“…In general, during the past two decades serious leisure has been an emerging and evolving topic in information behaviour scholarship and several studies have been done on this topic. For examples, leisure information behaviours in hobby quilting sites (Gainor, 2008), communities of hobbyist collectors (Lee and Trace, 2009), dietary and food blogging (Savolainen, 2010; Cox and Blake, 2011), online fantasy sports (Hirsh et al , 2012), retired investors, (O'Connor, 2013), music record collectors (Margree et al , 2014), re-enactment (Robinson and Yerbury, 2015), motorsport enthusiasts (Joseph, 2016), gardening (Cheng et al ., 2017), genealogy (Hershkovitz and Hardof-Jaffe, 2017), car restoration (Olsson and Lloyd, 2017), media fan communities (Price, 2017; Price and Robinson, 2017), information activities in ultra-running (Gorichanaz, 2017), fun life-contexts (Ocepek et al , 2018), information practices of music fans (Vesga Vinchira, 2019), basketball Twitter community (Sanchez, 2020) and music information seeking in fan clubs (Bronstein and Lidor, 2020) are among the long list of scholarly publications in this field.…”