Page 4A - Wednesday, December 3, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Page 4A - Wednesday, December 3, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 1 mJe~*idhii an 0atl Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MEGAN MCDONALD PETER SHAHIN and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. A new age o audio Final words: To myself the 'U'and my resilient peers t's gotten to that point in the semester where I will literally find any excuse not to do the work I need to be doing. I desire to be distracted. I know this must be true for many, dare I say most, college students. We've been bogged down g by the grind of the semes- ter; Thanksgiving break was approaching and has now passed, so it's a little chal- lenging to get back into the DEREK school routine once again. WOLE To make a long story short, those factors explain how I jumped into the world of the podcast - for the uninformed, podcasts are essentially prerecorded radio shows that cover just about everything and can be directly downloaded to your phone or computer. Before mid-November, I had really only known podcasts as that app on my iPhone that I don't use and a recording option on Garageband, which I have also never used. And yet, even with the limited experience I've had over the past couple of weeks, I'm not sure I ever want to leave this brave, new world. Because even though there are so many great TV shows out there, there's something special about excellent, educational and informative audio. It started with a tweet from one of my followers about "Serial," the hit real-life murder mystery show hosted by Sarah Koenig, a producer of "This American Life." With nine episodes to this point, "Serial" chronicles a murder that took place in the Baltimore area in 1999. Koenig has spent the last year or so researching the case to try to determine if Adnan Syed, the ex-boyfriend of Hae Min Lee, was the one who killed her and is releasing an episode week-by-week. I'm sure that description does not do it justice. I became a hooked listener instantly, so upon hearing at the end of the ninth episode- that the show would be taking a two-week hiatus for Thanksgiving, I was kind of devastated. It's that good. As of now, it isn't clear what the end result will be for Syed and I don't want to spoil it, but it's truly fascinating and I recommend that everyone take a listen. I'm counting down until Thursday. But "Serial" hasn't been the only podcast show that has piqued my interest. "Startup," a show about Alex Blumberg, a former NPR staffer, beginning his startup company, Gimlet Media, has been impossible to put down - or turn off, I guess. He even admits to the title and premise being "meta." He's right about that. I also believe Blumberg might be right about his big gamble in producing this show and what he really believes in, that the podcastingworld is going to explode. He told TechCrunch, "We're on the dawn of a second golden age of audio." That's an enormous bet - something Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla Motors, would probably say. But in order to get there, the rest of the podcasting content has to be top notch. "Startup" is professional, well edited, but also quirky and deeply personal. Blumberg connects with the listener and tells a story that has been underreported - the emotional side of starting a business. Gimlet Media's other and newer show, "Reply All," has done the same so far and has been successful with its shows relating to the Internet. But that's enough of reviewing shows. I'll leave that to our Arts section. What I want to continue with is that there has been a lot of debate on the Internet as to whether shows like "Serial" and "Startup" have changed the game in the podcasting universe. Some say yes, some say no. After having invested several hours into listening to these shows and then reading the articles, I'm ready to have some skin in the game - from an opinion standpoint, that is. I find myself leaning toward yes. Although it has been around for years, I find the podcast to be a new, fresh way to educate myself on important, and even not so important, issues. It has a different vibe than radio and there clearly is a demand for it. "Serial" broke the iTunes podcast down- load record with over five million by Nov. 18. In an episode of "Startup," Blumberg made a call for investments to complete his goal of raising $1.5 million. He raised $200,000 in a couple of hours. There's clearly a market for this high- quality content. And if these two shows continue to be successful, then that will certainly drive others to make great shows, too, to get a piece of the multi-million dollar pie. So far, it's an untapped market. There's some basic economics for you. This is a future I want to be a part of. Recently, I've begun to crave well-done storytelling. The podcast is a premiere medium for that. Besides, watching TV is overrated anyway. Well, at least until "Better Call Saul" premieres. - Derek Wolfe can be reached at dewolfe@umich.edu. This is my last column for The Michigan Daily. These are my parting words for myself, for this University and for the people who never cease to amaze me. To Myself: Y Maja, you must do something. Graduation MAJA is looming very TOSIC closely, but all I can focus on is how much this University has tried to break me. I cannot say that I am leaving as someone who's happy and pleased. I am leaving the University angered, hurt and disheartened. Within these walls, I have seen the true workings of our education system. Despite how broken I am to see University administrators not take action where action is due, what breaks me the most is that I need this University more than it needs me. This institution has snared me so strongly that I rely upon this problematic system. To them, I am just another dollar sign that is eas- ily replaced, but to me they are my key, my voice, my respect. With- out this institution, I would not have this stage from which to be heard. I would not have the same doors opening before me. I would not be as respected and listened to. Ironically, as much as I despise aspects of this University, it has also advanced my privilege. I can- not lie to myself and say that I am not grateful. But, I