Neville's Breakfast
Well-known member
I know Crodo's doing his usual fishing trip, but I'll bite anyway!
Going back to the original BBC article, here's a quote from Sarah Aitchison, Sutton United's Her Game Too club ambassador.
'Sarah also highlights how hard it is tackling a football culture which "has misogyny ingrained deeply into it".
"There's a particular chant where it talks about how wonderful the town or city is, because it's full of female body parts," she says. "To a lot of men, that would just seem like a harmless bit of banter.
"But actually, when you're a woman and you hear a lot of men chanting something that basically reduces you to a list of sexualized body parts, it feels quite intimidating."'
The last time I heard that particular chant sung was by Southend United fan Alison Moyet in 1996 on Fantasy Football League with Baddiel, Skinner and Millwall's Danny Baker there.
Now FFL was clearly of its laddish mid-90s time and the Jason Lee blacking up / 'he's got a pineapple on his head' has been rightly apologised for.
No-one would or should put up with that now. And Alison Moyet (who I love as a singer) may or may not have revised her opinion.
Clearly no woman should have to suffer threats of violence, unwanted touching or sexist abuse at games, or anywhere else for that matter.
Football's come a long way in this respect as it has in others. But I do wonder just how much further it's possible to go in reality.
Well-meaning attempts at redefining (some might say social re-engineering) the 'working man's ballet' is unlikely to have the full desired effects.
This is why both the women's game and the Qatar World Cup is so different. The key traditional demographic is missing, so a different experience is had.
Anyway, here's the transcript of the part of the conversation that was around chanting:
Baddiel: "Alison, as a singer...as a proper singer...I mean, do you chant and sing at football?"
Moyet: "All the time. I love it."
Baddiel: "But do people look round and say, 'God, that's nice!'?
Moyet: (laughs) "I just think everybody does sing at football matches like they do who come from Millwall. One incredible song which really appeals to me goes, "Oh my Southend is wonderful, oh my Southend is wonderful, it's full of tits, fanny and United..." (laughs)
Baker: "Yes, I know that one."
Skinner: "Well it is wonderful, isn't it?"
Moyet: "It's just the way everyone peters off towards the end."
Baddiel: "What's the tune of that, Alison? Or don't you want to sing it?"
Moyet: (sings in an exaggerated neanderthal way) "Oh my Sarfend... (laughs)
Baker: (finishes off the song)
Baddiel: (deadpans) "What a lovely song." (everyone laughs)
No-one set out to offend. No-one offended. Just football fan bandinage and repartee.
The video's terrible quality, but watch/listen from 17:06 onwards and make up your own mind.
As much as genuine abuse should be called out, let's hope this kind of thing isn't cancelled in the future for fear of offence.
With the matchday experience having changed dramatically in recent years, especially in the Premier League, football can't afford to lose more of its edgy soul that made us fall in love with the game in the first place.
I have always hated that song. I still hate it when I hear it (it is still sung). It is sung by immature boys/men who see women as sex objects. It isn’t edgy. It has never been a part of my football enjoyment in the 46 years I have been going to games.