Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 1, Winter 2006 | Page 73

At the Margins of the Minors 69 unrelated to the rewards of conventional structures of male power. Sex provides a telling and relevant example. In a relationship where a woman uses sex as her medium of exchange, her ability to withhold sex can be a relationship power play. However, her power in the relationship is diminished severely when there is a market of other women who are also willing to offer the man sex, which devalues the relative utility of the sex she offers. Moreover, if that woman depends on the man solely for status outside of the relationship, the marketplace of available sexual partners blocks her access to broader social power as it diminishes her power within the relationship. METHODS Because so little literature exists regarding groupies9 motives and behaviors, we seek to broadly understand their sexual relationships with athletes. Groupies may be interested in entering relationships with athletes even though the relationships are likely to be inherently imbalanced in terms of social, if not interpersonal, power. We investigated related female disempowerment relative to sexual commodification and objectification. We framed our research with exchange theory, which provides insight into the dynamics of relationships in terms of the rewards offered and received within a relationship, as well as the distribution and exercise of power within these same relationships. Data Collection and Analysis For our purposes, groupies were women who claimed to be pursuing sexual activity with a professional baseball player. We collected data in the southwestern United States, focusing on groupies of the Cheyenne Coyotes, an AA affiliate of the major league Portland Sailors (both names are pseudonyms). To collect rich descriptive data, along with ethnographic detail, we conducted in-depth interviews (McCracken 1988) with twelve groupies, who we met through our gatekeeper, a self-defined groupie who provided access to others. The data was thematically coded according to categories emerging from both the literature review and the data. The primary coding categories emerging from the literature review related to perceptions of marginalization and objectification. As we discovered new categories in the data, we considered all of our data relative to these discoveries. FINDINGS Both academic and popular writers suggest that groupies seek a break from the mundane through relationships with celebrities of any magnitude (e.g. Gmelch 2001). We find that groupies’ relationships with athletes are much more complex than others have suggested, revealing the importance of sex, power, and status as resources that are taken and given by the boys of summer.