There is a discussion of this on the UKMA "metric Views" board as well.  The 
graphics are provided by the Olympic organizers or the common video feed 
provided to all broadcasters, not NBC.  Provided there are som full size caps 
in the line, it is evident the units are "small caps" which is how lower case 
is rendered in that font.  However, the font is unsuitable for SI quantitites.  
It is Italic rather than upright, sans serif rather than Roman, and does not 
have true lower case.

--- On Fri, 8/3/12, Zach Rodriguez <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Zach Rodriguez <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [USMA:51818] Re: NBC Olympic Track & Field Coverage (Field)
To: [email protected]
Cc: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, August 3, 2012, 8:27 PM


During weightlifting, I heard the commentators talk about kilograms only 
(frequently using the widely-known slang term "kilos") much more often than 
kilograms and pounds or pounds only.


It's not track and field, but NBC archery coverage shows the wind speed in 
metres per second.


It's encouraging to hear the swimming commentators accepting and using metric 
only, even when estimating distances—that is, saying things like "... the last 
few metres!". This is in stark contrast to what I witnessed, about a year ago, 
while watching a rugby match with English commentators. One of the men said 
something similar to "He was only a couple of yards away from the 22 m line... 
!" That made no sense to me.


What annoys me is NBC's on-screen graphics. They make great use of small caps, 
which in itself is fine, usually helping to differentiate the first name and 
last name of the athletes (especially the case with the Chinese), but they also 
use small caps to improperly format unit symbols rather than using lowercase 
and a space between the quantity and symbol. Occasionally, if a title is in all 
caps, they will unfortunately capitalize the unit symbol.


So, on the network, one may see graphics that read:


"WOMEN'S 10000M" instead of "WOMEN'S 10 000 m"


"MEN'S 100M BUTTERFLY" instead of "MEN'S 100 m BUTTERFLY"


"SNATCH: 1̶2̶5̶K̶G̶" instead of "SNATCH: 1̶2̶5̶ ̶k̶g̶"


"2.0                          "2.0 
 M/S"     instead of      m/s" 


"500M" instead of "500 m"




It's a relatively minor problem, and I am glad they are using metric, but it's 
still an incorrect practice.









On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 3:55 PM, John M. Steele <[email protected]> 
wrote:






True, when the distance is the name of description of the event, (swimming, 
diving, track, rowing, weight categories as in judo) there seems to be little 
interest in using Customary.  One exception to that is long road races 
(marathon, bicycling, etc).
 
However, in field events, the distance is the performance measure and 
(generally) different for each athlete.  US Track & Field gives priorities to 
Customary reporting of field events (although it encourages dual if time 
permits).  Weightlifting recommends the weight be reporting in both pounds and 
kilograms (I'm not sure which is accurate, I assume the kilograms).

--- On Fri, 8/3/12, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:51815] Re: NBC Olympic Track & Field Coverage (Field)
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Cc: "Valerie Antoine" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, August 3, 2012, 3:28 PM




Apparently, the practice differs according to the sport.  In swimming and 
diving, I have heard nothing but metric.  In weightlifting, the weight 
categories were given only in kilograms, and the weights lifted primarily in 
kilograms, with a few inch-pound conversions thrown in.

============
On Fri, 3 Aug 2012, John M. Steele wrote:

> So far, NBC has only broadcast part of one field event in their coverage 
> today; the qualifying round
> of men's shot put.
>  
> As expected, the announcers have avoided telling us the true performance and 
> settled for the
> approximate conversion to feet and inches, in spite of lines on the field 
> being marked in metric. 
> Very confusing, as always.
>  
> Oddly, the NBC website gives only official results in metric:
> Overal schedule: 
> http://www.nbcolympics.com/track-and-field/results-schedules/index.html
> Shotput: 
> http://www.nbcolympics.com/track-and-field/event/men-shot-put/phase=atm051900/index.html
>  
> Just as an example, the performance of Reese Hoffa (winner in group B) was 
> broadcast as 70-01, but
> his measured performance is 21.36 m.
>  
> Hey NBC, the Olympics is totally metric, the athlete's performance IS the 
> story, hence important to
> the story, so it's OK to report metric.  Please tell us the athlete's true 
> (measured) performance
> first, then throw in a conversion if you are really convinced you need to.



-- 
Zach Rodriguez
http://twitter.com/#!/metricamerica
http://twitter.com/#!/zachrodriguez

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