2008 Summer Olympics on NBC

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NBC Sports coverage of the 2008 Summer Olympics (the broadcasts being officially titled, as were the games themselves, The Games of the XXIX Olympiad) was broadcast from August 6 to August 24, 2008 (including selecting football matches prior to the opening ceremonies) on the various television networks of NBC Universal in the United States. Coverage was broadcast on NBC, Telemundo, USA Network, CNBC, MSNBC, Oxygen, their associated HDTV simulcast channels where applicable, and Universal HD. NBC also set up two dedicated cable channels, the NBC Olympic Soccer Channel and the NBC Olympic Basketball Channel, for the express purpose of providing additional coverage of those two sports.[1]

Coverage

The scale of the coverage grew to the same huge proportions as the Games themselves. In 2008, NBC was scheduled to air over 3,600 hours of live coverage (1,400 on the TV networks and 2,200 more online). According to NBC, that is 1,000 more hours than the combined coverage of all Summer Games since that first telecast in 1960. NBC also is using 106 hosts, announcers, and commentators to cover the action. The main transmission center in the United States was Studio 8-H at Rockefeller Center in New York City, where Saturday Night Live is based. Some announcers and hosts were assigned to the New York studio and were not on location in Beijing.

Ratings

Through August 12, NBC was averaging 30.4 million viewers for each night of primetime coverage, up five million from the same period in 2004. The increased number was attributed to Michael Phelps' ongoing quests for the most gold medals in a single Olympics and in a career.[2] On August 11, NBCOlympics.com had 7.8 million unique page visits and 476,062 downloads from cellular telephones.[3] The number of average viewers had dropped to 28.7 million by August 17, but it still far outpaced shows on other networks. Most programming opposite the Olympics was in reruns, except for Big Brother 10 on CBS and High School Musical: Get in the Picture on ABC.[4]

By the end of the Olympics, NBC estimated a total audience of 214 million people for at least some of the telecasts, an all-time record for any Olympics. In the second week of the Games, all eight primetime telecasts (there were two on August 24) finished in the top eight of the ratings. On all 17 nights, NBC had more viewers than ABC, CBS, and FOX combined.[5] However, ratings on the final Friday and Saturday of the Games were the lowest for primetime coverage since 1988.[6]

Even other sports events saw ratings downturns attributable to Games coverage. Declines ranged from 14 percent for the PGA Tour The Barclays to 36 percent for the Little League World Series final.[7] (scroll to middle of page)

Night by night

Night Rating/share[8][better source needed] Notes
August 8 18.8/34 The opening ceremony was the most-watched night of the Olympics on NBC, with an average audience of 39 million viewers.
August 9 13.9/27 Michael Phelps wins first gold medal
August 10 18.1/31 Phelps wins second gold medal in a dramatic relay. Bob Costas interviews President George W. Bush.
August 11 17.6/29 The US Men's gymnastics team wins an unexpected bronze medal after losing the Hamm brothers to injury before the games. They weren't expected to medal.
August 12 19.9/34 Phelps breaks all-time career record for gold medals
August 13 16.7/28
August 14 17.9/31 Nastia Liukin wins gold medal in women's all-around gymnastics
August 15 15.4/28 Phelps ties Mark Spitz with seventh gold medal; after race, Spitz joins NBC coverage via satellite from Detroit, Michigan
August 16 17.8/32 Phelps is part of winning relay team, captures eighth gold medal; Usain Bolt breaks 100-meter dash world record
August 17 16.0/27 Liukin and Shawn Johnson win apparatus medals
August 18 15.8/26 First night in which all coverage was completely on tape in the U.S.
August 19 16.3/27
August 20 15.2/26 Bolt breaks 200-meter world record; Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh win gold medals in beach volleyball
August 21 13.8/23 Todd Rogers and Phil Dalhausser follow the Women's beach volleyball team in winning gold by defeating Brazil in their championship.
August 22 10.7/19 During late night coverage, Lester Holt reports from Beijing that, back in the U.S., Barack Obama has selected Joe Biden to run as his vice-presidential candidate.
August 23 10.3/19 Lowest rating for a primetime telecast since 1988 Summer Olympics. The victory by the "Redeem Team" over Spain is part of late night coverage and is the only event broadcast live by all affiliates in all time zones.; NBC kicked off the day's coverage with the US Women winning gold in Basketball.
August 24 15.5/25
12.3/21
First number is for closing ceremony; second number is for Beijing Closing Party, a separate program which followed immediately.; The closing ceremony coverage included the US Men's volleyball team winning gold.

