It’s rather rare that I agree with the uber-leftist UK Guardian, which is a serious hotbed of Progressivism, particularly in the opinion section and climate cult stuff. In this case, they’re completely correct
NBC paid $7.75bn for its Olympic rights … and we got televisual vomit
If there’s one message the Olympics unfailingly conveys, it’s that elite competition is all about making the right choices. At a certain point every athlete needs to make the decision not to do certain things: the fencer lunging for the head rather than the body, the trampolinist starting their routine on the third jump instead of the fourth, the whitewater slalom all-rounder choosing to focus, early in their career, on the kayak over the canoe.
In 2014 NBC paid $7.75bn for the rights to broadcast the Olympics in the US until 2032. For these Olympics, faced with an inhospitable timezone for US viewers, the host broadcaster has taken the competing athletes’ message of elite discipline in the heat of battle, thrown it out the window, and instead tried to show a bit of everything to every viewer on every available platform all at once. Fitting perhaps for a tournament held in 2021 but still stuck with the previous year’s label, a frazzled atmosphere has suffused American coverage of Tokyo 2020.
From NBC proper to NBCSN, the USA channel, the Olympics channel, and the Golf channel, there has been no shortage of options for Olympics viewing on basic cable. But instead of sticking with single events throughout primetime – introducing them, highlighting the stakes and the protagonists, getting the viewer comfortable with the quirks of competition – NBC has deployed this vast arsenal of broadcast resources to spray America’s households with a kind of inescapable Olympic televisual vomit.
Televisual vomit. Ha!
Viewers have been able to see everything at any given moment (provided you have the Peacock streaming service) while understanding fundamentally nothing about what’s going on. NBC has never met a night of swimming finals that didn’t need to be spliced up with bizarre human interest segments on Caeleb Dressel’s first ride through the Florida wetlands on an airboat, or a routine on the double bars that couldn’t be improved by a quick jump to an ad break and some random highlights of Denmark and Indonesia in the badminton. We all want to know who the athletes are, of course, if only at a superficial level; and since the whole Olympics is so overwhelming, with so much going on at once, some measure of discombobulation from the host broadcaster is always understandable. But when we switch on the Olympics, I think it’s fair to say that most of us want to witness elite athletes perform spectacular feats with their bodies, not hear a series of driving stories about how they handle their daily commute.
I’ve been saying this for decades. It really goes back to when NBC had the Olympics and were doing their “rock and roll highlights” for the 1994 winter games. They spent more and more time on showing highlights, rather than the competitions, along with too much “human interest”. Couple that with so much of the 1994 winter games being pay-per-view, and it got bad. This continued on, and became worse as the years went on. They think people want to know every story of ever athlete. No, we want to watch the competitions, not snippets. We don’t need to hear how the athlete was motivated by someone saying something mean in the 3rd grade. Yes, some stories are great, and they can be told. Quickly. Then show the sports
This happens with other sports, BTW. Broadcasters think people are super interested. Most aren’t. Show us sports.
And US citizens aren’t particularly thrilled with having to pay for the Peacock streaming service when their tax dollars are paying for all the U.S. athletes to compete.
Read: UK Guardian: The Olympics Are Rather Televisual Vomit »