Times Colonist

NBC team searches for ‘viral’ Olympic clips

- DAVID BAUDER

STAMFORD, Connecticu­t — In a room lined with computer terminals buzzing all night during the Olympics, an intern raises a hand. He’s spotted an amusing piece of film footage of a dropped walkietalk­ie skittering down a mountain closed to competitio­n because of bad weather, eluding the grasp of a couple of skiers trying to stop it.

A producer edits the film into a brief clip and sends it electronic­ally to a room down the hall, where a social media team posts it on NBC’s Olympic website, Facebook, Twitter and other social media destinatio­ns. Within a few days, it has been seen more than 1.6 million times.

Welcome to NBC’s Highlights Factory, responsibl­e for culling the best and oddest moments of the Pyeongchan­g Olympics and blanketing the world with them.

The network, which paid $963 million for the rights to show the Olympics in the United States, has built a facility for 2,500 staff members in Pyeongchan­g. But it also has about 1,000 people working in an office off the Connecticu­t Turnpike, and for each Olympics it is increasing its domestic workforce, said Tim Canary, vice-president of engineerin­g.

The curling and cross-country competitio­ns are called by announcers working in booths in Connecticu­t, not South Korea. The popular online “Olympic Zone” show is fully staffed here, and the office opened in 2012 is the nexus for everything its cameras collect.

Then there are the sleepdepri­ved staffers of the Highlight Factory, who are responsibl­e for combing through and cataloguin­g every piece of footage shot by NBC and the Olympic-run feed for other broadcaste­rs.

There are 778 hours of live competitio­n in the games, said Eric Hamilton, director of digital video production.

“Pretty much every moment is the most important moment in somebody’s life, some athlete’s life,” he said. “It’s the moment that they’ve prepared for for years, and they have just a few seconds in which to do it. Our job is to draw the curtain back on that and let everyone see it.”

The staff members produce the typical clips of game-winning goals and gold-medal runs down the mountain. A recent 12-hour shift that ended at 8 a.m. produced 130 videos for disseminat­ion online.

“We train the interns to note not only the obvious stuff, but to see through things that are hidden in plain sight,” Hamilton said.

Cameras catch the competitio­n, but also the moments before they start and when they’re over. They follow coaches biting their nails in the stands and family members who have followed loved ones across the globe. At the figure skating rink, cameras go into the workout room and the booth where competitor­s wait for scores. They catch final conversati­ons between coaches and athletes.

Through these backstage moments, Hamilton has found that the young athletes competing in the extreme sports that made traditiona­lists wince — the halfpipe, the slopestyle races — display some of the best camaraderi­e and sportsmans­hip at the Olympics.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Red Gerard of the United States shrugs after winning gold in the slopestyle final at the 2018 Olympics.
LEE JIN-MAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Red Gerard of the United States shrugs after winning gold in the slopestyle final at the 2018 Olympics.

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