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NBC tries to salvage a difficult Olympics

NEW YORK TIMES / JULY 23
                                The Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo.

NEW YORK TIMES / JULY 23

The Opening Ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo.

The 1992 Olympics in Barcelona had the Dream Team. The 2008 Olympics in Beijing had the Michael Phelps medal sweep. The Tokyo Olympics has a pandemic.

That has been the greatest challenge for NBCUniversal, the company that paid more than $1 billion to run 7,000 hours of Games coverage across two broadcast networks, six cable channels and a fledgling streaming platform, Peacock.

The ratings have been a disappointment, averaging 16.8 million viewers a night through Tuesday, a steep drop from the 29 million who tuned in through the same day of the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016. NBCUniversal has offered to make up for the smaller-than-expected television audience by offering free ads to some companies that bought commercial time during the Games, according to four people with knowledge of the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss negotiations.

The opening ceremony set a downbeat tone. Instead of the usual pageant of athletes smiling and waving to the crowd, there was a procession of participants walking through a mostly empty Tokyo Olympic Stadium, all wearing masks to protect themselves against the spread of COVID-19 as a new variant raged. The live morning broadcast and prime-time replay drew the lowest ratings for an opening ceremony in 33 years, with just under 17 million viewers. The high came Sunday, July 25, when a little more than 20 million people tuned in.

“You can only play the hand you’ve been dealt, and they’ve been dealt a difficult hand,” said Bob Costas, who spent 24 years as NBC’s prime-time Olympics host before leaving the network in 2017. “You can’t create something out of thin air. Everybody knows that this is, we hope, a one-of-a-kind Olympics.

“It’s like if somebody is running the 100 meters, and they have a weight around their ankles,” Costas continued. “That is not a fair judge of their speed.”

A widespread change in viewing habits, from traditional TV to streaming platforms, has been a big factor in the number of people watching. While NBC’s prime-time audience has shrunk considerably from what it was for the Rio Games five years ago, the Olympics broadcasts are still bringing in significantly more viewers than even the most popular entertainment shows. The most recent episode of CBS’ “Big Brother,” a ratings leader, drew an audience of less than 4 million.

“We had a little bit of bad luck; there was a drumbeat of negativity,” said Jeff Shell, chief executive of NBCUniversal, during a conference call last week, after NBC’s parent company, Comcast, reported its second-quarter earnings. The less-than-festive atmosphere, he added, “has resulted a little bit in linear ratings being probably less than we expected.”

Still, Shell said he expected the Tokyo Games to be profitable, with ad sales exceeding the cost of coverage. A spokesperson for NBCUniversal said today that total ad sales for the Tokyo Games would be higher than that of the Rio Olympics.

The absence or early exits of popular athletes from some events — including gymnast Simone Biles, runner Sha’Carri Richardson, tennis champion Naomi Osaka and basketball star LeBron James — further dimmed expectations. And in a constant reminder of the coronavirus, on-air correspondents have been masked as they keep their distance from the athletes.

Many of the reviews have been scorching, with complaints about a convoluted schedule that made it hard for viewers to find the events they wanted to watch. Critics also found fault with the thicket of distracting split-screen ads on the main NBC broadcast.

“We turn to the Olympics as an escape, as this fun, uplifting experience, and certainly there have been moments like that,” said Jen Chaney, a television critic for Vulture. “But more than anything, watching this year has shown the wounds that we’re dealing with.”

Chaney noted NBC’s interview with American swimmer Caeleb Dressel right after he won gold in a glamour event, the men’s 100-meter freestyle. Moved to tears, Dressel said, “It was a really tough year. It was really hard.”

The 13-hour time zone difference between Tokyo and the East Coast may have also figured in the drop in prime-time viewers. Many people in the United States have been waking up to phone alerts trumpeting the medal winners who will be featured in that night’s broadcast.

The strongest narratives arising from the competition — such as American gymnast Sunisa Lee’s all-around win — seemed to gain traction not so much on TV but in snippets shared on social media. That trend has been apparent in the number of followers for NBCUniversal’s Olympics channel on TikTok, which shot up 348% since the opening ceremony.

Those who decide to watch must choose from a jumble of channels and digital options. In addition to NBC, the coverage is spread across NBC Sports Network, CNBC, USA Network, the Olympic Channel, the Golf Channel, the Spanish-language channels Universo and Telemundo, not to mention NBCOlympics.com, the NBC Sports app and Peacock.

The Olympics coverage is headed by NBCUniversal executive Molly Solomon, who was named president of NBC Olympics Production in 2019, a few months before the postponement of the 2020 Games.

“The Olympics is the most complicated sports event in the world,” she said in an interview today. “The pandemic has added a layer of complexity.”

Solomon oversees a team of more than 3,000 people — 1,600 in Tokyo and 1,700 in the U.S. — who try to keep viewers in the moment by emphasizing tight camera shots that avoid the spectator-free stands and amplifying the natural sounds of the contests (the thud of a volleyball spike, the shouts of runners during relay handoffs).

The production team also incorporates shots of home watch parties to capture the whoops and hollers of medal winners’ friends and family members, minisegments that required significant advance legwork.

“It’s been a different experience for the viewer, and we’ve tried to enhance it in light of the fact that there weren’t fans here,” said Solomon, has worked on the Olympics since she started at NBC in 1990 as a researcher for the network’s coverage of the Barcelona Games.

In the view of Costas, who guided viewers through NBC’s Olympics coverage from 1992 through 2016, any comparison of the Tokyo Games with previous competitions is not fair, given the pall cast by the pandemic. And three years from now, if all goes according to plan, NBCUniversal will get what amounts to a do-over in Paris.

“Paris 2024 will be, we hope, fingers crossed, much more like a classic Olympics situation,” he said. “That will be a more legitimate test.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2021 The New York Times Company

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