I'm still not surprised that NBC, as an American network, uses US Customary 
units as much as possible. 

However, there has been talk from correspondents in the UK that local coverage 
oriented towards Britons (rather than a world audience) typically uses 
Imperial. 

Can anyone over there tell me which units the local BBC and local media outlets 
are using to cover the Olympic events? 

Cheers, 
Ezra 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Martin Vlietstra" <[email protected]> 
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, February 15, 2010 1:31:41 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific 
Subject: [USMA:46655] RE: NBC's Annoying Luge Coverage at the Olympics 




At the Athens Olympics, the British woman’s marathon hopeful, Paula Radcilffe 
was suffering from a stomach bug. Although she led for much of the race, things 
caught up with her and she visibly got to the 36 km mark (denoted by a huge 
“36”). She stopped, summoned up strength, and then withdrew a short distance 
afterwards. Even though millions of Britons saw this on television and the 
commentator used the word “36 kilometre mark”, the press was divided as to 
whether she had covered 21 miles, 21.5 miles or 22 miles. 






From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
John M. Steele 
Sent: 15 February 2010 00:01 
To: U.S. Metric Association 
Subject: [USMA:46650] NBC's Annoying Luge Coverage at the Olympics 





In the end, the luge is scored entirely by summing finish times. However, 
during the run, some split times and speeds are available. The speeds, like 
everything else are SI, kilometers per hour, and NBC flashes those graphics on 
screen. Apparently the announcers get instant coversion and yack endlessly in 
miles per hour while you are looking at on screen graphices in km/h. The 
disconnect is both annoying and confusing. 





NBC: Please let have the REAL results. Don't bother converting. 


(You will be less confused if you mute the announcers and just read on-screen 
graphics.) 





Fortunately, there are fewer Winter events they can screw up with unnecessary 
conversion. compared to the Summer Olympics.

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