(09-02-2014 21:32 )Tumble_Drier Wrote: (09-02-2014 16:06 )Goodfella3041 Wrote: Great line in yesterday's Times article suggesting that everyone calm down with the doom-and-gloom scaremongering about what a shambles the Sochi Olympics would be...
"The media cycle for every Winter Olympics always begins with 'OMG, they're not ready' and ends with 'OMG, they've run out of condoms in the athletes village'."
To be fair, the accommodation IS a shambles. The Russians have obviously put a huge effort into the actual venues (which are superb) but the behind the scenes stuff is nowhere near finished.
I agree and some of the pictures being tweeted and blogged do look quite damning.
But still, there is a degree of
schadenfreude about the way that the British media in particular reports on foreign Olympics. I was in Vancouver for the first week of those Olympics and -- except for the tragedy of the luger who died in the week before the Games began -- it was, generally speaking, a 24hr carnival atmosphere. But I would go online and read the papers from home and they were reporting scandal and catastrophe at every turn. It took them about 10 days into a two week event to -- almost reluctantly -- admit that the Games were a great success. Which they were.
If the media reported the 2012 Games the same way they reported foreign Games, the headlines would have been:
- Security a shambles and army has to be drafted it at the last minute
- Scandal of empty seats in all the venues
- Hoteliers suffer as Olympic committee block-books 90% of rooms and then dumps half of them weeks before the Games begin
- Central London suffers as tourists stay away
- Ultra patriotic Opening Ceremony full of references and in-jokes that only the British could understand
- Over-the-top triumphalism in support of British athletes
- Etc...
All of which is technically accurate too, but still a million miles from a true representation of what the atmosphere was really like. It was a great Olympics and it was reported as such. The rest of it -- in the grand scheme of things -- was trivial.
But then these reporters go overseas and all they want to do is focus on the negative. Clare Balding actually introduced the BBC recap of the opening ceremony by telling the audience that she called her 7-year-old daughter at home, who watched it on television and said, "
mommy, that looked EXPENSIVE". Which, frankly, says less about the opening ceremony than it does about how miserable it must be growing up in Clare Balding's house.
I think they have a certain number of column inches to fill and TV minutes to broadcast. If British athletes are winning, then that's the story. If they aren't winning, then they won't go with a
"Happy People, Having Fun" headline. It has to be some sort of scandal or crisis.
So I really hope that Team Britain wins a lot of medals -- partly because I like it when our athletes win stuff. But mostly so I don't have to hear our journalists constantly whinging about other stuff.