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Olympics on television

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International television series
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Olympic Games
Olympic Rings
Main topics
Games
Regional games
Sub-regional games
Defunct games

TheOlympic Games have been broadcast on television since the1936 Summer Olympics.

1930s

[edit]

1936 Summer Olympics

[edit]

The1936 games, held inBerlin,Germany, were televised by means ofclosed-circuit television to various viewing halls.[1] Broadcasts of the Games were made available in more than two dozen halls in Berlin, Leipzig and Potsdam and the Olympic village.[2]

1940s

[edit]

1948 Summer Olympics

[edit]

TheBBC provided coverage of the1948 Summer Olympics on theirtelevision service, live fromWembley Stadium and theEmpire Pool. Coverage was mainly limited to theLondon area,[1] but could be picked up as far away as the Channel Islands in certain conditions.[3]

1950s

[edit]

1956 Summer Olympics

[edit]
Further information:Olympics on Australian television

Television service was introduced toAustralia in time for the1956 Games inMelbourne. International broadcasting institutions present wereBBC,CBS,NBC,Eurovision andUnited Press. These Games were the first time broadcasting rights were sold.[4][5][6][7]

1956 Winter Games

[edit]

RAI introduced the first Winter Games coverage ever, and the first Olympic one extended to an international audience. The broadcasts were relayed live viaEurovision to Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, West Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Switzerland.[4][5]

1960s

[edit]

UK coverage

[edit]

The BBC continued to cover the Olympics for the United Kingdom into the 1960s and have covered every summer and winter Olympics since. They were joined byITV in 1968, in addition to also covering the Games in 1972, 1980 and 1988 alongside to the BBC. ITV skipped 1976 after having a suggestion for German-style alternating coverage turned down by the BBC, and an industrial dispute prevented coverage of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. The Games returned to ITV screens in 1988, sharing their coverage withChannel 4, who showed overnight and breakfast coverage with ITV covering the daytime action as well as broadcasting early evening highlights programmes. The 1988 Olympics were the last time that the Games have been shown on ITV with subsequent Olympic Games being shown only on the BBC. ITV only broadcast theWinter Olympics in 1968.

1960 Winter Games

[edit]

CBS paid$50,000 for the right to broadcast thegames in the United States, and this marked the first time the Olympic Games were televised there.[8] Also, officials, unsure if a skier had missed a gate in the men's slalom, asked CBS if they could review a videotape of the race. This would be the impetus and inspiration for CBS to develop what would come to be known as "instant replay."[9]

1960 Summer Olympics

[edit]

CBS paid $394,000 ($3.19 million in 2024) for the exclusive rights to broadcast the Games in the United States. This was the first Summer Olympic games to be telecast inNorth America. In addition to CBS in the United States, the Olympics were telecast for the first time inCanada (onCBC Television), inMexico (through the networks ofTelesistema Mexicano) and in thePhilippines (throughRPN-9). Since television broadcast satellites were still two years into the future, CBS, CBC, and TSM shot and edited videotapes in Rome, fed the tapes to Paris where they were re-recorded onto other tapes, which were then loaded onto jet planes to North America. Planes carrying the tapes landed atIdlewild Airport inNew York City, where mobile units fed the tapes to CBS, to Toronto for the CBC, and to Mexico City for Televisa. Despite this arrangement, many daytime events were broadcast in North America, especially on CBS and CBC, the same day they took place.[10]Television was broadcast live in Europe (including the UK) via the Eurovision television network

1964 Summer Olympics

[edit]

TheTokyo 1964 games were the first to be telecast internationally. The games were telecast to the United States usingSyncom 3,[11] the firstgeostationary communication satellite, and from there to Europe usingRelay 1, an older satellite which allowed only 15–20 minutes of broadcast during each of its orbits.[12][13] Total broadcast time of programs delivered via satellite was 5 hours 41 minutes in the United States, 12 hours 27 minutes in Europe, and 14 hours 18 minutes in Canada. Pictures were received via satellite in the United States, Canada, and 21 countries in Europe.[14] Several broadcasters recorded some sports from Japan and flown over to their countries.

