Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Sports fans and pop fangirls - two sides of the same coin?
The Straits Times
|April 06, 2025
They are obsessive, they are devoted. They plan their days around the next televised performance.
They scream when the display of artistry in front of them hits its crescendo. They wear shirts stamped with the names of their idols and hoard merchandise and spend eye-watering sums of money on tickets.
Sound familiar? Hint: I'm not talking about the tens of thousands of Little Monsters who will flock to the National Stadium in May for the Lady Gaga shows, or their ilk.
No, these fans are all around you, showing up to family gatherings in a Manchester United jersey, texting you "YNWA" when you tell them about the rough patch you're going through.
Ah, football fans. Love them or hate them, we've accepted them as a part of the wallpaper. I get it. I spent the better part of my teenage years losing sleep to 3am La Liga matches buffering on a dodgy streaming site. I ran a Tumblr blog dedicated to FC Barcelona. I told my then boyfriend to shift his proposal to another day so I could focus all my emotional energy on another man. (In my defence, that man was Lionel Messi and he was playing in a World Cup final.)
I also spent those teenage years cramming my brain with as many Taylor Swift lyrics as it would hold. When she came to Singapore for The Eras Tour in 2024, I took a day off work to queue for concert tickets.
And yet, while I would've readily identified as a football fan, I've always been reluctant to call myself a Swiftie. The former label bestows a certain degree of cultural cachet upon girls or women - albeit after you prove that you can name at least five players on the team and explain the offside rule - while the latter kinda confirms that you're just as basic as the rest of your gender.
Bu hikaye The Straits Times dergisinin April 06, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The Straits Times'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
The Straits Times
UPS cuts 48,000 jobs on fewer Amazon deliveries
NEW YORK - United Parcel Service (UPS) is cutting some 48,000 jobs as part of a major reorganisation connected to a planned reduction in delivery services for Amazon packages, company officials said on Oct 28.
1 min
October 30, 2025
The Straits Times
Child protection • Consider renaming agency to reinforce its enforcement role
A nation searches its soul over the brutal abuse and killing of four-year-old Megan Khung.
1 min
October 30, 2025
The Straits Times
S'pore investing in field of embodied Al
Of the two cohorts supported so far, six startups are based in Singapore, reflecting how local innovators are helping to shape the region's low-carbon transition, said DPM Gan.
2 mins
October 30, 2025
The Straits Times
KL's ban on raw rare earths exports remains despite US deal: Minister
KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia will maintain a ban on the export of raw rare earths to protect its domestic resources, despite signing a critical minerals deal with the US this week, the investment, trade and industry minister said on Oct 29.
1 min
October 30, 2025
The Straits Times
At least 132 killed in Brazil police raids in Rio ahead of COP30
Eighty-one arrested in operation described by state govt as largest to target major gang
2 mins
October 30, 2025
The Straits Times
Enlivening S’pore’s north, helping shops digitalise among ideas being studied by RTS Link task force
Rejuvenating neighbourhoods in Singapore’s north and supporting businesses through promotions and digitalisation are some plans being explored by a task force helping Singaporeans and local businesses seize opportunities from the upcoming Johor Bahru-Singapore Rapid Transit System (RTS) Link.
3 mins
October 30, 2025
The Straits Times
Nasa tests ‘quiet’ supersonic jet in quest for faster passenger air travel
- Nasa’s X-59 Quesst supersonic-but-quiet jet soared over the Southern California desert on Oct 28 in the first test flight of an experimental aircraft designed to break the sound barrier with little noise, paving the way for faster commercial air travel.
2 mins
October 30, 2025
The Straits Times
Repetitive dullness snuffs out A House Of Dynamite
A HOUSE OF DYNAMITE (M18) 115 minutes, available on Netflix ★★☆☆☆ The story: A missile, possibly armed with a nuclear payload, launches from Asia and is headed towards the United States. Impact is expected in minutes. In the White House situation room, Captain Walker (Rebecca Ferguson) tries to work out the origins of the launch and the reasons for it. At the same time, at a military command centre in Nebraska, General Brady (Tracy Letts) weighs his options. Walker and Brady report their findings to the US President (Idris Elba) and Secretary of Defence Baker (Jared Harris). As minutes tick by, officials are forced to consider the unthinkable: a retaliatory nuclear strike.
1 mins
October 30, 2025
The Straits Times
What Asean and buoyant Manchester United have in common
Years of underachievement, now a moment in the sun. For both, the hard part comes next.
4 mins
October 30, 2025
The Straits Times
Advertising Extend SkillsFuture safeguards to financial marketing
I refer to your Oct 8 report “SkillsFuture training providers barred from using third-party promoters from Dec 1”.
1 min
October 30, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

