American TV viewers slam NBC for delaying Rio broadcast
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[August 06, 2016]
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) -
American TV viewers used social media on Friday to vent their anger
at U.S. broadcaster NBC for delaying the screening of the opening
ceremony of the Rio Games by an hour and then going to repeated
commercial breaks during the show.
NBC, a unit of Comcast Corp, has the U.S. media rights for South
America's first Olympic Games and said it decided not to show the
ceremony live because its producers and commentators wanted time to
put it into context for Americans.
"It's not a sports competition," a NBC Sports spokesperson said in a
statement emailed to Reuters during the ceremony.
"It's a cultural ceremony that requires deep levels of
understanding, with numerous camera angles and our commentary laid
over it. We think it's important to give it the proper context. And
prime time is still when the most people are available to watch."
But many viewers were upset at waiting to see a global event while
audiences and news media in the rest of the world were already
sharing pictures of it on the Web.
"The rest of the world has been watching it LIVE for a half hour
now," said one tweet before the NBC telecast started.
Another chimed in: "Great idea NBC. Don't air what should be a
global cultural event live. Why would everyone want to watch and
enjoy together?"
Some journalists also showed their frustration, including Wall
Street Journal editor-in-chief Gerard Baker.
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An NBC logo filled with candies is pcitured in the NBC store inside
Rockefeller Center in New York April 30, 2013. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
"Just staggeringly irritating that - 20 years after the birth of the
web - NBC still shows the Olympics with a time delay," Baker
tweeted.
Others were annoyed at repeated ad breaks, including one who
tweeted: "Can NBC slip in a bit of the Olympic opening ceremony
between the commercials?!"
On commercial breaks, the NBC spokesperson said the delay enabled it
to insert ads into the broadcast without depriving viewers of much
of the ceremony.
(Reporting by Liana B. Baker and Leela de Kretser in Rio De Janeiro;
Writing by Mark Bendeich; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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