TRANSPAC-1, the first trans-Pacificcommunications cable from Japan to Hawaii was also finished in June 1964 in time for these games. Before this, most communications from Japan to other countries were via shortwave.[14]

1968 Winter Games

[edit]

FrenchmanJean-Claude Killy won three gold medals in all thealpine skiing events. In women'sfigure skating,Peggy Fleming won the onlyUnited States gold medal. Thegames[8] have been credited with making the Winter Olympics more popular in the United States, not least of which because ofABC's extensive coverage of Fleming and Killy, who became overnight sensations among teenage girls.

1970s

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1972 Summer Olympics

[edit]
Main article:1972 Summer Olympics

Munich massacre

[edit]
Main article:Munich massacre

Initial news reports, published all over the world, indicated that all the hostages were alive, and that all the terrorists had been killed. Only later did a representative for theInternational Olympic Committee (IOC) suggest that "initial reports were overly optimistic."Jim McKay, who was covering the Olympics that year forABC, had taken on the job of reporting the events asRoone Arledge fed them into his earpiece. At 3:24 A.M. (German Time), McKay received the official confirmation:

When I was a kid, my father used to say, 'Our greatest hopes and our worst fears are seldom realized.' Our worst fears have been realized tonight. They’ve now said that there were eleven hostages. Two were killed in their rooms yesterday morning, nine were killed at the airport tonight. They’re all gone.[15]

1980s

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1980 Winter Games

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Miracle on Ice

[edit]
Main article:Miracle on Ice

The rest of the United States (except those who watched the game live on Canadian television) would have to wait to see the game, asABC decided to broadcast the late-afternoon game ontape delay inprime time.

Though the game was on livetelevision in the Soviet Union, it was played at 1:00 AM Moscow time. This affordedCPSU officials some ability to squelch news and discussion;Pravda did not carry a game report or mention the match in its post-Olympic wrap-up, and the hockey players were quickly and quietly herded away from the arrival reception for Olympic athletes at Moscow's airport.

1980 Summer Olympics

[edit]

Major broadcasters of thegames wereUSSR State TV and Radio (1,370 accreditation cards),Eurovision (31 countries, 818 cards) andIntervision (11 countries, 342 cards).[16]Asahi TV with 68 cards provided coverage forJapan, whileOTI representing the Spanish-speaking world received 59 cards,TVNZ (New Zealand) was aired live and theChannel Seven provided coverage forAustralia (48 cards).[16]NBC,[8] which had intended to be another major broadcaster, canceled its coverage in response to the U.S.boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics, and became a minor broadcaster with 56 accreditation cards,[16] although the network did air highlights and recaps of the games on a regular basis. TheCanadian Broadcasting Corporation almost canceled their plans for coverage after Canada took part in the boycott and was represented by 9 cards.[16]

The television centre used 20 TV channels. Montreal had used 16, Munich 12, Mexico City 7.

1984 Summer Olympics

[edit]

The price for ABC's 180 hours of television was $225 million.[17] All Los Angeles radio and television stations covered theOlympics[10] extensively throughout the event. The Summer broadcast rights almost tripled from 1980 to 1984 ($87 million to $225 million) and both Winter and Summer rights have gone for $300 million or more since 1988.

1988 Winter Olympics

[edit]
Main articles:List of 1988 Winter Olympics broadcasters and1988 Winter Olympics

The American host network,ABC, paid a then recordUS$309 million, while the main host broadcaster, the CanadianCTV television network, won the domestic rights forCA$4.5 million. A further $90 million was raised by sponsorships and licenses.

1988 Summer Olympics

[edit]

The games were covered by the following broadcasters:

1990s

[edit]

1992 Winter Olympics

[edit]

CBS televised the Winter Olympics from Albertville, France, for the first time since 1960, while US cable broadcaster Turner Network Television televises the Games for the first time in its history.

1992 Summer Olympics

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Main article:Triplecast

The exploding costs of the Games sent networks looking for alternative strategies to ease the financial burden. In 1992, NBC made an attempt at utilizingpay-per-view subscriptions with the "Olympic Triplecast", which was organized in conjunction with Cablevision and intended to sell packages of commercial-free, extensive programming.[10]

NBC, which had the broadcast rights to thegames, partnered withCablevision for the experiment, believing that people would pay between $95 and $170 to see events live that would normally be shown ontape delay on the network inprime time. By the time the games began, relatively few people had ordered the package, which featured Red, White and Blue channels on a special three-buttonremote control offered by some cable operators for free as a lure to sign up for the service.[18]

The plan was a failure, mainly due to viewers' reluctance to pay to see some events when network coverage of others was free of charge. NBC and Cablevision would lose millions of dollars, with one estimate putting their losses at$100 million.

