Gnash of the Titans
The Winter Olympics and America seem only to be fair weather
friends ...
Underwhelming television ratings for the recently completed
games in Turin indicate that the USA is only inclined to watch
when their athletes are winning. Specifically, they watch when
they expect to see certain athletes winning. Those would be the
athletes who have been heavily hyped in the run-up to the Games.
Two examples of this point are skater Nancy Kwan and skiier Bode
Miller. Both are definitely capable of winning any competition
they enter. Both were considered favorites to earn medals in
Turin. As a result, both experienced extensive publicity
campaigns that were not of their own making. Both, however,
failed to meet expectations; Kwan had to withdraw from her
competition due to injury and Miller's medal chase went 0-for-5
in his events.
NBC Sports, holder of the American broadcast rights, was left
with a star-crossed presentation. The spectre of total failure
is not 'must see' TV.
This is one of the primary differences between how the Olympics
are perceived in the USA as opposed to the rest of the world.
Perhaps it's a holdover from the Cold War, when the Soviets and
Americans actually believed a superior medal count proved a
superior socio-economic system. Even though the Soviet lie was
ultimately proved via populism, it's possible the Americans
never did change their mindset.
Winning has an important place in life, not just in the USA, but
everywhere. So does coping with loss. That is not the key here.
Neither is the fact that the American way is littered with
overzealous win-at-all-cost Little League coaches,
sports-meddling dads and stage moms.
The important delineation of note is that, in the USA, it's
vital as to who wins. Star power is amplified by the American
media. This factor, for example, is what took the National
Basketball Association from a sporting afterthought whose
championship series was broadcast on a late-night tape-delay
basis as recently as the late 1970s to a media spectacle in the
early 1980s. That's when the league decided to focus on two new
talents, Larry Bird and Magic Johnson, promoting them instead of
their teams.
It worked.
It worked even better when Michael Jordan followed them.
Still, these are exceptional athletes who don't come around that
often. When their careers are over, it's rare when another
exceptional athlete is there to replace them. There is usually a
cotillion of pretenders, but they prove to be just that.
Ask the NBA.
They've attempted to promote others, but the general public is
wise enough to discern the difference between 'exceptional' and
'talented enough to be a professional.' So, the focus on star
power now has NBA ratings in decline. They've been hoisted on
their own petard, so to speak.
In the duration, though, other sports in the USA noted the NBA's
initial success and attempted to emulate it by promoting star
power of their own. The practice of putting a name forward
became a foundation of almost every national publicity campaign
for sporting endeavors. Logically, it was something to which the
American sporting public became accustomed.
In events such as the Olympics, where not every sport listed is
a household thought in the USA, it's clear that NBC felt a
strong need to insert star power. Their secondary tactic was
similar and successful to an extent in previous years, namely,
focus on a human interest story to emotionally attach the viewer
to a participant. Ultimately, though, there will be more
regular-life athletes getting medals than those who overcame
obstacles in their lives.
Other countries --- even 'winter' nations such as Canada, Russia
and the Scandinavians --- emphasize the competition over the
competitors. They appreciate the skill of the sport. Television
ratings throughout Europe were excellent, with only the Germans
amassing a large medal haul (they were the overall winners in
that category, incidentally). They took note of stars, of
course, but it mattered little that those stars were from other
countries. They took serious pride in their own stars, of
course, but recognized them as a part of a bigger picture rather
than that picture serving as a backdrop for them.
It's not only a refreshing difference, but a logical one.
Especially when a network needs to cover the rights fees being
charged by the Olympic movement.
NBC Sports has announced it will show a profit on its Turin
package, most probably because much of the advertising was
pre-sold with little provision for ratings-influenced price
fluctuations. That tactic worked because of the American success
in the previous Winter Games; coincidentally, they were held in
Salt Lake City. It may not be so effective for their 2010 Winter
Games package when the current ratings are pushed back in their
face.
The NBC coverage in Turin excellent from a presentation
standpoint. They used the cable networks in their stable ---
CNBC, MSNBC and USA --- to great extent, so if one wanted to
watch a particular event, odds were that it was being shown
somewhere. The only drawback was, these events were not promoted
nearly as well as the perceived 'star power' attractions. Only a
devotee would seek the coverage. That is not a strategy that
optimizes strong viewership.
The American media has conditioned its public to expecting
charasmatic competition. The Olympic movement expects spirited
competition. The American networks groan when smaller-market
teams advance to a championship series; they'd prefer a New York
- Los Angeles meeting any day. The Olympic movement rejoices
when smaller-country teams achieve such a standing;
Sweden-vs-Finland in the men's hockey final sent ratings through
the roof in those countries, but it did well in most other
nations, too, as the game itself was nothing short of
spectacular in both drama and skill.
It's already clear that this era will be known in history as the
CyberCentury. The world is more accessible to everyone more than
ever before. It only makes sense that viewer interest can expand
beyond the parameters of star power to the entire experience of
a competition. Other countries' media have always known this.
Manchester United, for example, is still a major draw without
David Beckham, and when he ultimately moves from Real Madrid,
the same will be said again.
When the American media re-discovers that it's the competition
--- not just the star competitors --- that make sports
attractive to viewers, the Winter Olympics will once again enjoy
a resurgence of ratings popularity in the USA. Such a
realization would be a welcome breath of fresh air, even during
those winter days when you can see it.