J
Joseph_Gallant
Guest
NBC's Olympics Press Kit Is Online: Will We See Fewer of Those Annoying "Up Close And Personal" Features??
NBC has posted on it's Media Village website (this is a PDF file) the network's press kit for the upcoming Winter Olympics in Turin/Torino.
There seems to be good news on pages 7 and 13 of the online press kit: NBC claims that they will continue a trend started in 2002 (Salt Lake Winter Games) and 2004 (Athens Summer Games) and present fewer of those "Up Close And Personal" features than in the past. Those "Up Close And Personal" features that are produced, according to the network, will be shorter in duration. The network promises that more of the "storytelling" will be given by the announcers at the event venues during coverage of those events.
By the way, ABC actually invented the idea of "Up Close And Personal" features during the 1960's; but I recall that there were only a couple of them each night and they seldom ran more than a minute-and-a-half each, if even that long. And when ABC did those features, they almost never descended to the level of flag-waving, soap-operaish segments that ran on and on, taking time away from the showing of actual Olympic competition, that this kind of feature has become since 1992.
Although I'll only believe it when I see it, dare we dream that NBC has finally gotten the message from angry viewers and has cut back on those syrupy "Up Close And Personal" features that have made the Olympics look more like "Days Of Our Lives" than a sports event??
NBC has posted on it's Media Village website (this is a PDF file) the network's press kit for the upcoming Winter Olympics in Turin/Torino.
There seems to be good news on pages 7 and 13 of the online press kit: NBC claims that they will continue a trend started in 2002 (Salt Lake Winter Games) and 2004 (Athens Summer Games) and present fewer of those "Up Close And Personal" features than in the past. Those "Up Close And Personal" features that are produced, according to the network, will be shorter in duration. The network promises that more of the "storytelling" will be given by the announcers at the event venues during coverage of those events.
By the way, ABC actually invented the idea of "Up Close And Personal" features during the 1960's; but I recall that there were only a couple of them each night and they seldom ran more than a minute-and-a-half each, if even that long. And when ABC did those features, they almost never descended to the level of flag-waving, soap-operaish segments that ran on and on, taking time away from the showing of actual Olympic competition, that this kind of feature has become since 1992.
Although I'll only believe it when I see it, dare we dream that NBC has finally gotten the message from angry viewers and has cut back on those syrupy "Up Close And Personal" features that have made the Olympics look more like "Days Of Our Lives" than a sports event??