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TV TATTLE

There’s something uniquely frustrating about watching NBC milk American athletes for all they’re worth

  • "As has become Olympics tradition, NBC has spent every night of its primetime coverage unveiling the stories of top U.S. athletes like it’s selling a weepy drama about their lives," says Caroline Framke, noting that alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin is "trying to mount a comeback through debilitating grief over the recent death of her father, whose grin always used to wait for her beyond the finish line. For NBC, these segments represent 'heartwarming' tales of resilience and pride, especially if the athletes involved manage to beat the odds and land a medal. When they don’t, the dial turns to 'heartbreaking' as the network zooms in even further on crestfallen faces to make sure the audience understands the depths of their devastation. Emphasizing failures as much as victories isn’t a new phenomenon to NBC’s Olympics coverage, but it’s uncomfortable to witness every time. NBC spends so much time finding human interest stories at the Olympics, but when one of the athletes actually reveals just how human they are, the commentators fall all over themselves in shock. While creating inspiring narratives is a mainstay of sports coverage (not to mention reality competition shows in general), there’s something uniquely frustrating about watching NBC, the sole U.S. broadcaster of the Olympics, milk American athletes for all they’re worth. After days of telling audiences about how much Shiffrin’s struggled since her dad’s death, watching her barely make it through a live Feb. 8 interview after her second failed event was genuinely crushing — especially as it became clear that NBC had no idea how to handle it...Shiffrin and other spotlighted athletes like her know exactly how much time and effort NBC has put into promoting her. Realizing how many eyes are on her performances, and how the network’s pushing her to the forefront with all the bells and whistles at its disposal, only spikes the pressure even more. And what did Shiffrin get for her moment of honesty? A brief pause, before the interviewer finally released her with a jarringly chipper, 'thanks for stopping by!'"

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    • NBC's Winter Olympics viewership is historically terrible -- but that isn't necessarily a bad thing: "Ratings for almost every kind of TV programming have been falling in recent years, but few have slid as far, as fast or from such commanding heights as the Olympics," says Paul Farhi. "NBC has lost nearly half the viewers who tuned in to opening night as recently as eight years ago. Once a towering TV event, the games now look merely … popular. By comparison, the drama series NCIS averaged 12.6 million viewers each week last season. The diminished TV audience continues a downward trend that began even before 2014 — the year that NBC’s parent, Comcast Corp., paid the IOC $7.75 billion for the rights to carry every Olympics from 2022 through 2032. But TV is only part of the story. While news coverage has focused on the distressed television ratings, NBC has quietly built a broad Olympics following online by spreading clips, interviews and highlights across TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and other digital platforms. The Olympics has also helped boost its Peacock streaming service, which now has 9 million paid accounts. NBC hasn’t disclosed how many digital viewers it has, in part because it hasn’t been able to track all of the clicks on its Olympics content, especially on social media. But the online audience is 'huge, growing and additive' to the number watching on a TV set, said Mark Lazarus, chairman of television and streaming at NBCUniversal, NBC’s parent."
    • Peacock has figured out how to cover the Olympics: "Why is it so fabulous? First, and most basic: It works!" says June Thomas. "In 2018, the Peacock user interface was a horrifying mess. In 2022, it’s a breeze. Using the Peacock app on Apple TV, I can easily navigate from sport to sport, event to event, and round to round. Take curling, a sport I claim to be a fan of yet watch only every four years. At each stage of the now-completed mixed doubles competition, I could see the upcoming schedule, watch live matches, or catch up on any contest that had already been decided. I’ll admit that sounds basic—the bare minimum that an Olympics app should do. But after the nightmare of four years ago, the fact that Peacock does what it should is a delightful surprise."
    • The rationalizing and compartmentalizing that sports tend to require isn’t working for the Beijing Winter Olympics: "Think whatever you will about any of it, but the line between the Beijing Olympics and a bunch of more important events is verging on nonexistent," says Alex Kirshner. "The Beijing Games are the purest, most uncut version of a (correct) worldview that says sports and the things happening around them cannot be separated. The events at issue here are a pandemic that has killed millions of people, an in-progress genocide at the hands of the host, and nations pointing guns and sanction threats at one another. Some people would rather watch a lower-stakes reality show. Others would rather watch the world’s best winter-sport athletes show off their crafts at the highest level on behalf of their countries. That’s hard to begrudge, too. An open question is whether future presentations of the Games will break down these walls in the same way. The pandemic will hopefully abate one day, and that will breathe some life back into the festivities, which also lacked in Tokyo. The next few Olympic sites are in democratic countries that are not <i>currently committing genocide (France, Italy, the United States), though we’ll see how America is doing on the small-d democratic front by the time the Los Angeles Games arrive in 2028. That will all mean less media coverage about the ethics of the Games being hosted where they are, but it’s not as if the Olympics can slide into a silo even then. The Games have long been controversial, especially in recent years with rising awareness about the environmental, displacement, and corruption issues that crop up in seemingly every host nation. Democratic countries can make their own Olympic problems for those who live in them, and the International Olympic Committee is not suddenly going to become a noncorrupt, upstanding organization. Even if it wanted to, its weak response to the Peng allegation demonstrated its lack of any real spine."
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    TOPICS: Winter Olympics, NBC, Mikaela Shiffrin, NBC Sports