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Author Topic: Olympics 2010 Vancouver  (Read 1462 times)
cbassn
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« on: January 29, 2010, 05:55:58 AM »

http://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2010/01/28/nbc-expects-200-million-viewers-to-watch-the-vancouver-olympics/


 January 28, 2010, 2:30 PM ET


                     NBC Expects 200 Million Viewers to Watch the Vancouver Olympics

 

The Olympic Flame lit in Victoria Park, London during the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Torch Relay on December 24, 2009 in London, Ontario. With the Vancouver Olympics two weeks away, the pressure is on for broadcast partner NBC Universal, just coming off the embarrassment of their feuding late-night hosts and admissions that the company will lose money on the Games,
which start Feb. 12. great

“I’m very confident we’ll do well from a ratings standpoint,” NBC research guru Alan Wurtzel told reporters Thursday. He said he expects 200 million people to watch at least parts of the Vancouver Games over the 17-day telecast. That number would be fewer than the 215 million who tuned in for the Beijing Olympics, but more than the 184 million from the prior winter Olympics in Torino, Italy.

Mr. Wurtzel said “American Idol” and other popular TV shows may eat into Olympics viewership, but he said, “The Olympics is the ultimate reality show.”

Mr. Wurtzel, NBC Universal’s president of research, said measurements of consumers’ awareness of the Games and intent to view them are “huge,” but it might take another week or so for people to throw themselves fully into Olympic fever. “We’ve always found America has to get past the Super Bowl,” before they turn full attention to the Olympics, he said. (TV watchers: the Super Bowl is Feb. 7.)

In a wide-ranging discussion of NBC’s plans to track how people follow the Games on TV, online, on mobile devices and anywhere else (acronyms like TAMi and iMMi were tossed around liberally), Mr. Wurtzel outlined new research methods to better understand how much Olympics people catch online or on smartphones, and why: is it to re-watch their favorite snowboarder taking a nasty tumble, or is it to skip TV entirely?

Mr. Wurtzel said it was “absurd” to think online video viewing erodes TV viewing—practically an axiom among some TV-industry watchers, but an idea the TV companies dispute. “It used to be that media was a zero-sum game,” he said, but now people will watch Michael Phelps swimming on TV, and surf the Web at the same time to read up on his Subway sandwich sponsorship or watch his prior races. “It’s not that people will forsake one medium for another.”

“What I want us to be is the smartest media company on the planet,” Mr. Wurtzel said of all the research methods.


  
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cbassn
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« Reply #1 on: January 29, 2010, 11:43:14 PM »

                                http://www.vancouver2010.com/
 08


The Official Site for 2010 Winter Olympic in Vancouver


You can check: Results, schedule, etc.
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cbassn
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« Reply #2 on: January 29, 2010, 11:47:12 PM »

                           
       cheer                        http://www.nbcolympics.com/


NBC is covering the Olympic on TV,  check here for the broadcasting schedule.
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cbassn
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« Reply #3 on: February 04, 2010, 04:06:44 AM »

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100203/ap_on_sp_ol/oly_vancouver_security_3/print


 
                            Obama skipping Olympics eases security concerns



Wed Feb 3, 6:37 pm ET
 
VANCOUVER, British Columbia – President Barack Obama's decision not to attend the Winter Olympics has eased some of the security concerns, although organizers still expect at least 40 foreign dignitaries needing special protection.

Assistant Commissioner Bud Mercer of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Wednesday that security will be ready for their arrival, along with the estimated 5,500 athletes and coaches, 11,000 media and 350,000 visitors expected to descend on Vancouver in the coming weeks.

"It would have made things more complex but we would have done it," Mercer said, when asked about Obama's decision not to attend.

Security is costing Canadians almost $609 million, four times the original estimate.

The opening ceremony isn't until Feb. 12, but already Vancouver is beginning to resemble an armed camp. Several streets are closed, helicopters patrol the skies and security perimeters have been established around 80 sport and non-sport venues.

Mercer said a 30-mile-radius restriction on aircraft has been established, centered around the athletes' villages in Vancouver and Whistler. Those restrictions will not affect operations at Vancouver International Airport, where athletes and officials will arrive at secured zones.

"The air space gets more restricted the closer you get to the center," Mercer said.

Mercer said 6,000 police officers from across Canada are in Vancouver, assisted by 4,800 private security officers tasked primarily with spectator screening at venues. The screening will be similiar to that done at airports.

Another 4,500 members of the Canadian armed forces are providing marine, Alpine and air security throughout the region, and Canadian Rear Admiral Tyrone Pile said NORAD forces are available should any emergency require U.S. participation.

"We have planned for a medium threat level," said Mercer, adding the threat remains low.

That assurance comes despite the disappearance of 6,000 bags of ammonium nitrate, the same material used in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombings. Officials at the Kinder Morgan company claimed the ammonium nitrate was missing because of a "clerical" error and an investigation continues, but Mercer said he believes there is nothing criminal about the situation.

Mercer said the tight security will not be so intrusive as to deny protesters the right to lawful and peaceful demonstrations, which was the source of controversy and confusion for many during the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Mercer said safe assembly areas have been established within sight of venues as directed by the International Olympic Committee.

"If it's legal now, it will be legal during 2010," he said.