The games were covered by the following broadcasters:

1994 Winter Games

[edit]
Main article:1994 Winter Olympics

When the construction of theLysgårdsbakkene jumping hills started in 1992, the hills had to be moved some meters north so that the American broadcasterCBS could get the best pictures available from their pre-chosen location.[citation needed] CBS became the largest source of revenue for the hosts.

1996 Summer Olympics

[edit]

ForAtlanta 1996,NBC bought the broadcasting rights for US$456 million.[19] TheEuropean Broadcasting Union paid US$240 million for broadcasting rights.[20]

Other broadcasters included:

1998 Winter Games

[edit]

TheNagano 1998 Games were covered by the following broadcasters:

2000s

[edit]

2000 Summer Olympics

[edit]

Most of the footage used by international broadcasters of the Opening and Closing Ceremony was directed out of SOBO (Sydney Olympic Broadcasting Organisation) by Australian directorPeter Faiman. InSydney in2000, there were over 16,000 broadcasters and journalists, and an estimated 3.8 billion viewerswatched the games ontelevision.

Thegames were covered by the following broadcasters:

Running up to the games an Australian comedy satire,The Games, was broadcast in Australia (it was also broadcast, at a later date, in New Zealand). It featured a spoof of the issues and events that the top-level organisers and bureaucrats suffered in the lead up to the games.

A poignant part of the media coverage happened in the Canadian broadcast. On 28 September, the CBC was airing the Olympics, when the network's chief correspondent,Peter Mansbridge, broke in to report thedeath of former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau.

NBC presented over 400+ hours on their main and sister stations,CNBC andMSNBC. The downside of the American coverage was that it was presented on tape delay rather than live due to the 15-hour time difference. The lone exception was the gold medal game in Men's Basketball, which featured the U.S. defeating France 85–75. The game was televised live in primetime on Saturday, 30 September (EDT), which was the afternoon of Sunday, 1 October in Australia.

2002 Winter Games

[edit]

An estimated 2.1 billion viewers from 160 countries watched over 13 billion viewing hours during the2002 Winter Olympics. The average worldwide viewer watched 6 hr 15 min of coverage, while the viewers in the game's host county of the United States watched an average of 29 hours each.[24][25] TheSalt Lake Organizing Committee (SLOC) used the organization International Sports Broadcasting (ISB), who had over 400 cameras, to provide a live video feed of competitions and ceremonies. The various official broadcasting companies in the 160 different countries could then tap into the feed and air the programs live or on a taped delay in their respective markets.[24]

AreaOlympic Broadcast Partner
 United StatesNational Broadcasting Company, Inc. (NBC)
CanadaCanadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC)
Hispanic AmericaOrganización de la Television Ibero-Americana (OTI)
EuropeEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU)
AustraliaSeven Network Limited
New ZealandTV New Zealand (TVNZ)
AsiaAsia-Pacific Broadcasting Union (ABU)
JapanJapan Olympic Pool
South KoreaKorean Olympic Pool
South AfricaSupersport International

2004 Summer Olympics

[edit]

NBC Universal paid the IOC $793 million for U.S. broadcast rights,[26] the most paid by any country.NBC made it possible for the network to broadcast over 1200 hours of coverage during the2004 Summer Olympics, triple what was broadcast in the U.S.four years earlier. Between all the NBC Universal networks (NBC,CNBC,MSNBC,Bravo,USA Network andTelemundo) the games were on television 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

In their 2004 coverage, NBC and its sister networks presented live coverage throughout the morning and afternoon, while showing marquee events pre-taped in prime time.

