This wrote:The thing is, many people are now making a fuss about it. But assume that Liberty media stopped using gridgirls without a public announcement, would anyone have noticed the difference? Nope. Nobody even paid attention to these grid girls anyway, so it's not 'political correctness' but removing an unnecessairy cost. That's economical thinking.
I do agree that the high profile way in which Liberty Media put that message out was, by drawing so much attention to it, going to draw considerable attention and criticism, whereas not making such a fuss in the first place would have probably reduced the intensity of the complaints.
Nuppiz wrote:dr-baker wrote:Interesting Autosport article, FE boasting to F1 that they quit their grid girl habit a year ago, didn't mention it, and nobody noticed. Is that because they didn't mention it, nobody noticed, or nobody cared? Or FE just doesn't get the coverage F1 does?
Probably a combination of all four reasons you mentioned.
Asides from that, there is probably also the fact that Formula E is a comparatively modern series and, as such, people are probably also not quite so accustomed to see grid girls there as they are in F1. The image that Formula E has also been trying to put out is rather different compared to F1, such that not having grid girls arguably fits Formula E's image much more neatly.
Wallio wrote:The Chicane wrote:Shouldnt of mentioned anything now, feels like I'm the only one who likes the grid girls on this forum. xD
To be fair, I like them, as being a race promoter now, I feel that a (big) race show be a wild spectacle. That being said, I'm not really surprised at the change, and honestly, I'm not losing any sleep over it either way. F1, like the NFL, has far bigger issues that annoy me.
I fall into the category of those who will ultimately not miss the grid girls being there - whilst there are those who have advocated for them being there, arguing that they are there of their own choice and wanted to be there, and making valid points about the way in which this has been handled, there have also been, as SuzukiSwift notes, those "traditionalists" who have used it as an excuse to pour out a torrent of bile, bigotry and undisguised homophobic abuse.
I can see that there were those who argued that they could use it as a form of empowerment and financial independence, but at the same time there have also been some testimonies indicating that those who did work as grid girls were sometimes being treated pretty badly by the organisers who hired them.
I do come down on the side that it is better for the sport to have removed the grid girls, though at the same time think it could have been handled in a better way. There have been those who complained about what they felt as being a rather woolly statement by FOM, and since then they have effectively allowed those who want to rage against the decision to vent their spleen without restriction, rather than attempting to defend or justify the decision.
As a feature, grid girls as they are used now are a comparatively modern phenomenon in F1 - it seems they were brought in at the end of the 1980's to "sex up" the grid and to garner headlines, such as with the publicity stunts alluded to in earlier posts. It's something that wasn't integral to the sport in the past - as Wallio notes, in the grand scheme of things, it's a minor issue and a change that, realistically the sport could either make on their own terms or probably be forced into by changing social pressures (if polls on sites such as F1Fanatic are worth anything, it seems that there was already a majority who were happy for grid girls to go after the WEC made a similar announcement).