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Olympics: Tatjana Schoenmaker Beats Lilly King in 100 Breast Semifinals
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Most broadcasters reporting on the Tokyo Games will have something in common with TV viewers: Theyâll be watching the action from thousands of miles away.
Of the more than 175 commentators assigned to cover the competition for NBC, roughly the same number who were in Rio for the 2016 Olympics, only 75 will actually be in Japan. The rest will conduct interviews, offer play-by-play analysis and try to capture the excitement without ever having to pull out their passports.
Itâs not as daunting as it sounds.
NBC Sports reporter Randy Moss made it to London for the 2012 Games. But he spent most of his airtime working out of a studio outside the sporting venues, relying on a bank of TV monitors to keep him up to date on several events at once.
Courtesy Betsy Riley
Track and field reporter Lewis Johnson is live on NBC during the third day of the Olympic Track Trials in Eugene, Oregon and he’s perched on the steeplechase barrier in front of the water jump.
He explains the origins of the event, from the 1800s in England. Graphics flash on the screen, showing the specifics of the modern-day version of the steeplechase, 28 barriers over a 1.86-mile race. Johnson describes how the barriers don’t move as he tries, unsuccessfully, to hip check the one he was just sitting on.
Then the segment takes a whimsical turn. He walks around to the water side of the jump, kicks off a pair of green Nikes, and wades in. “Oh, that feels so good, Diff,” he says, talking to Leigh Diffey, the lead announcer at the Trials.
TV viewers will experience an Olympics like no other
TV viewers will experience an Olympics like no other When U.S. athletes win medals, NBC hopes to connect them immediately via satellite with family members and friends. July 22, 2021 7:46am Text size Copy shortlink:
Most broadcasters reporting on the upcoming Tokyo Games will have something in common with TV viewers: They ll be watching the action from thousands of miles away.
Of the more than 175 commentators assigned to cover the competition for NBC, roughly the same number who were in Rio for the 2016 Olympics, only 75 will actually be in Japan. The rest will conduct interviews, offer play-by-play analysis and try to capture the excitement without ever having to pull out their passports.
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