The Olympics' Upset Winners

Published: 23 September 2000 y., Saturday
A large number of news and information sites are seeing double-digit traffic increases tied to the Games. When the Russian women's gymnastics team walked away from the Olympics finals with a silver medal on Tuesday, the six team members had tears of disappointment, not pride, in their eyes. The Russian team had gone to Sydney with one goal: Bring home the gold. The same is true for NBC. When the TV network agreed to pay $705 million for the TV rights to the Sydney 2000 Olympics, it knew that anything short of ratings gold would be utter defeat. So far, it doesn't look good. In its first five days covering the Games, the network's ratings fell below those of prior Olympics. They are down nearly 36 percent from those of the Atlanta Games in 1996, 20 percent below those of Barcelona in 1992 and 12 percent below those of Seoul in 1988. The low numbers may force NBC to offer free spots to advertisers, who were promised higher ratings. Pundits are blaming the underwhelming TV audience on a number of factors: the tape-delayed coverage, a generally disappointing showing by American athletes, the beginning of the football season and the end of the baseball season (which compete with the Games for viewers), and NBC's lackluster production. "Even CBS (CBS)' Survivor series seemed to have more immediacy than these Olympic Games," says Tom Shales, TV critic for the Washington Post (WPO) . NBC may be delaying its coverage of the games, but much of the Net isn't. Beyond the sports sites, Internet destinations from newspaper sites to America Online (AOL) are publishing exhaustive news and analysis. "There is some marvelously innovative coverage going on in the Internet across the world," admits Kevin Monaghan, VP of business development for NBC Sports.
Šaltinis: The Standart
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Congress Covets Copyright Cops

Congress is set to more than double the number of federal copyright cops. more »

India Hackers Scared Straight?

Indian hackers always thought they were too sophisticated to fall into the hands of the rough cops in this country, whom various human rights groups routinely accuse of brutality. more »

Australian Internet Users Badly Served - Study

One in four Australian households and businesses can't use a phone line to download a simple Web page in less than six minutes, the Australian government's Productivity Commission said. more »

The humiliation virus

How Sircam can help turn your most private documents into a worldwide joke. more »

Will users pay to play music online?

After months of hullabaloo over online music subscription services, it appears as though the industry big boys are finally ready to test the waters. more »

EPIC to protest Passport bundling with Win XP

The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) is preparing to file a complaint with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) about Microsoft Corp.'s plans to bundle its Passport identification service with Windows XP more »

Sun, HP open their code to developers

SUN MICROSYSTEMS AND Hewlett-Packard are expected to announce separately Monday that they will make projects under development at the companies available to developers under the open-source model, adding further support to the collaborative development mo more »

Pentagon Blocks Public Web Site Access

Servers Struck by 'Code Red' Virus more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Code Red Worm

A malicious piece of software more »