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cbassn
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« Reply #4 on: February 12, 2010, 04:15:29 AM »

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/a-global-digital-work-of-art-will-emerge-from-the-vancouver-2010-olympic-games-84157527.html

 
  

   A Global Digital Work of Art Will Emerge from the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games
 
Think of it as modern-day Impressionism with digital people instead of paint


VANCOUVER, Feb. 11 /PRNewswire/ --


 People around the world can contribute to and participate in an unprecedented event in Olympic history with just with the tips of their fingers.  

The Canadian Tourism Commission (CTC) in collaboration with the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad and its digital edition (CODE) is inviting everyone watching, listening, or reading about their favorite athletes or sports to receive a unique digital memento that will be sent out "in the moment" while billions of eyes are focused on the pageantry of the Opening Ceremony.


To be part of this extraordinary event, all people need to do is head to  code.vancouver2010.com   now to access the invite.

On February 12during the Opening Ceremony, an official Olympic souvenir will be delivered digitally to those that have signed up for the experience as well as a coveted digital ticket to a global social media event that will give participants the opportunity to be a virtual participant at the Closing Ceremony.



Contact:
 >
Jitka Licenik
 >
Corporate Communications Advisor
 >
Canadian Tourism Commission
 >
Tel 604-638-2482
 >
licenik.jitka@ctc-cct.ca
 >

 >
Ernst Flach
 >
Executive Director, Business Development
 >
Canadian Tourism Commission
 >
Tel 604 638 8375
 >
flach.ernst@ctc-cct.ca
 >

 >
Susan Iris
 >
Vice President, Strategic Initiatives and 2010 Winter Games
 >
Canadian Tourism Commission
 >
Tel 604-638-8391
 >
iris.susan@ctc-cct.ca
 >
>

SOURCE Canadian Tourism Commission

RELATED LINKS
http://code.vancouver2010.com/       great here is the link


  
Find this article at:
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/a-global-digital-work-of-art-will-emerge-from-the-vancouver-2010-olympic-games-84157527.html  
 
« Last Edit: February 12, 2010, 04:18:04 AM by cbassn » Logged
cbassn
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« Reply #5 on: February 12, 2010, 01:55:54 PM »

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE61B40S20100212


    03   

                                Luge Olympian killed in training crash


 3:41pm EST


WHISTLER (Reuters) - Georgian luge competitor Nodar Kumaritashvili died on Friday after a training crash at the Vancouver Winter Olympics, Georgian Olympic delegation head Irakly Japaridze said.

The 21-year-old was thrown off the sled as it bounced over the rim of the track at the Whistler Sliding Center at around 90mph and slammed into a pole by the side of the course.

"Unfortunately he died," Japaridze told Reuters.

The Games officially open later on Friday.
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Mizar
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« Reply #6 on: February 12, 2010, 06:35:46 PM »

Tragic, he may have been dead before he hit the post, the 360 spiral flip after he left the sled may have broken his neck, the impact certainly broke his back, and may have torn the Abdominal Aorta.
  Let's hope this is the first and last Fatality.

  Mizar
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cobalt
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« Reply #7 on: February 12, 2010, 07:22:44 PM »


I wonder if safety nets, placed above each side of the track, might have saved his life?  Of course, he was going over 80 m.p.h. so maybe nothing would have helped.
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cbassn
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« Reply #8 on: February 13, 2010, 01:24:01 AM »

 http://www.reuters.com/assets/print?aid=USTRE61B4W820100213


                                  Factbox: Games-related deaths
 12:34am EST
2-13-10

(Reuters) - List of Olympic Games-related deaths after Georgian luge competitor Nodar Kumaritashvili died in a training crash for the Vancouver Winter Games on Friday.

According to Olympic historian David Wallechinsky, there has been no athlete deaths   during  official  Winter   Olympics competition.

There have been two in  Summer   Olympics competition.



1912 Summer Olympics - Stockholm

Portuguese runner Francisco Lazaro was the first athlete to die in modern Olympic competition, when he suffered a heart attack while running the marathon. He was 21.



1960 Summer Olympics - Rome

Danish cyclist Knud Enemark Jensen collapsed during his race under the influence of drugs and later died in hospital. He was 23.



1964 Winter Olympics - Innsbruck, Austria

Polish-born British luger Kazimierz Kay-Skrzypecki was killed on a trial run on the Olympic course at Igls two weeks before the start of the Games.

The Games' downhill competition was also marred by the death of 19-year-old Australian Ross Milne, who died on a practice run after flying off the course and hitting a tree.

Weather conditions were cited as factors in both tragedies.



1988 Winter Olympics - Calgary, Canada

Austria's leading orthopaedic surgeon and Olympic team doctor, Joerg Oberhammer died on the slopes when he collided with a skier and fell beneath a snow grooming machine, dying instantly.



1992 Winter Olympics - Albertville, France

Swiss skier Nicholas Bochatay crashed into a snow-grooming machine on a public trail while training in the closing days of the Games and died.



2010 Winter Olympics - Vancouver

Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili died in a training crash, which saw him thrown off his sled as it bounced over the rim of the track at around 90mph and slammed into a pole by the side of the course. He was 21.
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Mizar
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« Reply #9 on: February 14, 2010, 09:44:16 PM »

I am enjoying the Olympics, more than the events however, I am enjoying all the international folks who are in town, showing their country colors, and providing more color to this magnificent City.
 Mizar
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cbassn
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« Reply #10 on: February 15, 2010, 03:25:21 AM »

 cheer  Sounds like fun Mizar. 

 What do the Guest from the other Countries think of B.C. and the Olympics so far?
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