A Celebration of Women
enthusiastically Celebrates the Life of this Powerhouse of a Woman, that has taken her God Given talent and now devotes her Life to sharing that with other Women. Through Foundations, etc. this Woman has shown great generosity, kindness, and support to halping the Women of our World enjoy growing in the Sports Arena of TENNIS.
WOMAN of ACTION
Billie Jean King
Billie Jean Moffitt was born in Long Beach, California, in 1943. As a kid, she was very interested in tennis and learned it at a very young age. She attended college at California State College at Los Angeles (then Los Angeles State College). When she was 18 in 1962, Billie Jean suprisingly defeated the world’s leading women’s tennis player, Margaret Smith Court, at Wimbleton. After this incident, nothing could stop her and she became one of the most successful players in tennis history.
Billie Jean won the Wimbleton singles tournament in 1966, 1967, 1972, 1973, and 1975. She won the doubles in 1961, 1962, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, and 1979. Then, she won the mixed doubles at Wimbleton (doubles with a male partner) in 1967, 1971, 1973, and 1974. Her total of 20 Wimbleton titles set a record as well.
Billie Jean also won a lot of championships at the U.S. Championships. She won the singles in 1967, 1971, 1972, and 1974, and she won the doubles in 1964, 1967, 1974, 1978, and 1980.
In 1965, Billie Jean married a law student named Larry King, and in 1967 became the first woman since 1939’s Alice Marble to win singles, doubles, and mixed in Wimbleton and the U.S. Championships. In 1968, she also won the Australian championships, and in 1972, she won the French Open. Also important was her win over Bobby Riggs in 1973 where she demonstrated her point that there should be equal treatment for women in sports.
Also in 1973, Billie Jean cofounded the Women’s Tennis Association. In 1974, she established the Women’s Sports Organization with swimmer Donna de Varona, track star Wyomia Tyus, diver Micki King, and cyclist and speed skater Sheila Young. Lastly, in 1996, she coached the women’s Olympic tennis team.
March 2, 2009, marked the Inaugural Year of the Billie Jean King Cup and the first time women’s tennis had been played at Madison Square Garden since 2000, when the year-ending Chase Championships were held there. Broadcast internationally on HBO, the inaugural year featured 2008 US Open Champion Serena Williams, 2008 Wimbledon Champion Venus Williams, 2008 French Open Champion Ana Ivanović and 2008 year end world number 1 ranked player Jelena Janković, who filled in as a wild card for the injured 2008 Australian Open Champion Maria Sharapova.
The Billie Jean King Cup is a one-night tennis exhibition that features the four Grand Slam winners from the previous year to compete each March at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Officially known as the BNP Paribas Showdown for the Billie Jean King Cup, the event format is a single elimination tournament with four players competing in a one set, no-ad scoring semifinal, with the winners advancing to a best-of-three set final with regular scoring. The Billie Jean King Cup serves as the kick off to the tennis season in America as it is part of one of the United States Tennis Association’s largest grassroots initiative, Tennis Night in America.
2011
THE Arthritis Foundation is taking a new tack with its public service advertising, introducing a hard-hitting campaign that urges people to take up exercise as a weapon against pain.
Billie Jean King is the star of a series of ads that promote exercise as a way to fight arthritis pain.
The new campaign — which was developed with the Advertising Council and created by the New York office of Y&R Advertising — follows humorous ads introduced last year that featured people of different ages, races and shapes doing a type of break-dancing. The spot advised, “Moving is the best medicine.”
Most of the new ads show middle-age men and women participating in sports like swimming, biking, boxing and walking, activities the Arthritis Foundation said could help relieve arthritis pain and sometimes even delay the onset of symptoms. The copy says, “In the fight against arthritis, you need a weapon,” and asks, “What’s yours?”
• In addition, some ads feature Billie Jean King, the 12-time Grand Slam singles winner and co-founder of World Team Tennis. Ms. King, who is 67, has had osteoarthritis since she was in her 20s, and had both knees replaced last year. Advertising featuring her — created with the cooperation of the United States Tennis Association — as well as the rest of the campaign will be announced at Arthur Ashe Stadium Wednesday morning, before U.S. Open play begins.
