On Tue, Jul 27, 2021 at 4:12 PM PGage <[email protected]> wrote:

> Adam, do you think it is this Discovery coverage that NBCOLYMPICS.COM is
> streaming? The commentators all seem to have some sort of British accent
> (my ear is not good enough to rule out an occasional Australian or South
> African, and there was at least one Irish accent, though not sure which
> one).
>
>
No - I think that mix of accents, which will include people from multiple
English-speaking countries, is being provided by Olympic Broadcasting
Services (OBS). They're the company that provides everyone with the basic
feeds of the sport. Obviously larger broadcasters can supplement those
feeds with their own camera positions, close-ups of coaches etc. But the
idea is that if you buy coverage, you get a basic minimum.

One part of that offer is what in the trade is usually called a "World
Feed" commentary team. And I think that the majority of sports get these
commentators. When someone hear earlier this year posted the big NBC press
release about who was calling what, that release noted that there would be
some "World Feed" commentary teams in place. Tell-tale signs are neutrality
about favoured nations (although they may cover English-speaking countries'
competitors a little more), and no reference to the network they're being
carried on.

I watched the mountain bike races and there was a South African man and a
Australian woman doing the coverage. In the UK, both Eurosport and the BBC
used that World Feed commentary as neither really had their own experts. I
also saw some of the Women's Triathlon earlier on Eurosport and that too
sounded like a World Feed to me (Irish man/Australian woman, I think).

One key thing to note is that the World Feed commentators from OBS are
often at the venues - which is much rarer this year. And even in normal
years, a lot of commentary comes from booths in the massive media centre,
rather than actually in booths at the events themselves. I'm not sure how
many people NBC have in Tokyo, but many events on the BBC and Eurosport are
being called from the UK/France (Eurosport's HQ is in Paris) rather than in
Japan. That's pretty unusual. Obviously there are still reporters on the
ground for interviews/features. But far fewer.

If you want to learn lots of technical detail about how OBS operates,
there's a lot here:
https://www.sportsvideo.org/2021/07/27/live-from-tokyo-olympics-obs-technical-area-offers-inside-look-at-how-the-games-come-together/

It's all being made in 4K, although in the UK nobody is showing it that
way. The audio is captured 5.1.4. The 5.1 is regular Surround Sound and the
.4 is for "ceiling" speakers - think Dolby Atmos without the branding.
Apparently there are 16 "channels" of sport being produced from Tokyo. So
that's the maximum number of simultaneous feeds you could be watching!



Adam

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