Okay, Danny Boyle did a bang-up job with the opening ceremony
of the London Olympic games on Friday. It wasn’t what you’d call universal or
inclusive in terms of the brotherhood of man, but it told a heck of a tale
about the United Kingdom.
He didn’t
go as far back as James A. Michener usually did with his novels—no primordial
ooze. But we got a history-lesson-in-a-stadium starting with bucolic Britain,
through the dark days of the Industrial Revolution, the wars of the 20th
century, NHS nightmares and the digital age. And it was massively
entertaining.
Frankly,
even though it didn’t seem to be part of the narrative, Boyle had me at the
schtick with James Bond and HM the Queen. No, no—not the two of them going on
a mission and parachuting into the stadium; the part with the corgis. That
was all class.
I also
enjoyed the percussion exercise, led by Evelyn Glennie. They could box that and I’d buy it.
The bit
with Mr. Bean channeling Chariots of Fire
was so British. I wonder if I was the only person remembering the incident
involving Zola Bud and Mary Decker at the 1984 Olympic games?
The big
downer of the whole evening was NBC’s “coverage”. Meredith Veiera and Matt
Lauer expanded the concept of cringeworthiness exponentially. Their ignorance was
embarrassing, and they just could not stop bashing on about it. They could
have gone down onto the stadium floor during the rural sequence and stood in
for the village idiots.
I joined thousands of tweeters in yelling, “Shut up, you two! For the love of God, just shut up!” They got
their own hashtag: #ShutUpMattLauer. Actually, there's another, #NBCfail, but
that wouldn't be Olympics-specific.
For the first couple of hours the
network was cutting to commercials about every nine to ten minutes. But when
the parade of athletes started, commercials came on at three minute intervals. Not even basic cable channels have the chutzpah to pull that. (Thank
God for DVR.)
And, in another demonstration of NBC’s crass jingoism (which has marked their coverage ever since they got the contract years ago),
the network swapped a taped interview with Michael Phelps for a sequence at the
ceremony honoring victims of the 07/07 London terror attack. (If you want to
see it, go here.)
Seriously? What were you thinking,
NBC? So you could edit, but just not for the better?
(Well, if they had shown the tribute, Veiera and Lauer would just have yammered right through it.)
(Well, if they had shown the tribute, Veiera and Lauer would just have yammered right through it.)
Another question—why, in this
Digital Age, can I not find some coverage online that’s not bleeding NBC?
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