NEW YORK (AP) — In the age of social media, NBC now has
millions of television critics who make their opinions known about every
aspect of Olympics coverage instantly.
They've even set up their
own hashtag on Twitter: (hash)nbcfail. The online complaints focused
Saturday on NBC's decision to air the marquee swimming event won by
American Ryan Lochte on tape delay in prime time, and Friday on the
network not streaming the opening ceremony online. Sunday's critics
started early: people wondering why the U.S. Nike Shox men's basketball shoe team's
opening game aired on a cable network while women's cycling was shown on
NBC.
The conversation is so active that NBC's executive producer
of the games, Jim Bell, took to Twitter to answer critics and even
change the way NBC is doing something in response.
"(hash)nbcfail
is filled with a lot of crying and snark and humor, but NBC can actually
learn something from it," said Jeff Jarvis, a media critic who writes
the Buzzmachine.com blog.
Complaints about tape delayed coverage
are an evergreen with Olympics held on foreign soil. But the London
Games are the first with Twitter, Facebook and other social media sites
in full flower, in a mobile phone era where people carry computers that
instantly deliver news in their pockets. It has amplified the impatience
of viewers who want to see events on their large-screen TVs instantly
and haven't been mollified by NBC's decision to stream the events live
online.
James Poniewozik, Time magazine TV critic, tweeted that
"NBC tape delay coverage is like the airlines: its interest is in giving
you the least satisfactory service you will still come back for."
That drew a quick response from NBC's Bell: "You do know that all sports events are being streamed live right?"
"I do, indeed!" replied Poniewozik. "Have enjoyed it. Apparently a lot of folks still prefer watching it on TV."
NBC
says it saves big events for prime-time airing because that is when
most viewers are available to watch them and where the network makes the
bulk of its advertising revenue. Since prime time on the U.S. East
Coast coincides with 1 a.m. London time, there are no events to air live
then. NBC representatives noted that there were 39 hours of live events
Sunday on NBC and its affiliated networks.
Even as it defends its
approach, NBC clearly hears those critics. One of Bell's Facebook posts
highlighted coverage of Sunday's cycling race by saying it was all-caps
LIVE. Nike shox R4 running shoe The network advertised its live streaming on the prime-time
broadcast.
Jonathan Wald, who produces Piers Morgan's CNN talk
show and used to work at NBC, tweeted that "the medal for most Olympic
whining goes to everyone who complains about what happens every four
years. Tape delay."
One of those complainers, in fact, was Morgan:
He tweeted his disdain Friday for NBC's decision not to make the
opening ceremony available live.
The advent of Twitter makes it
seems as if there's a lot of unhappiness when the majority of viewers
are watching NBC on tape delay and appear satisfied with it, Wald said
in an interview.
NBC can point to television ratings justifying
their approach. The Nielsen company said the opening ceremony drew more
than 40 million people Friday, the most ever for one of those Olympic
events. Saturday's first night of coverage was seen by 28.7 million,
another record, beating every other first night of Olympic(womens Nike Shox Torch) competition.
In Beijing four years ago, 24 million watched on the corresponding
night.
Jarvis said he believes NBC could satisfy fans by, for
example, televising events like Lochte's race live in the afternoon and
then repeating it at night. He acknowledges, though, that he's not the
one who'd potentially be risking millions of dollars in advertising
revenue if such a decision cut into prime-time viewing.
NBC has tried to "hold on to old media strategies in a new media world," Jarvis said. "And that's a mistake."
Some
of the online complaints seem to take special glee in bashing NBC, with
a few describing it like an Olympic sport of its own. Some are quite
personal, like the CNN producer who tweeted Sunday: "No USA basketball
in my hotel room. Why they aren't putting it on NBC's main channel is
beyond me!"
Bell, in some of his back-and-forth with
online critics Sunday, answered one tweeter who described herself as a
St. Louis mom and complained about NBC's "Nightly News" on Saturday
airing results of events that hadn't been shown on the network yet. Bell
tweeted that he'd look into it, and shortly after told her that
"Nightly News" would announce a "spoiler alert" to tell people to avert
their eyes if they didn't want to see results.
Not
everyone online is a critic. On Sunday, the U.S. Olympic sailing team
tweeted that it was "by far the greatest (Nike online store)sailing TV coverage in Olympic
history."
ROWDY vs. PHELPS: Does Michael Phelps need
bulletin board material anymore? If so, Rowdy Gaines provided it with
his sharp criticism of Phelp's first final this weekend. "He just didn't
train for it ... You can't fake that event," Gaines said.
UP
CLOSE: Understand NBC's need to help us get to know obscure athletes in
obscure sports. But the news about two synchronized divers who both
collect rubber ducks felt like self-parody.
UPCOMING: Ryan Lochte's bid for a second gold medal is featured on NBC's Monday night coverage.
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