- Jul 7, 2003
- 48,446
Ultimately, when we get the stadium at Falmer, we're going to need to justify its existence by filling it.
I see no problem with the Albion targeting some of their advertising towards the gay community in Brighton. It's no different to giving tickets to schools, for example, or putting posters in amateur clubs' grounds.
It's all about getting more people through the gates, isn't it, not more gay fans, not more young fans, just more fans, full stop.
Who cares where they come from? Anyone who decides to support the Albion is alright by me. I was born in Kent, but nobody ever suggested to me I should support Gillingham instead, so why shouldn't someone (who happens to be gay) from, say, Liverpool, become interested in the Albion? What has anyone's sexuality got to do with their liking for football or passion for the mighty Seagulls?
And to suggest gay fans would only be interested in looking at the players' legs is patronising in the extreme. Whoever said that, do you think that about all us female fans at the Albion as well? On second thoughts, don't answer that...
At the end of the day, if attracting some of the sizeable gay community in Brighton & Hove could guarantee (say) an extra 4000 people on the gate each home game, who here would turn down the extra revenue that would generate, "because they're poofs, innit"? Cash is cash in our position, however you get it.
I see no problem with the Albion targeting some of their advertising towards the gay community in Brighton. It's no different to giving tickets to schools, for example, or putting posters in amateur clubs' grounds.
It's all about getting more people through the gates, isn't it, not more gay fans, not more young fans, just more fans, full stop.
Who cares where they come from? Anyone who decides to support the Albion is alright by me. I was born in Kent, but nobody ever suggested to me I should support Gillingham instead, so why shouldn't someone (who happens to be gay) from, say, Liverpool, become interested in the Albion? What has anyone's sexuality got to do with their liking for football or passion for the mighty Seagulls?
And to suggest gay fans would only be interested in looking at the players' legs is patronising in the extreme. Whoever said that, do you think that about all us female fans at the Albion as well? On second thoughts, don't answer that...
At the end of the day, if attracting some of the sizeable gay community in Brighton & Hove could guarantee (say) an extra 4000 people on the gate each home game, who here would turn down the extra revenue that would generate, "because they're poofs, innit"? Cash is cash in our position, however you get it.