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15 Dec 2017, 15:26 (Ref:3787272) | #26 | ||
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16 Dec 2017, 13:27 (Ref:3787456) | #27 | |||
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So my thought is, rather than simply asking if grid girls should stay in F1 - the whole role of an individual on the grid should be reviewed. Perhaps the situation would be more correct if the people were used for much more within the team(s), including being brand ambassadors, having a hospitality and service role, and that gender was irrelevant? If we had an insight into the behind the scenes work (as airlines have done), and saw that they also had a wider contribution to the running of an event, then perhaps the job would be seen as so much more than just being employed for your body? |
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16 Dec 2017, 13:41 (Ref:3787459) | #28 | |
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at one event last season, formula e used young karters from the country (was it the new york rounds?) as grid people, overalls and all. that seemed like a far more positive solution than a bunch of girls in skirts.
meanwhile, thousands of races manage to organise a grid fine without somebody standing there with a sign. going to split the thread out as suggested to allow the conversation to continue. |
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16 Dec 2017, 13:51 (Ref:3787461) | #29 | ||
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A recent BBC podcast described the early grid girls as being required as the drivers were on their own once they left pitlane. Clearly there was a reason for their existence back then, that is not relevant today. Hence why I wonder if there is a different role that could be fulfilled, which also provides a focal person at the front of the grid box?
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16 Dec 2017, 13:54 (Ref:3787462) | #30 | ||
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Makeup and lycra is not a requirement either. |
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16 Dec 2017, 14:00 (Ref:3787463) | #31 | ||
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The grid girl they had on the show was exactly that - a fan who saw it as a way of getting involved in motorsport. She is also a full season grid girl for a BTCC team, and definitely sees herself as part of the team in BTCC, but not as included on the F1 grid.
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16 Dec 2017, 14:00 (Ref:3787464) | #32 | ||
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16 Dec 2017, 14:04 (Ref:3787465) | #33 | ||
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16 Dec 2017, 14:07 (Ref:3787466) | #34 | ||
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Run an online competition. Exclude nobody. Pick at random 20 people, who get to bring 2 extra guests (so a 10 year old gets to bring his parents). The winners gets to be a grid person (assigned to a car at random), and the winners and guests get VIP treatment for the weekend. Turn a negative into a positive. Seems like a simple solution, whilst getting some great positive PR. Think of how good that wee kid getting to meet Kimi was. Imagine 20 of those, every weekend. You'd make peoples year. It'd be amazing. |
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16 Dec 2017, 14:12 (Ref:3787467) | #35 | |||
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In the American sports arena, do they have 'mascots' in the same vein that football players are usually accompanied by youngsters? |
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16 Dec 2017, 14:30 (Ref:3787468) | #36 | ||
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worked one event where my employers uses grid/promotional girls. chose to work anything other than that series again for that reason. they were a pain in the backside - took up our seating space in the truck, stank the trailer out, and wore dresses with a miniscule logo on. either the brand was embarassed to have them, or they're terrible at marketing. no leaflets to hand out, nothing. i don't think anyone other than us would have noticed if they weren't there. in their defence, they did realise they were an inconvenience but so are the data engineers, and they do at least make the tea as a follow up: pro tip to any grid girls. if you want to feel a part of a team, bring a couple of packs of digestives and make tea in your downtime instead of hanging out in the bogs touching up your makeup talking loudly about your darren. it's not your job but even the grumpiest of old farts won't turn down a brew. |
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16 Dec 2017, 17:41 (Ref:3787509) | #37 | ||
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They are an anachronism and look absurd . I remember seeing a British GT round at Oulton a few years ago with some girls trussed up like turkeys , thigh high boots etc - and it was about 40F . It looked utterly ridiculous and , frankly , embarrassing for all concerned.
F1 might just be realising , albeit forty years late, that it is not forever 1975. . |
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16 Dec 2017, 18:19 (Ref:3787517) | #38 | |
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I think the issue with grid (and podium) girls in the first instance is the dress or lack thereof they are made to nearly wear. While flags, names, sponsor details etc need holding, there should be no need to do so while wearing next to nothing. It's kind of ironic that it's fine for these girls to wear little but the teams go nuts about losing wings and fins because it removes sponsor space. I don't know how sponsors fit on some of the outfits the girls are forced to wear.
