trinityvixen: (harley raspberry)
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It's already a given that there are favorite sports in the Olympics. We like things that are pretty or whose physical prowess is demonstrable in a dramatic way. Gymnastics, we know, is always going to the get the coverage that handball, volleyball (note: except beach volleyball), softball, even basketball, aren't. It's just so pretty and surprising and scary and amazing. The track and field events will get their day, but there's definitely a reason they drag out the gymnastics events over the entire two weeks of coverage. You could do all the individual medal events--the beam, the bars, etc.--in a day or two. But why? The better to spread them out and have people tuning in each night for twenty minutes. Maybe they'll stay and watch other stuff!

It works, so they'll never stop doing it, but the coverage is agonizing. They cut away and cut between things. Our other broadcasting prejudice--to only display those countries as are good/likely medal contenders, the host country, and ours--make it even worse. Here's some gymnastics! Well, ours, China's, and some of Japan, but they're only silver medalists. They're not the plucky USA team that shouldn't even be here! Wait, Michael Phelps is doing something! Cut to him listening to his iPod! GREAT STUFF.

Actually, I'd like to see all of the event, good or no. I'd love to know when in the event something is going to happen or not, and not be yanked every ten minutes between sports. NBC is tempting me to set up the DVR recording for the first two hours, ignore it, and then come back and watch on fast forward until I catch up with real time because this schedule is nuts. Even Bob Costas is like, "Sorry folks, this is no way to broadcast a jumping frog race, and it's going to go on for another week."

Date: 2008-08-12 08:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ivy03.livejournal.com
I should also add--the commentators knew jack shit about fencing. They were going oh, uh, look at how fast that was. I had to explain the rules of a sabre match to my cousins.

Date: 2008-08-12 08:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com
You watched the gymnastics, right? It felt like they all were drunk or high or something. They referred to one of the Chinese gymnasts on the rings as being "silly strong." (Technical term, you know.) One of the releases on the high bar was "crazy difficult." Alas, they stopped before things were "wicked hard" or "mad powerful" or I would have known for sure they were toking up in their booth.

Date: 2008-08-12 08:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] edgehopper.livejournal.com
I watched some of the fencing live; unfortunately, they had no text commentary for the Round of 64, and I wasn't willing to stay up until 4 AM to watch the final rounds. Sabre was far too fast for me to figure out what was going on; epee was cool to watch.

Weightlifting commentary was impressive; they had a former national champion doing text and answering e-mailed questions from the audience.

Date: 2008-08-12 08:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ivy03.livejournal.com
Sabre's confusing because you can only score when you are attacking and there are complicated rules about who has right of way. So if you don't know that, you can be like--but she hit first? Why didn't she get the point? Plus they had those red and green lights which were displaying right of way, but were baffling until I figured out that's what was going on.

Date: 2008-08-15 08:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wellgull.livejournal.com
Aha, whence my dislike of fencing as a sport -- because in 1654, if you actually get stabbed with a sabre, guess what? You still die of an infection six days later!

Ahhh sports.

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