also cannot lie to myself and say that I am pardoned from the responsibility of challeng- ing this institution even when I am far gone. I am forever tied to this place; therefore, I am forever tied to the silence I must break. Maja, you cannot let future gen- erations become just as angered, hurt and disheartened as they too graduate from the University of Michigan. You must do something. To the University: It's not you, University of Michigan. Your conception was pure, but it's these people who sit highly in your buildings that have tarnished you. They have poisoned your integrity with greed for more green. They have ruined your value of education when they overlooked the way racism an.d sexismenter the classroom. Perhaps you have never lived up to your true intentions, because you were never free of these people. I hope that one day you find yourself ablaze in flames and fury. I wish all your walls come crashing down, because it was not you that built them. They were built by the wrong people. They were built as shields to protect privilege and power and notas hosts of multi- dimensional growth and liberation. In the midst of your ashes, I hope that all the voices who value the true possibility of education will rebuild your containers stronger than before. Then, your spirit will finally flow freely without oppression and injustice keeping you down. I dream that you become what you are meant to be. To My Resilient Peers: I will not paint this column completely in sorrow. My radical act is to pour what compassion and love is left within me and to extend it to you. Despite the hatred we are taught to have for ourselves and neighbors, I will not comply. There are beautiful souls at this University that wake up each morning with a purpose. Some of them go to class and some skip class. Some study from their textbooks and some refuse to buy intellectualized andracisthistories. Some learn through professors and some learn through the narratives that surround them. They are all different in the ways they navigate and survive at this University. But, none of them lay still as this institution tries to bury them. Their words and actions regardless of size are acts of resistance. Their joy and compassion are testaments to their strength in face of an institution that fears them. I have had the honor of meeting several people that do not put their heads down when they are told to. That do not remain silent when they are silenced. That do not spread hatred when they are washed within it. I have grown with some of these folks and have admired many more from a distance. Sadly, I know that there are many hearts that beat to this same tune that I will never meet. For you, I write this. I hope that you will continue to find your source of darkness no matter what light surrounds you. Because, light can be blinding and it takes a pocket of darkness to read- just views. I hope you find some- thing that shakes your core and moves you to act. I hope that you live life intentionally and never lose sight of your passions. I hope that you are happy and loved. Forever. - Maja Tosic can be reached atftosimaj@umich.edu. FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER Keep up with columnists, read Daily editorials, view cartoons and join in the debate. Check out @michigandaily to get updates on Daily content throughout the day. ZAK WITUSI Student athletes of the world, unite! 0 EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Edvinas Berzanskis, Devin Eggert, David Harris, Rachel John; Jordyn Kay, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Michael Paul, Allison Raeck, Melissa Scholke, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Mary Kate Winn, Jenny Wang, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe SIMON RIVERS I I am Michael Brown On Nov. 10, University Presi- dent Mark Schlissel delivered an honest and therefore controver- sial assessment of the University's Athletic Department to the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs. Schlissel noted, among other things, the historic academic underperformance of University athletes, especially high-profile ones like football players, and the continuing obstacles to their aca- demic success. Ina follow-up inter- view with The Michigan Daily the next day, Schlissel "clarified" (i.e. recanted) some of his previ- ous remarks - but the follow-up interview and ensuing article failed to address the message hidden in Schlissel's initial comments: I'd like to revisit the line of argument Schlissel began to articulate on that Monday and follow it to its logical and therefore probably controver- sial conclusion - namely, that the pairing of university-level academ- ics and high-profile college athlet- ics, like Division I NCAA football, doesn't make sense anymore, espe- cially not for highly exploited, high- profile student-athletes. Speaking to SACUA, Schlis- sel made important insights into the economics of college athletics. The Daily reported that Schlis- sel "addressed the motivations for athletic departments to value per- formance over academic integrity." He said, "The incentives are really strong for (athletic ,departments) to be as successful on the field as possible, and some of those are in dollars and others are in perfor- mance." SACUA member Robert Ziff, an engineering professor, cor- roborated Schlissel's argument. The Daily reported that Ziff "believes student-athletes have an 'extreme amount of demands placed on them' as a result of their status, and that they're often made to feel that the '$100 million Athletic Program is riding on them,' which could con- tribute to decreased performance in the classroom and elsewhere." When one considers the econom- ic incentives at play for high-profile student-athletes, the supposedly problematic result of football play- ers shirking their schoolwork should surprise no one. What Schlissel and Ziff are saying is that these student-athletes have been incentivized to focus on success on the field above and beyond suc- cess in the classroom, and they're correct. Not only does their ath- letic performance influence their individual chances to play profes- sionally, but it also influences the profitability of Michigan football. Blaming Michigan