Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 1, Winter 2006 | Page 71

At the Margins of the Minors: Good Girls, Bad Girls, and Baseball Beyond the Big Leagues ABSTRACT This paper examines the experiences o f minor league baseball groupies, focusing on the exchange relationships that they form with players. As two types o f exchanges emerged, we discovered two types o f groupies who are marginally attached to the world o f one particular minor league baseball team. Contrary to some popular writers, who suggest that all groupies have similar motives and relationships with players, we find that “good girl” groupies and “bad girl ” groupies create remarkably different relationships with players. This paper details how we discovered these two types o f groupies. Sport groupies are often portrayed in popular culture as seductive vixens. For example, sexually aggressive female fans are infamously prominent in the movies Bull Durham and The Natural. While many such depictions permeate American popular culture, few scholars have systematically investigated sport groupies, limiting their analysis to categorizing groupies according to their sport. This paper examines minor league baseball seeking to categorize sport groupie-athlete relationships relative to the experiences of groupies. These relationships reflect broader structures and processes in American society which: (1) reinforce an inequitable, patriarchal social structure in which women attempt to obtain status via a male benefactor; and (2) disempower women through sexual objectification and commodification. REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE Early popular writing on groupies was largely documentary in nature, focusing on rock and roll musicians and the women who pursued them, as the film Almost Famous romanticizes. Connie Hamzy (“Sweet Connie”), Pamela Des Barres, and the Plastercasters are some of the most notorious original rock and roll groupies, whose stories emerged in the 1980s (Balfour 1986; Des Barres 1987). However, very little academic literature has addressed sport groupies in particular. The Prominence o f the American Athlete When a community elevates athletes into a superior class through prestige and economic rewards, athletes enjoy a unique position. The