, but
the operation itself is spiritless, bearing

‘It’s a stupid,
bad habit. I have
a problem.... But
the problem
is when you can’t
afford it. I can
afford to gamble.’

— Charles Barkley,
who appears
in a new FanDuel
ad, in a 2006
ESPN interview
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