For the first time, major broadcasters were allowed to serve video coverage of the Olympics over theInternet, provided that they restricted this service geographically, to protect broadcasting contracts in other areas. For instance, theBBC made their complete live coverage available to UK high-speed Internet customers for free.[27]

NBC launched its own Olympic website, NBCOlympics.com. Focusing on the television coverage of the games, it did provide video clips, medal standings, live results. Its main purpose, however, was to provide a schedule of what sports were on the many stations of NBC Universal. The games were on TV 24 hours a day on one network or another.[citation needed]

2006 Winter Olympics

[edit]

The2006 Olympic Winter Games were broadcast worldwide by a number of television broadcasters:

  • An extensive list of official broadcasters is found atThe Games on Television section of the Torino Games official site.
  • TheBBC provided television and radio coverage of the winter Olympics in theUK - the TV coverage was presented mainly byGrandstand regulars such asHazel Irvine andClare Balding. Most of the coverage was shown onBBC Two, with some onBBC One, and there was alsoBBC Red Button forFreeview,Satellite andCable (digital TV) viewers. BBC also broadcast many events live on the webcastFreeview provides an extra two screens whereas all three interactive streams were available to UK users only onBBC and Digital Satellite and Cable such asSky Digital.
  • Eurosport also provided live coverage of events to viewers across the EU and Europe.
  • American Forces Network rebroadcast some of this coverage formilitary personnel serving outside the United States.
  • SportTV2 broadcast for the first time all days and all events in Brazil.
  • ČT4 Sport was introduced on the occasion of the Olympic Games in the Czech Republic.
CountryBroadcasting organization
AustraliaSeven Network
AustriaORF
BelgiumVRT
RTBF
BrazilSportTV2
CanadaCBC
TSN
RDS
Radio-Canada
CBC Country Canada
ChinaCCTV-5
CroatiaHRT
Czech RepublicČT
ČT4 Sport
DenmarkTV2
EstoniaETV
FinlandYLE
FranceFrance 2
France 3
GermanyARD
ZDF
GreeceERT
IcelandRÚV
IrelandRTÉ
IsraelChannel 2
ItalyRAI
LatviaLTV7
LuxembourgRTL
JapanNHK
MalaysiaAstro
MexicoTelevisa
TV Azteca
MontenegroRTCG 1
NetherlandsNOS
Nederland 2
New ZealandTVNZ
NorwayNRK
SportN
PolandTVP
RomaniaTVR
RussiaC1R
RTR
SerbiaRTS
SingaporeMediaCorp 5
South KoreaKBS
MBC
SBS
SpainTVE
SwedenSVT
 SwitzerlandSSR
TSR
TurkeyTRT
UkraineNTU
United KingdomBBC
United StatesNBC
CNBC
MSNBC
USA Network
Telemundo
Universal HD

About 40% of the television coverage of the 2002 Winter Olympics was inhigh definition.[28]

Ratings and attendance

[edit]

Numerous events reported low spectator attendance despite having acceptable ticket sales. Preliminary competition and locally less popular sports failed to attract capacity crowd as expected. Organizers explained this was because blocks of seats were reserved or purchased by sponsors and partners who later did not show up at the events.

Several news organizations reported that many Americans were not interested in the Olympics as in years past.[29] It has been suggested that reasons for this disinterest include thetape delayed coverage, which showed events inprime-time as much as 18 hours later in theWest.[30]

In Canada, CBC's coverage has also posted disappointing numbers, which were reduced as the Canadian men's hockey team was eliminated early in the competition. Primetime ratings reached only as high as #7 in the weekly ratings. However, ratings for live, afternoon coverage have attracted 300,000 more viewers than the taped, primetime coverage. Overall, only primetime coverage has suffered, dropping 45% from the 2002 Games, with the entire coverage being 52% ahead from 2002.[31][32] Meanwhile, onTSN, the numbers for its live curling coverage (which aired as early as 3:00am EST) were between 300,000 and 500,000 viewers.

The Olympics' main threat in the USA was the2006 season ofAmerican Idol.[33] One night of interest was 23 February in which the first results show of the season went head to head with that night's coverage which included the Women's Free Skate in Figure Skating.

2008 Summer Olympics

[edit]
Main article:List of 2008 Summer Olympics broadcasters

Thesegames were the first to be produced and broadcast entirely inhigh-definition television.[34] In their bid for the Olympic games in 2001, Beijing confirmed to the Olympic evaluation commission "that there would be no restrictions on media reporting and movement of journalists up to and including the Olympic Games."[35] The host broadcaster wasBeijing Olympic Broadcasting, a joint venture betweenOlympic Broadcasting Services (OBS) and theBeijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games.