football coach Brady Hoke - who, by the way, has actually improved the football program's academic performance - and the football players for get- ting bad grades (which it turns out they actually aren't) ignores the real economic incentives motivat- ing their actions. High-profile stu- dent-athletes, like the University's own football and basketball players, would be idiots not to react to such great incentives. They're not idiots, I claim, and so they quite rationally choose to focus less on academic performance and more on their ath- letic performance. How, then, should we understand the University's academic standards for student-athletes as well as the NCAA guidelines (e.g. capping the number of hours student-athletes can practice and compete)? In short, they're an absurd hindrance to ath- letic development. These standards and guidelines try to create incen- tives to compete with the more powerful, already existing ones. A coach telling his player to study is not as powerful an incentive as, say, Stephen M. Ross's $100 million investment in the University Ath- letic Department, nor as powerful as a professional athlete's starting salary. Furthermore, these artifi- cial, reactionary incentives and the rules and regulations that embody them conceal the fact that the term "student-athlete" is, for many high- profile student-athletes, a gross misnomer. Their first and foremost reason for college enrollment is to play sports. I suspect - and indeed there's evidence that suggests - that many have little genuine inter- est in earning college degrees, and that's fine, just as I have little inter- est in playing college-level sports. So although I maintain that these high-profile athletes aren't idiots when it comes to recognizing and responding to economic incentives, they are indeed fools. They are fools because they believe that they must abide by these rules and regulations at all, and maintain a certain GPA or practice for a certain number of hours. But more so they are fools because they believe that they must accept scholarships instead of genu- ine salaries. The institution of col- lege athletics, headed by the NCAA and its constituent colleges, has foisted a false consciousness onto its workers (the student-athletes), making student-athletes believe that there is no alternative to their current work-for-scholarship busi- ness arrangement. But the truth is that the student-athletes; particu- larly the high-profile ones, decide whether or not the University and the NCAA, along with their rules and regulations, have power or not. In other words, the college athletic establishment's power depends on the high-profile student-4thletes agreeing and consenting to the establishment's power. Once these student-athletes realize this funda- mental fact, their own agency will be illuminated and they will have a choice to make. Do they choose to consent to the NCAA and the Uni- versity's rules and regulations? Do student-athletes consent to caps on how long they can practice and com- pete? Do they consent to being paid with scholarships instead of genuine salaries? Whythe fuck would they? When people discuss the problem of high-profile athletes' academic underperformance, people seldom ask the question of why these athletes are students anyway. Do they want to be, or would they rather just play sports? People often don't consider that this problem is one that we can simply eliminate by no longer demanding high-profile athletestoperformacademically; or, conversely, by high-profile athletes refusing to perform academically and demanding fair wages for their work. Why are colleges in the sports business anyway? Whose interests does this system serve? High- profile student-athletes may want to consider why they're stuck eating in dining halls while the Board of Regents eats at The Chop House. I propose we fully partition academics and high-profile, currently "pre-professional" athletics. Indeed, the partition already partially exists, and our University president realizes it. Student-athletes should not expect that the benefactors of the current institution of college athletics (the universities, the NCAA, media corporations, etc.) will voluntarily relinquish their power and in turn fairly compensate student-athletes for their work. The high-profile student-athletes should seize the power themselves, and they can do so effortlessly by simply refusing to continue to acknowledge the pretentious authority of the University and the NCAA. Student- athletes of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose but your meal plans and your textbooks. Zak Witus is an LSA junior. I am tired. I am weak. I am crying. I am angry. I am dissatisfied. I am enraged. I am livid. But most importantly, Iam Michael Brown. I am the young Black man, the system is treacherous. I am the young Black man, unarmed and dangerous. I am the young Black man being profiled walking down the street. I am the young man, shot to death by the police. I am the young Black man, sick and tired of being sick and tired.. I am the young Black man, twelve shots the officer fired. I am the young Black man, strangled by the flag you salute. I am the young Black man, hands up, don't shoot. I am Michael Brown. Every young Black man is Michael Brown. I am the young Black man, lying in the middle of the street for 4.5 hours while the police try to cover up my murder. I am the young Black man whose character has been assassinated by the media. I am the young Black man whose life is worth less than it costs to operate a courtroom. I am the young Black man whose mother and father will have to live with the heartache knowing that their child was killed. I am the young Black man whose life will create a revolution. I am the young Black man whose death will not be in vain. I am Michael Brown. I am Michael Brown, hear our declaration. I am Michael Brown, let the system break with our frustration I am Michael Brown, your words will not deter my motivation. I am Michael Brown, letus mobilize a nation. Michigan in Color is the Daily's opinion section designated asa space for and by students of color at the University of Michigan. Tocontribute your voice or find out more about MiC, e-mail michiganincolor@umich.edu. A