Title: The Olympics Games
1The Olympics Games
- Television and the Olympic Games
2Television is the dominant medium that impacts
the Olympic Games
3History of Television
- Berlin, 1936
- 25 broadcast parlors in Berlin
- 3 TV cameras (1 live camera)
- 138 viewing hours
- 162,000 viewers
- No broadcast fees to IOC
4History of Television
- London, 1948
- Local broadcast zone (50 mile radius of London)
- 64 viewing hours (programming not live)
- 600,000 viewers
- Broadcast fee established in concept (3,000 US)
5History of Television
- Helsinki, 1952
- First attempt at Broadcasting Rights negotiations
(FAILED) - Melbourne, 1956
- Second attempt at Broadcasting Rights
negotiations (FAILED) - ISSUE
- TV Networks rejected IOCs Demands
- Olympics were news, not entertainment
- RESULTS
- Olympic Games blackouts in Major TV markets
6History of Television
- Sophia Bulgaria, 1957 (53rd IOC Session)
- Rule 49 1st IOC Policy on Broadcast Rights
- Composed by Brundage and Otto Mayer
- Host cities negotiated deals
- IOC distributed revenue (no policy)
- 9 minutes/day Royalty-free coverage
7Avery Brundage
8Television History
- ISSUES 1960 and early 1970s
- Satellite Technology
- IFs dissatisfaction
- GAIF (power struggle)
- IOC resistance to enter TV Economy
- Broadcast rights versus installation fees
9History of Television
- Rome Formula, 1966
- 1/3 of 1st million btw IOC, IFs, NOCs
- 2/3s of 1st million to OCOG
- 2/3 of 2nd million to IOC, IFs, NOCs
- 1/3 of 2nd million to OCOG
- 1/3 of every subsequent million to IOC, IFs, NOCs
- 2/3 of every subsequent million to OCOG
- Cap on IOC revenue after 3 million
- Revision
10History of Television
- Rome, 1960
- 1st live Broadcast in Europe, 18 countries
- Delayed coverage in US, Canada, Japan
- Hosts give 50,000 to IOC (IFs get none)
- Tokyo, 1964
- Global satellite
- Mexico City, 1968
- 1st live colour telecast
- 1st use of slow motion replay
- ABC pays 4.5 million
- Sapporo, 1972
- 1st General feed for selective broadcasting
11History of Television
- Munich, 1972
- OCOG claims expenses prior to submitting revenue
reports - IFs reach compromise for distribution
- 50 equally
- 50 proportionately (based-on gate receipts)
-
12History of Television
- 1974, IOC Television Sub-Committee
- EBU members
- US Network members
- 1983, IOC Television Right Negotiating Committee,
- Dick Pound (Canada), Chair
- 1984, IOC Joins OCOG in negotiation process
- ABC wins Calgary Bid, 309 Million
- Blind bidding process
- EBU wins Calgary Bid, 5.7 Million
- Awarded by Samaranch
- 1988, Olympic Winter Games extended over 3
weekends
13History of Television
- 1988, USOC demands proportion of TV profits
- 1988, USOC negotiates 10 of US TV Rights revenue
(in perpetuity) - 1991, The Olympic Broadcast Act, US Congress (not
passed, but revisited in 1996) - Transfers negotiation of US Rights from IOC and
OCOG to USOC - 1995, 1st Long-term Rights Deal with NBC
- Sydney 2000, Salt Lake 2002
- 1996, NBC, USOC, IOC agreed on 2.3 billion
Rights Package 2004-2008
14USA versus International Fees
15Summer Olympic Games TV Revenue
16Winter Olympic Games TV Revenue
17Distribution of TV Revenues
18At the Olympic Games
- OCOG Requirements
- Working facilities (International Broadcasting
Centre IBC, Main Press Centre MPC) - Accommodation
- Transportation
- Telecommunications
- 12,000 Media Accreditations Summer
- 7000 Media Accreditations, Winter
19Host Broadcaster Responsibilities (Case Study)
- Calgary, 1988, CVT HB
- Plan, create and manage the IBC, Big Four
Building - TV and Radio Studios
- Control rooms
- Technical rooms
- Master Control Room
- Shipping and Receiving
- Banks, Lounges, Offices
- Provide full coverage of all events
20Broadcast Relations Division of OCO 88
- Responsibilities
- Quality Control of Host Broad
- Specify Technical Standards
- Facilitate Relations btw HB and OCO 88
- Facilitate Relations btw HB and Rights Holders
21TV and Athletes at the Games
- Three Locations for TV/athlete exchange
- Sport competition (HB)
- Mix Zone (NOC, IF, OCOG, Rights Holders)
- IBC (HB, NOC, Rights Holders)
22Gruneau Televsion, The Olympics and The
Question of Ideology
- Televisions elaboration and selection of
preferred emphases and meanings, its favoured
narratives, its management of contradictory
themes and values, can all be seen as part of a
complex process through which some understandings
of sport, the body, consumer culture, and the
pursuit of excellence are naturalized while
others are marginalized, downgraded, or ignored.
23Gruneau Preferred understandings, discourses,
etc.
- Two levels of discursive layers
- Technical
- Programmatic
- Focus of Mediation (from last class)
- The Movement
- The Festival
- The Sport/Competition
- The Athlete/Personality
24GruneauPreferred understandings, discourses, etc.
- Sport is a timeless and universal expression of
humans need to strive for excellence. - The history of sport is emptied of conflict and
causation and reduced to a chronicle of Romantic
images and personalities. - Criticism This neutralized the fact that sport
has been the locus of conflict between class,
ethnicity, race, and gender
25Gruneau
- Collaborative Communicative Process
- Broadcasters/ Audience Markets
- Unequal collaboration that supports dominant
perspectives - What type of sport is being promoted?
- The dangers of apparent fairness!
- Stupid realism of Olympic broadcasting
- Discourse of modern publicity
- The realm of common sense
- A pervasive cultural reality
26Gruneau Preferred understandings, discourses,
etc.
- Olympic Television Broadcasts Naturalize
- A social definition of sport that emphasizes
specialization, record setting, commercialism - Narrow concept of bodily/physical norms
- Privatized consumption of sporting good/lifestyle
- Sports important relationship with nation states
units or power - Meritocracy as a means of reconciling rival
claims of freedom and democracy
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