London Games: Highs And Lows

August 14th, 2012 | Posted by James K in Sports | Television - (0 Comments)

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The London Olympics are history. Reflections on TV and the rings:

  • NBC’s coverage of the Games was the “most-watched television event in US history” with 219 million, surpassing the 215 million who tuned in for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. No surprise. America loves the Olympics. NBC televised more hours and the TV audience is bigger than it was four years ago.
  • The majority of viewers want to see everything live with taped replays at night. NBC needs to ditch its outdated old formula for the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi. The Russian city is eight hours ahead of New York.
  • NBC’s live online streaming was a positive step but there were too many glitches and annoying interruptions for commercials.
  • NBC botched Sunday’s closing ceremony telecast, cutting it down by almost an hour and omitting key performances by Muse and Ray Davies. NBC further enraged viewers by leaving the ceremony at 11 p.m. for an hour to air new sitcom “Animal Practice” and the local news. Cut out the monkey business.
  • Next time, leave Ryan Seacrest home.

Gold Rush

August 5th, 2012 | Posted by James K in Sports - (0 Comments)

subENNIS articleLarge 570x313 Gold Rush

They made her “the face of the Games,” her image plastered across billboards throughout London. Local girl Jessica Ennis was the favorite in the hepthalon, the pride of a nation, the golden girl. Talk about pressure.

She didn’t blink. On Saturday, with Great Britain enjoying its finest Olympic day, Ennis capped off the glory by winning the hepthalon in spectacular fashion before an adoring, roaring crowd at Olympic Stadium. It was an unforgettable moment.

The captivating Ennis, 26, was already a big deal in Great Britain, with lucrative deals with BP, British Airways, Adidas, Omega and Powerade among others. She’s been on the cover of Cosmopolitan and featured in a British GQ photo spread.

Now, look out. Ennis should turn her gold medal into a bigger pot of gold. One PR expert predicts she could net $5 million in the next two to three years. More power to her.

Daily Mail: The golden girl delivers

Official Website of Jessica Ennis

Olympic Games Opening Ceremony London 2012 1 570x349 NBC Sets Opening Ceremony Record With 40.7M

How are we following the London Olympics? Let us count the ways. Network television. Cable television. Live online streaming. Sirius XM radio. 3-D. The Internet. Newspaper and magazine websites and blogs. Twitter. Facebook. You Tube. Mobile apps. There’s never been an Olympics with so much access. Now can we keep it up for over two weeks?

A record 40.7 million people watched Friday’s compelling opening ceremony on NBC. It topped the previous mark of 39.8 million people who watched the 1996 Atlanta Olympics begin, and the 34.9 million who watched the first night from Beijing four years ago.

NBC, which is streaming every event live for the first time, was criticized for airing the opening ceremony on tape in prime time. It was the right move as judged by the ratings. Really how many people would have preferred to watch the OC on their computers. It’s entertainment not a sports event with a result, and meant to be enjoyed with family and friends in big couches on a TV screen at night.

Top cities Friday night: 1. San Diego, 2. (tie) Washington, D.C. and West Palm Beach, Fla.

The five NBC nets — NBC, NBC Sports Network, MSNBC, CNBC and Bravo — combined for 58 hours on Saturday, the first full day of competition. Coverage began at 4 a.m. on NBCSN and at 5 a.m. (with swimming prelims) on NBC. We had all 5 TVs in the JoyHog command center going at once. It was a beautiful sight.

The main event on Saturday was the men’s 400 IM, and we followed Ryan Lochte’s gold-medal swim live at 2:30 p.m. NBC featured all the swimming finals in prime time — for the biggest audience. It’s going to be that way all during the Games. The beauty of NBC’s new policy of live streams is that you can have your cake and eat it too.

There’s no reason to watch the prime time telecast live. We taped it, and started watching at 9:30 p.m. after some baseball. We fast-forwarded through the commercials.

 

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A billion people are expected to watch Friday’s Opening Ceremony for the London Olympics, and that includes us. British filmmaker Danny Boyle (“Slumdog Millionaire”) created the three-hour extravagna, which begins at 9 p.m. London time. NBC’s prime-time telecast, hosted by Bob Costas, Matt Lauer and Meredith Viera, runs from 7:30 p.m.-midnight.

The ceremony’s theme is “Isles of Wonder,” inspired by William Shakespeare’s “The Tempest”.

What you can expect to see:

  • The ceremony will open with the sound of a 27-ton bell — the largest harmonically tuned bell in the world — forged at London’s 442-year-old Whitechapel Bell Foundry.
  • A prerecorded segment filmed inside Buckingham Palace, reportedly involving Queen Elizabeth II and Daniel Craig as secret agent James Bond. A stuntman dressed as 007 will reportedly parachute into the stadium to start the show.
  • The opening sequence evoking a pastoral idyll, the “green and pleasant land” described in William Blake’s poem “Jerusalem.”  The elaborate set will comprise rolling hills, fields and rivers, complete with picnicking families, sport being played on a village green and farmyard animals.
  • Aerial photographs of the set for the second section of the show depict dark buildings and smokestacks with the River Thames running through it. This is the other side of the country described in “Jerusalem” — a land of “dark satanic mills.”
  • A third act showcasing the regeneration of east London, where the Olympics are taking place, as parkland and a creative heartland, home to many artists, designers and Internet startups.
  • Vignettes drawing on British history, including Depression-era jobless protesters and nurses performing a tribute to the National Health Service. Performers dressed as miners and factory workers have also been seen going into the stadium, and one set piece is a model of the Empire Windrush, a ship that brought hundreds of Caribbean migrants to Britain in 1948.
  • A section featuring characters from children’s fiction classics including “Alice in Wonderland” and “Peter Pan” — and a showdown between Voldemort, the villain of J.K. Rowling’s “Harry Potter” books, and a horde of flying magical nannies based on Mary Poppins.
  • Kenneth Branagh is rumoured to be reciting a speech by Caliban from the play, replacing Mark Rylance, who pulled out after the death of his stepdaughter.
  • Soccer star David Beckham will headline a sporting parade of athletic stars that could include Muhammad Ali, Michael Jordan, Sir Steve Redgrave, gymnasts Larisa Latynina, Nadia Comaneci and Olga Korbut and swimmers Mark Spitz and Michael Phelps.
  • Music including songs by The Beatles, The Who, the Sex Pistols, and Vangelis’ theme from “Chariots of Fire.” Also songs by newer acts, including Dizzee Rascal and Tinie Tempah.
  • The final act will be former Beatle Paul McCartney leading the audience in a sing-along of “Hey Jude.”
  • Who will light the cauldron? The heavy favorite is Roger Bannister, 83, the first person to run a sub-four-minute mile in 1954.
  • Not everything planned will make the show. Boyle has already cut a stunt bike sequence to try to keep the show to its allotted three-hour running time so everyone can use public transport to get home.
  • Weather forecast: cloudy.
  • NBC will tease its telecast with a short film voiced by Ewan McGregor and Emily Blunt.
We’re getting ready by following The Guardian’s live blog, which includes Carl Lewis’ great quote about Mitt Romney’s Olympic gaffe. “Seriously, some Americans just shouldn’t leave the country.”

London 2012 Olympics: build-up to opening ceremony – live blog