NBC paid $4.4billion for 10 years' worth of broadcast rights to NASCAR. They 
paid about $1.25billion for this year's Summer Olympics. You want to place a 
bet on which takes priority?  :)


Doug Fields

Tampa, FL


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From: daniel anderson

Sent: Tuesday, August 16, 9:10 PM

Subject: Re: [TV orNotTV] NBC's Unforgivable Sin [Was: I tried watching the 
Olympics...]

To: TVorNotTV



I wonder how NBCSN will handle the NASCAR race from Bristol on Saturday Night? 
that might conflict with the "Dream Team"


On Tuesday, August 9, 2016 at 1:04:57 PM UTC-4, PGage wrote:


On Mon, Aug 8, 2016 at 9:35 PM, David Lynch <[email protected]> wrote:



One interesting thing from tonight: the medal round for men's team gymnastics, 
normally a marquee event, didn't start airing until well after 11:00 ET and was 
partly pushed to late night. Of course, it was kind of obvious from the way 
they covered what we saw that there wasn't a comeback from the early stumbles 
that made it into the prime time show (i.e., there were neither leaderboards at 
any point nor any coverage of any of the other teams.)









I had to pull this out for special comment, because I thought what NBC did with 
the Men's Team Gymnastics illustrates the worst abuse of their prime time tape 
delay policy. NBC has embraced the fuzzy line between sports, entertainment and 
profit in their Olympic package, and I am willing to cut them some slack, given 
how much they spend both on the rights and on the production. But if they do 
not honor some basic rules about sports, then the Olympics become a joke; they 
become not just a reality show like "Survivor", but junk TV like "Battle of the 
Network Stars".



We know Men's Gymnastics does not have the appeal the Women's Gymnastics have, 
but it still is a a prime time event, and I have to believe that NBC's initial 
plan was to cover it in prime time. They obviously chose not to (at least, not 
very much of it) once they saw that the US team did not do very well. This is 
ridiculous, first because it just violates what to me is fundamental about 
sports: you don't know the end from the beginning. Your team may win or lose, 
the game may be close or a blowout. More than that, while the US did not do 
well, the event itself was very interesting, with lots of movement and dramatic 
stories. For a little while it looked like the home team Brazil might finish in 
the medals; Japan came from way behind to win the Gold - led by what most 
experts call the greatest male gymnast in history; Russia got Silver after a 
lot of frustration. China came from as far back as the US to get the Bronze. 
And the US, dead last after the first round, actually make it interesting for a 
little while and looked like they might make the podium. 



In other words, it was not a case of the event not being competitive (for many 
years networks might switch from one NFL game to another near the end if it was 
a blowout; this was not like that). The event was very competitive, and 
interesting, with lots of great story lines. It was a case of NBC making the 
cynical calculation that the US not making the podium was a downer of a story 
that might turn viewers off to the whole Olympic vibe. It was the application 
of Trumpism to television sports coverage - an effort to "make America great 
again" by only showing half naked US swimmers and beach volleyball players 
pounding foreigners, and denying any facts that might make Americans feel bad 
about themselves.



NBC's ratings for this Olympics (which, overall, so far I am enjoying) are way 
down. Most of that probably is due to what has been observed here already - a 
critical mass of Americans live much of their lives every day online and 
already know the results when the primetime show comes on. Again, NBC really 
should show the events live on cable, and then do their primetime show like a 
modern, daily "Wide World of Sports".


But I suspect part of the problem is the utter contempt with which NBC holds 
its own viewers. Women may be its core demo, and a larger fraction of women may 
not be traditional sports fans, but women are not morons, and do not need to be 
treated like they can only watch Lifetime soap opera movies. This is what an 
NBC executive had to say:




"The people who watch the Olympics are not particularly sports fans. More women 
watch the [Olympic] games than men, and for the women, they're less interested 
in the result and more interested in the journey. It's sort of like the 
ultimate reality show and mini-series wrapped into one." 






That is some serious sexist bullshit, and I think NBC is paying for it in their 
ratings.







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