Kuwait Times

Olympics 2020 broadcaste­rs gear up for the biggest show on earth

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MADRID: Clock-watching is an integral part of any Olympic Games but even the most eagle-eyed sporting anoraks might be forgiven for missing the fact that yesterday marked 600 days until the start of the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

For most people, it is not actually a particular­ly significan­t milestone but for 160 people of 35 nationalit­ies beavering away in a building overlookin­g a highway in Madrid, the pressure of organising the biggest television show on earth just went up a notch.

These are the people of the Olympic Broadcasti­ng Services (OBS), a wing of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee responsibl­e since 2008 for providing the pictures of every competitio­n which are beamed around the world.

The size of the audience is phenomenal as is the money that is generated. Over five billion viewers tuned in for the last Games in Rio de Janeiro in 2016 as opposed to 3.4 billion for this year’s football World Cup.

Television stations from around the world have dished out more than six billion dollars for the rights to the Games in Tokyo-broadcasti­ng the event is a complex, lucrative business managed from the Spanish capital.

“Preparing and planning for the games is an ongoing function, so as we speak we are obviously very close to the finalisati­on of our plans for Tokyo,” says Yiannis Exarchos, the imposing Greek boss of the OBS.

“But we have already started quite detailed planning for the winter games in Beijing (2022) and we have already started engaging with Paris (2024) and Los Angeles (2028).” The first time pictures were beamed live from the Olympics was Berlin in 1936. It wasn’t until the 1964 Games, also in Tokyo, that pictures went live around the world. Back then it was the responsibi­lity of the host nation to provide the coverage and that is how it stayed until 2008.

“During the games we employ a team of more than 7,000 profession­als coming from 90 different countries, we have 1,000 cameras, hundreds of thousands of kilometres of cables,” says Exarchos.

“This started to become a big burden for the organising committee as the Games grew bigger and more complex. “As early as the Games of Atlanta (1996), it was made clear that the IOC should do something to support the cities.”

So it was that the IOC created OBS in 2001 to provide coverage of all Olympic and Paralympic Games.

Beijing 2008 marked the OBS’ first outing and it comes as no surprise to discover that Sotiris Salamouris, who is in charge of technology at OBS, was back in Beijing last month to discuss the next Winter Olympics in 2022.

“We need to have a good number of discussion­s with the organising committee in terms of the infrastruc­tures they need to make available for us,” says Salamouris. “The IBC, that is the priority.”

The IBC is the Internatio­nal Broadcast Centre, a bustling hub set up in each host city where television channels from all over the world get the signal from OBS to broadcast back home.

“We need to work quite early with the organising committee to find this facility, to secure it, to agree about timelines, additional works necessary. “This is what we have begun with Paris,” says Salamouris looking ahead already to the Summer Olympics of 2024.

Given that the IOC is based in Lausanne, it may raise an eyebrow to see that the OBS is centred in Madrid. “It does not come from heaven, it comes from (Manolo) Romero,” jokes IOC member Juan Antonio Samaranch Salisachs whose father served 21 years as president of the IOC. — AFP

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