Home GRASP GRASP/Korea NBC's 2018 Olympics coverage will air live in all time zones

NBC's 2018 Olympics coverage will air live in all time zones

287
0
SHARE

NBC’s prime-time coverage of the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea will air live across the United States.
NBC’s prime-time coverage of the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, will air live across the United States, including on the West Coast, a first since the Games became a major television attraction in the late 1960s.
The move to coast-to-coast live coverage — which NBC Sports is announcing Tuesday — is an acknowledgement that holding back results or highlights for any part of the audience is no longer a viable option as viewers have instant access to information immediately through online platforms and digital devices.
The plan is also aimed at staving off any further erosion of the Olympics TV audience. NBC’s coverage of the Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro averaged 25.4 million viewers over 17 nights last summer, a massive audience, but down 18% from the 2012 Games in London.
Some of that loss was attributed to the growth in viewing the Olympics online. Streaming of live video of Olympic action on NBC’s apps reached 2.7 billion minutes, nearly double the amount for all previous Games.
Jim Bell, president, production and programming for NBC Olympics, told the Los Angeles Times that making the Games live coast to coast is a way to address evolving viewer habits while “reasserting” television’s status as the preeminent medium for coverage.
“We’re streaming it live, and social media has become so ubiquitous that it’s hard to ignore even for people who are trying to avoid it,” Bell said. “It just seemed like it was the right time to take this step.”
Since social media reached critical mass, Olympic TV viewers have frequently groused about seeing events on delay. In response, the network has loaded as much live coverage as possible into the prime-time hours of 8 to 11 p.m., when the most TV viewers are available to watch.
Even when NBC Olympic coverage was live in prime time in the Eastern and Central time zones, viewers in the Pacific and Mountain time zones, accounting for 20% of the country, were seeing it on a two- or three-hour delay when more people in those regions were at home and available to watch.
Bell said the Games actually have a history of performing better in the Western half of the country despite that delay.

Continue reading...