“…Discourses about what McEnnis (2016, p. 968) calls the “professional ideology in sports media” and what makes effective members of the sports media create unique challenges for women in that those assumptions produce a shared understanding of what makes a knowledgeable sports reporter as synonymous with a male sports reporter, leading women in the industry to face skepticism and critique from the moment they begin their careers. Indeed, a survey by Sheffer and Schultz (2007) showed that sports directors rated male sports broadcasters as more knowledgeable about sports compared with female sports broadcasters, while surveys and experiments with fans have consistently shown that women are evaluated through a gendered lens and rated lower on measures of credibility (e.g., Cummins, Ortiz, & Rankine, 2019; Mudrick, Burton, & Lin, 2017). Moreover, these assessments manifest themselves in a space where women are often understood as interlopers in male terrain, a process that reinforces and justifies women’s exclusion (e.g., Autonovic & Whiteside, 2018; Genovese, 2014; Hardin & Shain, 2006; Harrison, 2018).…”