In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph.Large market baseball franchises are gaining an enormous advantage over smaller market franchises and television is playing a major role in this ongoing problem. This advantage exists for a number of reasons. Most important and most talked of is the reality that large market franchises have more capital than those who make their living in the small market areas do
The National Basketball Association (NBA) has a fundamental problem with their business model; not e...
This article presents evidence that team owners in Major League Baseball (MLB) set ticket prices as ...
In 1958, Walter O\u27Malley moved his baseball team from Brooklyn to Los Angeles. This franchise rel...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph.Large market baseball franchises are...
The Major League Baseball (MLB) organization operates their broadcasting system predominantly at the...
This paper analyzes the impact of three different types of professional sports franchises on wages i...
This paper will discuss how Major League Baseball (MLB) has decreased in popularity in the United St...
As the 20th century dawned, professional baseball was well established on the American landscape, bu...
This thesis explores how the market size of Major League Baseball Teams affects their player valuati...
In the first essay, titled "Broadcasting versus Narrowcasting", we identify the characteristics of T...
This study attempts to discover the impact that macroeconomic factors in a sports franchise’s local ...
In this article, I present an economist’s perspective on the TV industry and view it as a so-called ...
This article studies sports league expansion and consumer welfare. The author assumes that as a spor...
Minor league baseball flourished in the aftermath of World War II. However, a new tech-nology, telev...
Drawing from theories of the political economy of communication, this book offers readers a comprehe...
The National Basketball Association (NBA) has a fundamental problem with their business model; not e...
This article presents evidence that team owners in Major League Baseball (MLB) set ticket prices as ...
In 1958, Walter O\u27Malley moved his baseball team from Brooklyn to Los Angeles. This franchise rel...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph.Large market baseball franchises are...
The Major League Baseball (MLB) organization operates their broadcasting system predominantly at the...
This paper analyzes the impact of three different types of professional sports franchises on wages i...
This paper will discuss how Major League Baseball (MLB) has decreased in popularity in the United St...
As the 20th century dawned, professional baseball was well established on the American landscape, bu...
This thesis explores how the market size of Major League Baseball Teams affects their player valuati...
In the first essay, titled "Broadcasting versus Narrowcasting", we identify the characteristics of T...
This study attempts to discover the impact that macroeconomic factors in a sports franchise’s local ...
In this article, I present an economist’s perspective on the TV industry and view it as a so-called ...
This article studies sports league expansion and consumer welfare. The author assumes that as a spor...
Minor league baseball flourished in the aftermath of World War II. However, a new tech-nology, telev...
Drawing from theories of the political economy of communication, this book offers readers a comprehe...
The National Basketball Association (NBA) has a fundamental problem with their business model; not e...
This article presents evidence that team owners in Major League Baseball (MLB) set ticket prices as ...
In 1958, Walter O\u27Malley moved his baseball team from Brooklyn to Los Angeles. This franchise rel...