InCanada, the public network CBC/Radio-Canada and cable networksTSN andRDS broadcast its final games before a private consortium involving CTV/Rogers/TQS takes over for the2010 Winter Olympics, which happened within Canadian borders, in Vancouver.[citation needed] InAustralia, theSeven Network broadcast its final games before theNine Network and Pay-TV operatorFoxtel took over from the2010 Winter Olympics and beyond.[citation needed]

2010s

[edit]

2010 Winter Games

[edit]
Main article:List of 2010 Winter Olympics broadcasters

Vancouver 2010 was broadcast worldwide by a number of television broadcasters. As rights for the 2010 games were packaged with those for the2012 Summer Olympics, broadcasters were largely identical for both events. The host television broadcast was solely produced by OBS for the first time. Previously, a host broadcaster set up by the organising committee of the Games produced the broadcast.

Broadcasters included:

2012 Summer Olympics

[edit]
Main article:List of 2012 Summer Olympics broadcasters

Continuing the IOC's commitment to providing over-the-air television coverage to as broad a worldwide audience as possible,2012 Summer Olympics was scheduled to be broadcast by a number of regional broadcasters. Though reduced dramatically since 1980, the United States television rights currently owned byNBC still account for over half the rights revenue for the IOC. Many television broadcasters granted rights to the games have bureaux and studios in London, but since at least the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, rights-holder operations are hosted in the dedicated International Broadcast Centre (IBC). London's IBC was planned to be within theLondon Olympics Media Centre inside the security cordon of the Olympic Park.

As rights for the 2012 games were packaged with those for the2010 Winter Olympics, broadcasts would be largely identical for both events. Confirmed broadcasters included:

2014 Winter Olympics

[edit]
Main article:List of 2014 Winter Olympics broadcasters

On August 19, 2008, it was reported thatESPN andABC, both owned byThe Walt Disney Company, were interested in airing the2014 Winter Olympics inSochi, Russia.[39] ESPN and ABC planned to carry more Olympic events live as opposed to the tape-delay format used by current rights-holderNBC. NBC,FOX and a partnership betweenCBS andTurner Sports also participated in the bidding process for televising the Games in the United States. In 2011, NBC agreed to a $4.38 billion contract with theInternational Olympic Committee to broadcast the 2014, 2016, 2018, and 2020 Olympics, the most expensive television rights deal in Olympic history.[40]

2016 Summer Olympics

[edit]
Main article:List of 2016 Summer Olympics broadcasters

On August 19, 2008, it was reported that ESPN and ABC, both owned by The Walt Disney Company, were interested in airing the2016 Summer Olympics inRio de Janeiro,Brazil.[39]

In Brazil,Rede Globo andBand won the rights to broadcast the games, but they allowed theIOC to negotiate with others broadcasters about the free-to-air transmission.Rede Record purchased the rights for the free-to-air broadcasts. But, they have the exclusive rights for cable TV and internet.

In Europe, for the first time, the IOC rejected the offer from EBU to broadcast the 2014 & 2016 Olympics, so individual networks in Europe must contract for television rights.

SKY Italia in 2008 had reached an agreement to broadcast 2014 & 2016 Olympics, but later, it sold the second one to RAI, holding only the first one. The Italian public service provided over 1000 hours on television over three HD channels avalilable on DTT and satellite, and provided an Internet site and an app which offered every single feed of every sport produced by OBS.

In Canada, theCanadian Broadcasting Corporation were granted rights to the 2014 and 2016 games in July 2012 for an undisclosed sum.

In Australia,Network Ten achieved an agreement for 2014 Winter Games spending $20 million, while the 2016 Summer Olympics had been granted toSeven Network in a bundle with 2018 and 2020, for $150 million.

2018 Winter Olympics

[edit]
Main article:List of 2018 Winter Olympics broadcasters

Discovery Communications has been granted by IOC rights to 2018 in Europe, except Russia.

2020s

[edit]

2020 Summer Olympics

[edit]
Main article:List of 2020 Summer Olympics broadcasters

Discovery Communications has been granted by IOC rights to 2018 and 2020 (except France and United Kingdom), 2022 and 2024 Olympics in Europe, except Russia.