Personally it puts me off the thing being advertised when there's a half naked girl advertising it, more so when it's freezing cold. It's just so unnecessary. In football there are mascots and these are not girls in Lycra but kids in replica kit. If there is a need for someone to stand there, it shouldn't be a half naked model. It could be men, kids etc and appropriately dressed. If the thing is to see sponsors, regular clothes do that. I've never seen anyone walking around in replica grid girl kit for instance. It's supposed to be an inclusive society these days so if people are needed to stand around holding things, open it to anyone and wear clothes with sponsor decals - replica overalls, jackets, t shirts etc. |
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17 Dec 2017, 00:13 (Ref:3787552) | #39 | |||
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i absolutely agree on the inclusive aspect of this. going on the grid representing a team is pretty cool, and everyone should be able to experience it at least once in their lives. also everyone should have to experience the horror that is most team kit once in their lives too Last edited by bella; 17 Dec 2017 at 02:39. |
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17 Dec 2017, 07:04 (Ref:3787573) | #40 | ||||
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I'm fairly ambivalent about grid people, but most of the arguments seem to ignore what the girls think. If the women doing it thought it was demeaning, would they do it? I have no idea as I am not a woman.
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I like the sentiment of having the average Joe or Jane promote sponsor's products but most companies want their products displayed in the most positive way. Unfortunately the way the world is at the moment, sex and beauty sells products. This is slowly changing, maybe not fast enough for some. As an aside I work in an industry that supplies hotels and pubs. Some of these employ women (and about 2 that employ men) to wear scanty clothing. I have spoken to some of these ladies and they like their job and many of the patrons seem to as well. Who am I to tell them they shouldn't do it because because it makes other people uncomfortable? That being said, I am old and maybe my way of looking at it is going the way of the dinosaurs. |
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17 Dec 2017, 12:00 (Ref:3787612) | #41 | |||
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one of the benefits is probably something the girls themselves wouldn't talk about. it's an ego boost having photos taken and an ego boost getting the attention from the competitors and teams. it's a status boost when people put you up on a pedestal when you're at work, and your social media profile gets a boost as well if you choose to use it that way. but in the same way that basing your self-worth on your social media exchanges is a recipe for insecurity and thirsting for more likes, being on that pedestal can have a negative effect as well. that's been a far greater factor since instagram and tinder became popular, vast swathes of youth culture now revolve around image and self-marketing. Quote:
the whole discussion seems to be a bit like the consent and sexual assault issues in wider society. some men (and fewer women) argue that it was acceptable "back then" for guys to be handsy, or women to be used in promotion. but then if you speak to women, they had their own network to make sure everyone knew who the handsy executives were. or in the case of jimmy saville, the kids on the ground knew he was a bit weird and to stay away from him. so it WASN'T acceptable, not to the victims/potential victims. they didn't have a voice to express it, and they were brushed off by those in authority. the problem wasn't that things were socially acceptable, but that decision makers weren't of the opinion that it was worth tolerating. they were, of course, all men from a particular culture. i think you'd find that it's a similar situation with using women to sell motorsport. it's pretty uncool with at least 50% of the population, if not more. but that 50% is only being listened to recently. as far as a lot of men are concerned it's simply another breach of their entitlement to women's bodies. my sincere apologies for being very wordy in my responses in this thread, but since a lot of posts express a lack of understanding about the female points of view i feel duty bound to try and explain one of them |
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17 Dec 2017, 20:28 (Ref:3787752) | #42 | ||
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17 Dec 2017, 20:46 (Ref:3787761) | #43 | |
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18 Dec 2017, 16:56 (Ref:3787899) | #44 | ||
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It's cheesy. Let's move on. Grid girls belong to the era of Benny Hill.
At the London 2012 Olympics, young aspiring athletes carried the competitors stuff around for them. Some of them turned out to be Olympic athletes themselves in Rio. Why cant F1 do something similar? |
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22 Dec 2017, 11:54 (Ref:3788685) | #45 | |
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Carolina Panthers appoint Tina Becker Chief Operating Officer.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-f...-idUSKBN1EC2T6 "The Panthers said Becker, who started as a cheerleader, will be one of the highest-ranking female executives at an NFL team." |
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24 Dec 2017, 01:19 (Ref:3788922) | #46 | ||
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If only the grid girls could also race an F1 car....
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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24 Dec 2017, 05:15 (Ref:3788944) | #47 | ||
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28 Dec 2017, 18:03 (Ref:3789482) | #48 | ||
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I'd be interested to know what grid girls do the rest of the time. It seems to me that if, as I suspect many are, they're professional models, then they're earning a living from their looks. It would be rather a different kettle of fish if the circuit organisers got Claire Williams or Monisha Kaltenborn to dress in short skirts.
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28 Dec 2017, 18:43 (Ref:3789486) | #49 | |||
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28 Dec 2017, 20:57 (Ref:3789504) | #50 | ||
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