The National Football League has always been a business built on one simple truth: give the people what they want. That formula helped football become America’s game, drawing in millions of loyal fans every Sunday. But today, the league seems more interested in giving the media and corporate sponsors what they want, even when it directly conflicts with the people who actually watch.

Consider the decision to add male cheerleaders across the league. This isn’t just an isolated move anymore. For the 2025 season, 12 NFL teams now feature male cheerleaders — including the Vikings, Ravens, Rams, Saints, Eagles, Patriots, 49ers, Chiefs, Colts, Titans, Buccaneers, and Panthers. On its face, the move is pitched as “inclusion,” “progress,” and “representation.” Yet the numbers make the logic hard to follow. Nearly 70 percent of NFL fans are straight men. Men are the core audience, the ones who buy the jerseys, fill the stadiums, and drive the league’s television dominance. If the overwhelming majority of your customers are men, why would you change the product to include something most of them never asked for?

The truth is simple: the NFL is not responding to its fans. It is responding to public pressure and corporate pressure.Cheerleading was once marketed to men, an added layer of entertainment during breaks in the action. But as lawsuits piled up and critics accused the league of “objectifying” women, the NFL went into full damage-control mode. Adding male cheerleaders is less about demand from fans and more about optics for advertisers. It is the NFL’s way of saying, “See, we’re modern and inclusive, please don’t accuse us of being outdated.”

But inclusivity should not come at the expense of common sense. Men already watch football in massive numbers. They don’t need to be “represented” on the sidelines; they’re the ones in the stands, on the field, and in front of the television. This is not about equality, it’s about pandering to cultural critics who don’t even buy the tickets. It is about shaping the brand for media headlines rather than serving the audience that built the NFL into a multibillion-dollar empire.

The problem with this kind of decision-making is that it misunderstands the very foundation of the league’s success. Fans don’t tune in for a political message. They tune in for football. Every time the NFL bends to outside activists or tries to force social engineering into the game-day experience, it risks creating unnecessary tension between the product and the people.

The league can call it progress, but let’s be honest — if 70 percent of your fan base is straight men, putting male cheerleaders on the sideline makes about as much sense as putting men in the Miss America pageant. It misses the point entirely. The NFL is not giving fans more of what they love; it is giving fans a lecture disguised as entertainment.

And that is why this doesn’t make sense. A league built on loyalty is testing how far it can push that loyalty. Fans might shrug today, but if the NFL continues to ignore its base in favor of pleasing critics who don’t even watch, the real question is how long that loyalty lasts.

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