2022 Winter Olympics

[edit]
Main article:List of 2022 Winter Olympics broadcasters

2024 Summer Olympics

[edit]
Main article:List of 2024 Summer Olympics broadcasters

Future Olympics Games

[edit]

On May 7, 2014, the IOC grantedNBC Universal rights to all Olympic Games from the2022 Winter Olympics to the2032 Summer Olympics. The agreement was valued at US$7.65 billion, and will last from 2021 to 2032.NBC, which has held the broadcast rights to both editions of the Olympics since 2000, now holds the rights in the United States until 2032. This is the most expensive deal in the history of the Olympics.[41] In 2024, the IOC announced that the agreement had been extended to 2036 at a cost of US$3 billion, withComcast (the owner of NBC) becoming a "strategic partner" of the IOC.[42]

In January 2023, the IOC announced that a joint bid from theEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU) andWarner Bros. Discovery had been awarded rights for all Olympic Games from the 2026 Winter Olympics to the 2032 Summer Olympics. The joint bid between European free to air broadcasters and Warner Bros Discovery follows criticism of the 2015 deal to award European television rights to Discovery.[43] Each EBU member will broadcast at least 200 hours of coverage of the Summer Olympics and at least 100 hours of the Winter Olympics, whereas Warner Bros. Discovery will have unlimited rights.[44][45]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"The 1948 London Olympics Gallery".BBC History.BBC. Retrieved2008-08-15.
  2. ^Billings, A.C.; Angelini, J.R.; MacArthur, P.J. (2018).Olympic Television: Broadcasting the Biggest Show on Earth. Routledge.ISBN 9781138930322.
  3. ^Hayes, Paul (8 June 2021)."International Football at the 1948 Olympics".BBC Genome Project. BBC. Retrieved11 January 2021.
  4. ^ab"Eurovision and the Olympic Games".eurovision.net. Eurovision Song Contest. Archived fromthe original on July 2, 2012. RetrievedDecember 4, 2013.
  5. ^ab"Eurovision connectivity timeline (1956)".go-eurovision.com. Archived fromthe original on June 20, 2013. RetrievedDecember 4, 2013.
  6. ^"1956 Melbourne Olympics - Role of the Media"(PDF).corporate.olympics.com.au. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on October 17, 2012. RetrievedDecember 4, 2013.
  7. ^"Australian Screen - Olympic Post Script (1956)". Government of Australia. RetrievedDecember 4, 2013.
  8. ^abc"OLYMPICS AND TELEVISION".Museum of Broadcast Communications. museum.tv. Archived fromthe original on 2011-06-28. Retrieved2010-01-06.
  9. ^"Olympic Games Medals, Results, Sports, Athletes - Medailles, Resultats, Sports et Athletes des Jeux Olympiques".olympic.org. 14 July 2021.
  10. ^abc"OLYMPICS AND TELEVISION - The Museum of Broadcast Communications". Museum.tv. Archived fromthe original on 2009-07-27. Retrieved2011-03-23.
  11. ^"For Gold, Silver & Bronze".TIME. 16 October 1964. Archived fromthe original on 21 June 2008. Retrieved5 January 2010.
  12. ^Martin, Donald H. (2000).Communications Satellites (fourth ed.). El Segundo, CA: The Aerospace Press. pp. 8–9.ISBN 1-884989-09-8.Archived from the original on 13 December 2011. Retrieved31 October 2009.
  13. ^"Significant Achievements in Space Communications and Navigation, 1958–1964"(PDF).NASA-SP-93. NASA. 1966. pp. 30–32.Archived(PDF) from the original on 14 May 2010. Retrieved31 October 2009.
  14. ^abOrganizing Committee 1964, pp. 381–400
  15. ^"McKay, Jim - 5 Questions for Jim McKay".American Sportscasters Association.
  16. ^abcd1980 Summer Olympics Official Report from the Organizing Committee. Vol. 2. p. 379. Archived fromthe original on 2006-06-22.
  17. ^"Olympic Games and the Media: 1984 Los Angeles".terramedia.co.uk.
  18. ^"PPV Olympics gets 100K 'reservations.' (Pay-Per-View Olympics) | Multichannel News | Find Articles at BNET". Archived fromthe original on 10 October 2008.
  19. ^"Atlanta Olympics: By The Numbers".Sports Business Daily. July 18, 2016. Retrieved2019-03-20.
