The main problem with gambling is that it exists and as a result ruins thousands of people's lives.
Will you post results and a quick summary of observations? Always good to see where this stuff ends up.
Done.
I very recently closed all my online betting accounts as I felt it was FAR too accessible and easy to lose fiver after fiver with no real sense of true cost.
Done.
The main problem with bookies is that they make it very accessible to have a bet if you lose, not so much if you win. Just Today, a nameless local William Hills shop wouldn't lay me £200 on a 13/8 shot, offered £50 instead
Done.
I did a tally up a little while ago of clubs in the Premier League and Championship and it was something like over 50% of them have gambling sponsors on their shirts.
People in here may know the answer actually: what does an 'official betting partner' actually mean? It is just some betting company throwing money for a club so their logo can appear on websites etc?
Done. My answers will look like I'm a problem gambler, when actually I'm just a matched better!
Can I ask what answers you're attempting to find? I ask because you don't need a dissertation to tell us that gambling is way too accessible - that much is obvious. Are you looking to discover the most effective ways of gambling advertising, or something else?
Done - when you really think about it, adverts and opportunities for betting are everywhere. The next big social disease.
The idea behind the survey is to identify which methods of gambling are accessible for different demographics. I will be combining the survey with a couple of secondary data sources to link gambling accessibility and exposure to advertising with social demographic indicators. A quick run of the data collected so far produces interesting results with regard to the link between perceived accessibility, as from the survey, social deprivation, and physical accessibility with site locations.
I was slightly dismayed when we started slinging betting adverts around the pitch on those electric hoardings.
With the PL TV money do we really need to take money from gambling firms as well? Then I remembered what Uncle Tony is well known for and became even more confused.
Kind of hard to get uppity about gambling / betting firms when we're owned by a professional poker player.
Accept Uncle Tony is not interested in fixed odds betting, which is where so many problems with gambling start.
Done.......
It's become hugely pervasive and everyone seems to be doing it. Particularly concerning is the number of younger (yes, like you ) people getting into it. When I was a yoof it didn't occur to me to go into a grubby betting shop full of sad old men, but doing it through a glitzy website, after I've been bombarded with adverts, is a million miles away from that. Way too accessible really.
I was slightly dismayed when we started slinging betting adverts around the pitch on those electric hoardings.
With the PL TV money do we really need to take money from gambling firms as well? Then I remembered what Uncle Tony is well known for and became even more confused.
Kind of hard to get uppity about gambling / betting firms when we're owned by a professional poker player.
You didn't hang around with the right people! I spent my yoof in Labrokes on Fiveways. Never had any trouble getting in or bets on and the environment was like a social club rather than the arcade it was to become from the age of 15. Once you got to know the people in there it was like a local pub albeit my mum was always asking why I smelt of smoke.
In the evenings, we used to walk to Hove dogs on a Thursday and a Saturday. Whilst we struggled to get served in the Park View, we could get beer with no questions asked at the dog track and have a bet.
His Lizard company are very much interested in fixed odds betting.