San Francisco Chronicle

‘Opportunit­y to be apolitical’

- By David Bauder David Bauder is an Associated Press writer.

NEW YORK — Fresh off the Super Bowl, NBC begins more than two weeks of Winter Olympics coverage Thursday with a new host, some new wrinkles and the hope that its business model keeps pace with the different ways people experience events on television and online.

Some skiing and figureskat­ing competitio­n takes place Thursday in South Korea. NBC will stream the Olympic Opening Ceremony from Pyeongyang live early Friday in the United States, then repeat it that evening for television viewers with Mike Tirico and Katie Couric as hosts.

NBC parent Comcast Corp. placed a $963 million bet — the Pyeongchan­g rights fee — on Americans wanting to take a breather from arguments in Washington to watch athletes prospect for gold on snow or ice.

“This is a wonderful opportunit­y to be apolitical in a time when that’s been very difficult to do,” said Couric, who’s making a return to NBC for the Olympics.

That might be a tough sell. There’s more attention paid to the Summer Olympics than the Winter version, and distant locations tend to depress interest, too. “It definitely feels like it’s more quiet, more subdued, than previous Olympic seasons,” said Ashwin Navin, CEO of Samba TV, an analytics firm that measures television viewing.

Adam Schwartz, an analyst for Horizon Media, said he has noticed a lack of enthusiasm among many advertiser­s, some related to curiosity over how the time-zone difference will unfold (Pyeongchan­g is 17 hours ahead of Pacific Standard Time). NBC has estimated it has booked more than $900 million in national advertisin­g.

“Outside of (American skier) Lindsey Vonn, there hasn’t been much buzz,” Schwartz said.

Tirico, formerly of ESPN, replaces Bob Costas as host of NBC’s prime-time coverage and already he’s being asked to put in more hours. For the first time, NBC will air its evening coverage live across the country, meaning the telecast that starts at 5 p.m. Pacific. With a half-hour break for local news, Tirico will stay on the air each evening until 11 Pacific time, coinciding with the end of prime-time.

NBC believes the time-zone difference will serve the American audience well. Since prime evening viewing time coincides with daylight hours in South Korea, it means more live events than usual when most viewers are available.

NBC’s coverage team is well stocked with people such as essayist Jimmy Roberts, covering his 17th Olympics and Mary Carillo, her 14th.

Yet there are some notable changes for Olympic followers. Tara Lipinski and Johnny Weir are the lead analysts for the marquee sport of figure skating, replacing Scott Hamilton and Sandra Bezic. Hockey announcer Mike “Doc” Emrick, who doesn’t want to make the long journey, will be missed. Former Olympic skier Bode Miller and speedskate­r Joey Cheek will be new analysts.

In addition to the return of Olympic enthusiast Leslie Jones of “Saturday Night Live,” NBC will add a couple of left-field choices for cultural correspond­ents in race-car driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Momofuku restaurant founder David Chang.

NBC’s prime-time coverage is the window through which most Americans experience the Olympics, but it’s only a fraction of what is offered. All the competitio­n will be streamed online, and coverage also is available on NBCSN, CNBC, USA Network and the Olympic Channel. NBCSN even airs different Olympics coverage during prime time and, coupled with the online options, gives couch-bound viewers the chance for a multi-screen experience.

“A viewer is a viewer,” said Dan Lovinger, NBC’s executive vice president of sports advertisin­g sales. “If they’re passionate about the Olympics, it doesn’t matter whether they’re on NBCSN, on the broadcast network or digital. We just have to find ways to put it all together, and that narrative has definitely changed. It’s changed drasticall­y.”

 ?? Felipe Dana / Associated Press ?? Athletes from Japan practice at the Gangneung Oval during a speed skating training session Tuesday.
Felipe Dana / Associated Press Athletes from Japan practice at the Gangneung Oval during a speed skating training session Tuesday.

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