Peggy Conlon, president of the Ad Council, said the Arthritis Foundation’s 2010 advertising was “lighthearted. The first campaign helped us raise awareness for this issue. For the second year, we wanted to be more empowering and more action-oriented.”
According to Dr. Patience H. White, vice president for public health for the Arthritis Foundation, arthritis is the leading cause of disability in the United States, affecting 50 million Americans, or one in five adults; that number could jump to 67 million by 2030. Osteoarthritis — a degenerative joint disease characterized by a breakdown of joint cartilage from obesity, past joint injury and age — is the most common form of arthritis, and a type whose pain can be managed by exercise.
Dr. White said the foundation wanted to be “more serious about arthritis” with its new advertising. The 2010 concept was “fun and caught people’s attention, but now we want people to refuse to accept pain and the limitations of arthritis on their life. We want it to be more urgent and hard-hitting, to aim it at baby boomers 55 and older, to have them take action today to prevent the progression of arthritis.”
Research conducted last November among adults age 40 and older by Harris Interactive for the Ad Council found that only 16 percent of those with arthritis were very confident they could manage their pain. The research also found that while 58 percent believed taking medication is the most effective way to relieve arthritis pain, only 45 percent thought regular exercise was an effective way to reduce this pain.
The voiceover on new television commercials — with middle-age adults doing sports — says, “The pain will not control us. It will never break us, define us, or keep us still. Because arthritis can’t beat us, if we beat it first.”
Radio, print and banner advertising delivers similar messages. All advertising carries the tagline, “What’s your weapon? Visit FightArthritisPain.org.”
Television ads featuring Ms. King depict her playing tennis, with arthritis as her opponent. In one, Ms. King says, “Tennis is a weapon for me with arthritis. There’s nothing like it for me to hit a ball, run to the ball. Any time, any court, I’m ready, let’s go.”
Cliff Skeete, a creative director in the New York office of Y&R Advertising, part of the Young & Rubicam Brands division of WPP, who oversees the Arthritis Foundation’s campaign, said the latest ads deliberately showed “real people, not all physically fit, not all Jack LaLanne types. They’re shaped more like an everyday person who can inspire the people at home watching.”
Similarly, Ms. King, a member of the President’s Council on Fitness, Sports and Nutrition, said, “I’m a little chubby, I think people are going to relate. I’m not just somebody who won a championship. I’ve overcome arthritis, I deal with it.”
Print, television and online advertising featuring Ms. King will appear during the U.S. Open, on screens at stadiums, throughout the grounds, and in collateral material; the U.S.T.A. also will feature content about the campaign and advertising on its Web site and in social media. In addition, the King advertising will run on U.S. Open broadcasts on ESPN2 and the Tennis Channel.
The execution of the campaign was questioned by some marketing and advertising experts, although they praised its intent.
Rick Burton, a professor of sports management at Syracuse University, said while Ms. King’s participation in the campaign is notable, “I don’t know if she fits it. I don’t take her personality to be militaristic. There seems to be a disconnect between the engagement of Billie Jean and advertising using generic weekend warriors.”
Yoram Wind, a professor of marketing at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, said the campaign is “too rational. Most effective ads are emotional. They’re relying on one celebrity, Billie Jean King.”
• Adam Alter, an assistant professor of marketing at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said the campaign’s use of “weapon as a metaphor seemed difficult to grasp.”
However, Dorothy Dunlop, an associate professor of medicine at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University and an author of a recent study on physical activity and osteoarthritis, commended the new campaign for focusing on “everyday activity.”
Ms. Dunlop, who has received financing for research from the Arthritis Foundation and reviews its research proposals, said the “ads will help people not think of this as an exercise regimen, but part of their daily experience.”
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WOMAN of ACTION – Billie Jean King
September 27, 2011 by