%0 Journal Article %T The Sport-Blogging Community and the Public Sphere: An Israeli Perspective %A Yair Galily %A Ilan Tamir %A Ofer Muchtar %J Journal for Communication and Culture %D 2012 %I Institute for Communication and Culture %X The aim of the current research was to determine the extent to which blogs serve as a public arena, wherein discourse conditions of equality, mutuality, and symmetry are amplified. Research questions were tested through a convenience sample from audience members (N=103) of the most popular sporting blog in Israel, and involved online surveys and an in-depth interview with the blog writer. Findings illustrate the process of forming a social community (virtual settlement/virtual community) through discussion and engagement, to a large extent similar to the ideal speech situations presented by Habermas. Indeed it seems that everyone is entitled to converse and engage in discourse; each person has the right to raise questions, question any claims made in the discourse and make any claim that comes to mind. Findings indicate that: specific topics receive disproportionate coverage, debate often leads to an overlapping collection of conversations and not to a single discussion, and not all topics are subjected to rational debate. %K sports %K blogging %K Israel %K public sphere %U http://jcc.icc.org.ro/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/JCC_vol2_no1_Yair_Galily_pages_68_87.pdf