Tackling inequality in sport
Angela鈥檚 charge to change聽the culture of sport.
Angela Pippos is a die-hard sports fan and dedicated to her 鈥榬eligion鈥, feminism.
She is also a sports journalist, presenter, author, documentary maker and gender equality advocate.
In the 90s, she was one of very few women employed in sports journalism and, over a career spanning more than 20 years, has experienced and witnessed sexism and inequality in sport.
In more recent years, things have started to change.
鈥淭he best thing about living in this era is that we are challenging the old attitudes, we are challenging the old status quo,鈥 said Angela.
鈥淭he word equality is now used in conversations around sport 鈥 that sounds like a really small thing, but for sport it鈥檚 big, because for so many years you couldn鈥檛 even mention equality in the same sentence as sport.鈥
For Angela, these changes have also seen the return of her optimistic and invincible nine-year-old self, and her belief that it is possible to change the world.
鈥淚 see the women of AFLW as the聽modern day suffragists as they聽have stared convention in the聽face and won. That鈥檚 after a long聽period of ridicule and being made聽to feel like oddities and unnatural聽for wanting to play the game.鈥Angela Pippos
Angela has always loved sport. Preferring running shoes over pointe shoes, she would disappear from ballet class to watch netball played on nearby courts. She was very close to her brother Chris, so when he began to learn Aussie Rules Football, she also became besotted with the game. 鈥淲e took stats for each other鈥檚 games.聽We really were obsessed聽with it, and after we had played our respective sports, we would go to Norwood oval and watch Norwood play,鈥 she said.
It was at University that Angela discovered other passions, including聽feminism. She became involved in student politics, activism and the student newspaper, On Dit. It was through these activities she met fellow students Natasha Stott Despoja AO (former politician),聽Annabel Crab (Australian political journalist, commentator and television host), and Samantha Maiden (journalist).
鈥淚t must have been second year and I was studying feminist history and I just loved it. Learning about the different waves of feminism and the role that South Australian women聽played in suffrage really inspired me.
鈥淎nd then you鈥檙e hanging around with Annabel and Natasha, a really cool group of switched on, feisty women. I was hooked and it gave me a really solid platform to head out into the world,鈥 Angela said.Completing honours in politics at the 成人大片, and聽then a Bachelor of Journalism at the University of South Australia, Angela felt ready to take on the world.
鈥淚 felt the pressure to be better than them and I had to work doubly hard to be respected.鈥Angela Pippos
The plan was to become a political journalist working in Canberra, but her path took a different turn.
Angela became a researcher for ABC Adelaide鈥檚 7.30 Report. When the show was axed, she moved into the newsroom as a general reporter. Because of her good sporting knowledge, she started to cover more sport than anything else, and people started to notice her talent.
Melbourne鈥檚 head of ABC News asked her to apply for a specialist sports journalist position. It was too good an opportunity to turn down, so she applied, got the job and moved to Melbourne in 1997.聽Angela loved her work, but as one of only a handful of women in sports journalism at that time, she鈥檇 underestimated the challenges she would encounter.聽
鈥淚 was often the only woman at a media conference, so that came with the pressure of feeling like I was representing all women. So I didn鈥檛 want to let the team down by asking silly questions, even though men all around me were asking silly questions.
鈥淚 felt the pressure to be better than them and I had to work doubly hard to be respected,鈥 she said.聽
Her best defence was to quickly develop a robust sense of humour and get on with the job, which she did, working in television as a sports presenter for ABC for more than a decade. She has also appeared, co- hosted and presented on ABC Radio Melbourne, Sport 927, and been a columnist and feature writer for the AFL website and The Sunday Age.
Angela鈥檚 tipping point, where she聽finally felt she had enough runs on the board in her career to speak out, was empowered by a couple of聽events away from the sporting world. The first being then Prime Minister Julia Gillard鈥檚 misogyny speech in parliament in 2012.聽
鈥淚 saw so much of myself in her when she stood up in parliament and did that.聽
鈥淚 saw myself rapidly moving聽towards that point where I would be able to stand in front of my peers and say the same thing,鈥 Angela said.
The other significant moment was the birth of her son Francis in 2013. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really hard to explain, but I think what happened was that I was no longer the centre of my universe. It started to matter less what people thought of me, my focus was on Francis and the world that he was going to grow up in,鈥 she said.
In her second book, Breaking the Mould: Taking A Hammer To Sexism In Sport, Angela describes the many events in 2015 that created the conditions for movement towards positive change. These include Michelle Payne鈥檚 historic Melbourne Cup win, and the Matilda鈥檚 (Australian women鈥檚 soccer team) stand for more respect and a聽decent base salary.
The introduction of AFL Women's (AFLW) in 2017 was, for Angela, the most exciting thing to happen in sport in her lifetime.聽
鈥淲hat I love about AFLW is that it鈥檚 okay to be physical, but it also creates another version of what it means to be a girl or woman.聽
鈥淚 see the women of AFLW as the modern day suffragists as they have stared convention in the face and won. That鈥檚 after a long period of ridicule and being made to feel like oddities and unnatural for wanting to play the game,鈥 she said.
Angela has written, directed and produced two television documentaries about the rise of women in Australian Rules football. She has a third documentary in the pipeline.
鈥淚 feel like I鈥檝e had a career revival really because things have started to change for women and it鈥檚 given me a real spring in my step to continue to change the culture of sport so women can be at their sporting best.鈥
Story by Kelly Brown
Photos by Meaghan Coles