The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

THE COVERAGE

Highlights from media coverage of the Pyeongchan­g Olympics:

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NO RIPPON: American figure skater Adam Rippon agreed to become an NBC correspond­ent for the duration of the Olympic games, but then changed his mind overnight. He told NBCSN on Sunday that he was flattered by the offer, “but if I took this opportunit­y, I would have to leave the Olympic team and I would have to leave the (Olympic) Village.” He said his friends on the Olympic team were there for him during his events and he wanted to return the favor. Rippon attracted attention for his colorful and candid interviews, and his apparent ease with the medium.

SEALED WITH A KISS: It was a small moment with a big impact. Kudos to NBC for showing American skier Gus Kensworthy getting a kiss from his boyfriend Matt Wilkas. Kenworthy knows what it meant. “I never saw a gay athlete kissing their boyfriend at the Olympics,” he said. “I think if I had, it would’ve made it easier for me.”

JUMP THE BRIDGE: NBC’s Paul Burmeister reached way back to Burt Reynolds’ 1978 movie “Hooper” in comparing an aerial skier’s move to when Reynolds jumped over a gorge in a souped-up Trans Am.

QUOTE: “I hope my grandmothe­r watching on TV is OK” — German bobsled driver Nico Walther worried about how the folks back home would react to a his nasty spill. He was fine.

REGIONAL POPULARITY: Halfway through the Olympics, Salt Lake City has a keener interest in the games than any other U.S. market, the Nielsen company said. The Utah city hosted the 2002 Winter Olympics. Denver, Milwaukee and Seattle follow as cities with the top ratings for NBC’s coverage.

GENDER BREAKDOWN: Bya roughly 60 to 40 percent margin, NBC’s prime-time Olympics coverage has featured men’s events more than women’s during the first half of the games, according to a study by three professors. The numbers don’t include mixed-gender events. The study said the gap is wider than it was during the first half of the 2014 games. It should become more even during the second half of the games when women’s figure skating is featured. Weather postponeme­nts of Alpine skiing events may have impacted the ratio, said Andrew Billings of the University of Alabama, who is studying the issue with James Angelini of the University of Delaware and Paul MacArthur of Utica College.

RATINGS: Because of the holiday weekend, NBC did not immediatel­y have ratings for its Saturday night coverage.

IT’S HISTORY: We’re convinced NBC’s Leigh Diffey can narrate a Monday morning commute to work and make it sound thrilling and history-making. He and analyst Bree Schaaf turned the women’s skeleton competitio­n into high drama. “Lizzy Yarnold proves she is an Olympic legend,” Diffey said of Britain’s two-time gold-medal winner. He and Schaaf are a breakout team.

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