Want to see every recent advance in sports broadcasting rolled into one spectacle?
Tune
in, click on or punch up this summer's Olympic Games in Beijing.
Indeed, the 2008 Games -- carried in the U.S. by NBC, which paid $5.7
billion for exclusive rights -- will feature more HD footage and
broadband coverage than any other sporting event in history.
"This
is the most important sports broadcasting event ever," says Ken
Kirschbaumer, director of information and editorial services for the
Sports Video Group, the industry trade org that's making the Olympics
the centerpiece of NAB's Sports Technology Forum on Wednesday. The
all-day event will cover everything from creating an all-HD
international broadcast center at the Games to mobile production of
Olympics coverage.
"Given that Beijing is such a huge event
involving so many manufacturers and technologies, we thought it would
be a good idea to get them in a room and have them share ideas,"
Kirschbaumer notes.
"These Olympics will provide a huge platform
for both content and technology to be displayed at the highest level,"
adds Ron Bension, CEO of Sportnet, a network of sports-related websites
that includes channels for the U.S. Olympic swim, track-and-field, and
gymnastics teams.
"Anybody who has a cool technology will want to
either debut it or have it highlighted at such an event that's watched
by hundreds of millions of people globally."
Certainly, companies dealing in high-def capture and delivery technologies will enjoy a huge showcase at the Games.
Starting
Aug. 8, when the Olympic flame is lit, the Beijing Olympic Broadcasting
Co., which is handling production operations for a platoon of
international broadcasters, will not have a single standard-def camera
position; instead employing more than 1,000 HD cameras and 60 HD mobile
units while wiring all the Olympics venues with fiber-optic cables
suitable for high-def transmission.
This commitment will allow
the global group of broadcasters who enjoy Olympics rights -- which
includes not only NBC, but Britain's BBC and Japan's NHK, just to name
a few -- to vastly expand their HD offerings.
In previous
Olympics, NBC's HD coverage was limited to a finite number of sports.
During the 2004 Athens Games, for example, the network presented 399
hours of HD coverage of select events -- basketball, diving, soccer,
swimming and track and field -- spread across its broadcast and cable
platforms. For the 2006 Winter Olympics, the Peacock delivered just
over 303 hours of high-def programming.
In Beijing, however, the network will deliver 756 hours of HD, spread across NBC HD, Universal HD and USA HD, with many events broadcasts live in primetime despite a 12-hour time difference between New York and Beijing.
The lofty high-def ambitions of these Olympics, NBC Sports exec producer David Neal
predicted in a keynote address last year, "will be a signature moment
for the adoption of high-definition as a mainstream delivery medium for
consumers."
Meanwhile, these Games could have an equally
innovative impact on broadband video, with the bulk of NBC's
unprecedented 3,600 hours of event coverage -- a trifold uptick from
the 1,210 hours for Athens -- available exclusively online at
NBCOlympics.com
The emergence of a robust streaming video
platform will offer viewers access to more niche-oriented Olympic
sports -- table tennis, anyone? -- that typically can't generate the
Nielsen numbers necessary for broadcast or cable delivery.
"It
will allow what is otherwise a non-economical broadcast to be taken and
really pared down to an economical webcast," says Bension, noting that
the online medium also provides a bigger tent for advertisers typically
shut out of the pricier, less-targeted television broadcasts.
"We're
able to deliver advertisers who are really endemic to niche sports and
bring their audience directly to them as opposed to them putting a
30-second spot on 'Wide World of Sports,'" Bension adds. "We can say to
them, for example, 'Here are females 25-35 interested in gymnastics.' "
© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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