Announcers

Hosts

Event announcers


*These announcers were to call the action from the NBC studios in New York City rather from onsite in Beijing

Sport Sports commentator Color commentator Reporter
Opening Ceremony Bob Costas
Mary Carillo
Dan Hicks
Matt Lauer
Joshua Cooper Ramo
Craig Sager
Heather Cox
Jim Gray
Marty Snider
Bob Neumeier
Andrea Kremer
Andrea Joyce
Archery Joe Castellano* Denise Parker*
Badminton Jim Kozimor* Steve Kearney*
Baseball Eric Collins* Joe Magrane*
Basketball Mike Breen
Chris Carrino*
Mike Crispino*
Pete Pranica*
Eric Collins*
Doug Collins
Ann Meyers
Teresa Edwards*
Bob Salmi*
Craig Sager
Beach volleyball Chris Marlowe Karch Kiraly Heather Cox
Boxing Bob Papa Teddy Atlas Jim Gray
Canoeing Tim Ryan (flatwater)
Craig Hummer (whitewater)
Pat Parnell (whitewater)
Joe Jacobi (both disciplines)
Cycling Pat Parnell
Craig Hummer
Kenan Harkin
Paul Sherwen
Marty Snider
Diving Ted Robinson Cynthia Potter Bob Neumeier
Andrea Kremer
Equestrian Kenny Rice* Melanie Smith-Taylor*
Fencing Joe Castellano*
Pete Pranica*
Andrew Catalon*
Mika'il Sankofa*
Gymnastics Al Trautwig (artistic and trampoline)
Andrea Joyce (rhythmic)
Elfi Schlegel (all disciplines)
Tim Daggett (artistic and trampoline only)
Andrea Joyce (artistic only)
Team handball Andrew Catalon* Dawn Lewis*
Field hockey Mike Corey* Nick Conway*
Modern pentathlon Ron Vaccaro Rob Stull
Rowing Tim Ryan Yaz Farooq
Shooting Bill Clement* Shari LeGate*
Soccer JP Dellacamera*
Glenn Davis*
Adrian Healey*
Steve Cangialosi*
Marcelo Balboa*
Brandi Chastain*
Shep Messing*
Lori Walker*
Softball Joe Castellano* Michele Smith*
Swimming Dan Hicks
Craig Hummer (open-water races)
Rowdy Gaines Andrea Kremer
Synchronized swimming Craig Hummer Heather Olson
Table tennis Bill Clement* Sean O'Neill*
Tennis Barry MacKay* Jimmy Arias*
Track and field Tom Hammond
Ron Vaccaro (race walking)
Lewis Johnson
Carol Lewis
Dwight Stones
Ato Boldon
Craig Masback
Ed Eyestone
Bob Neumeier
Triathlon Craig Hummer Siri Lindsey Marty Snider
Volleyball Paul Sunderland Kevin Barnett
Water polo Bob Fitzgerald Wolf Wigo
Weightlifting Pete Pranica* Shane Hamman*
Wrestling Matt Devlin Rulon Gardner
Closing Ceremony Bob Costas
Mary Carillo
Dan Hicks
Matt Lauer
Joshua Cooper Ramo
Craig Sager
Heather Cox
Jim Gray
Marty Snider
Bob Neumeier
Andrea Kremer
Andrea Joyce (artistic only)

NBC did not plan coverage of judo, sailing, or taekwondo on any of its networks. Coverage in the U.S. was to be available only online at NBCOlympics.com.

2008 Sportsdesk reporters

Feature reporters

Studio contributors

DVDs

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. NBC has made three DVDs available related to the 2008 Summer Olympics. One covers the opening ceremony, another covers the highlights from the entire competition, and the final is a retrospective of Michael Phelps' record-setting Olympic career in swimming. They are produced by the Ten Mayflower production company are available online at NBCDVD.com. The DVDs are available for retail sale at Wal-Mart.

References

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  8. http://sportsmediawatch.blogspot.com/2008/08/olympics-numbers-game_26.html
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External links