  20. ^"Case Study: The European Broadcasting Union".www.itu.int. Retrieved2024-07-22.The EBU has secured the rights to broadcast the Atlanta Olympic Games for a cost of $US240 million. Within its coverage area, 54 television organizations will broadcast the event throughout 44 countries, making use of 20 satellite channels.
  21. ^"Colombia aún espera la señal".El Tiempo (in Spanish). 13 September 2000. Retrieved11 July 2024.
  22. ^"Medalla de lata".El Tiempo (in Spanish). 21 September 2000. Retrieved11 July 2024.
  23. ^Monroy, Martha Luz (29 September 2000)."Algo más que un juego".El Tiempo (in Spanish). Retrieved11 July 2024.
  24. ^abThe Salt Lake 2002 Marketing Report(PDF). International Olympic Committee. 2002. p. 15.Archived(PDF) from the original on 11 December 2011. Retrieved20 December 2010.
  25. ^"International Sports Broadcasting Company".KSL-TV. 20 October 2001. Archived fromthe original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved20 December 2010.
  26. ^Crawford, Krysten (August 30, 2004)."NBC Universal rings in Athens profits".CNN Money. CNN.
  27. ^Pfanner, Eric (August 30, 2004)."Athens Games beating Sydney in TV race".International Herald Tribune. Archived fromthe original on September 12, 2007. RetrievedAugust 18, 2006.
  28. ^Williams, Martyn (8 August 2008)."Olympics goes all-HD for the first time".Computer World.
  29. ^Shipley, Amy (2006-02-26)."Ciao to the Winter Games".The Washington Post. Retrieved2007-04-19.
  30. ^Caple, Jim (2006-02-26)."The best, and real, drama is always at Olympics".ESPN. Retrieved2007-04-19.
  31. ^Brioux, Bill (2006-02-23). "Olympics lose against fake games".
  32. ^McArthur, Keith; Robertson, Grant (2006-02-23)."Olympic hockey loss misses the net for CBC ratings".The Globe and Mail. Toronto. Archived fromthe original on 2016-01-24. Retrieved2007-04-19.
  33. ^Jones, Terry (2006-02-18)."Curling is making waves". Archived fromthe original on 2006-02-21. Retrieved2007-04-19.
  34. ^"Seeing clearly: Panasonic ushers in first HDTV Game".China Daily. 2007-07-06. Retrieved2008-03-24.
  35. ^"Report of the IOC Evaluation Commission for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad in 2008"(PDF).multimedia.olympic.org. p. 73. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2003-12-29.
  36. ^ab"IOC signs 2010–2012 TV rights deal for Brazil]".International Olympic Committee (Press release). RetrievedMarch 16, 2007.
  37. ^Deans, Jason (2005-11-09)."BBC key to London's Olympic win".The Guardian. London. Retrieved2010-05-20.
  38. ^"Olympic Games Medals, Results, Sports, Athletes | Medailles, Resultats, Sports et Athletes des Jeux Olympiques".Olympic.org. 23 September 2021.
  39. ^abESPN Eyes Rights to Games in 2014 and 2016 Retrieved on August 20, 2008.
  40. ^Crupi, Anthony (7 June 2011)."NBC Has Bid $4.38 Billion for the Media Rights to the 2014-2020 Olympic Games".AdWeek. Retrieved14 November 2024.
  41. ^"IOC awards Olympic Games broadcast rights to NBCUniversal through to 2032 - Olympic News". 13 July 2021.
  42. ^Weprin, Alex (2025-03-13)."Comcast Inks $3B Deal to Keep Olympics Rights Through 2036".The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved2025-03-29.
  43. ^Ziegler, Martyn (30 July 2021)."BBC traded full Tokyo Olympics rights for future Games guarantee".The Times.ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved2023-01-16.
  44. ^"IOC awards exclusive 2026-2032 Olympic Games media rights in Europe to European Broadcasting Union and Warner Bros. Discovery".InternationaL Olympic Committee. 16 January 2023. Retrieved16 January 2023.
  45. ^Yossman, K. J. (2023-01-16)."Olympic Games European Broadcasting Rights to Be Shared by EBU, Warner Bros. Discovery".Variety. Retrieved2023-01-16.

Works cited

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External links

[edit]
Summer Olympics
Winter Olympics
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