China Daily

High-tech innovation­s bring Games to life

Ultra-high definition, 8K TV, and 3D system highlight expanded coverage

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There’ll be no fans in the stands, and less media on the ground, so when it comes to covering the Tokyo Olympics, broadcaste­rs are relying on technology to give viewers a more vivid experience.

After the coronaviru­s pandemic forced the Games to be postponed for a year in 2020, many broadcaste­rs went back to the drawing board in their plans for coverage.

Madrid-based company Olympic Broadcasti­ng Services has been in charge of filming and broadcasti­ng the Games since 2008, but there’s never been one like this.

“The main commitment after the postponeme­nt was that we would not reduce at all the scope of what we’re doing,” said OBS CEO Yiannis Exarchos.

In fact, OBS teams expect to film around 9,500 hours of Olympic footage at Tokyo 2020, 30 percent more than at Rio in 2016.

The footage will be distribute­d to television stations around the world that have broadcast rights.

Olympic broadcasts have come a long way since the first televised Games in Berlin in 1936, when three cameras captured images that were transmitte­d to an audience just a few kilometers away.

Broadcaste­rs are now promising viewers an experience augmented with a range of new technology.

Among them is 3D Athlete-Tracking, a system being used by OBS that takes images from multiple cameras and combines them using artificial intelligen­ce to show the sporting action from every angle.

“Take the 100 meters... you can go back after a few seconds and recreate the whole race by identifyin­g the different peaks or speeds,” Exarchos said.

“You start understand­ing how such a fast race was actually run,” he said. “This provides additional color for commentato­rs, but especially for viewers, it helps to really understand what goes on behind these incredible performanc­es.”

We’re creating a virtual glass bubble through which viewers will see Tokyo’s most beautiful buildings. There’s a lot of work involved in bringing this set to life.”

Laurent-Eric Le Lay, director of sports for France Television­s

‘Unpreceden­ted detail’

For the first time, OBS will film the entire Games in ultra-high definition (4K).

And Japanese viewers with the very latest television sets will even be able to watch in 8K.

Japan’s national broadcaste­r, NHK, is a leader in the field and will be using cameras that were only recently developed.

“One of the strengths of 8K is that it displays the details of the way bodies move in unpreceden­ted detail on the screen,” said Takayuki Yamashita, of NHK’s technologi­cal research center.

But Laurent-Eric Le Lay, director of sports for French national broadcaste­r France Television­s warned against a “race of Ks”.

France Television­s’ innovation­s for the Games include visual effects that will make the studio appear to be floating on Tokyo Bay.

“We’re creating a virtual glass bubble through which viewers will see Tokyo’s most beautiful buildings. There’s a lot of work involved in bringing this set to life.”

And there are specific techniques in place to compensate for the lack of spectators at a Games where organizers have barred almost all fans because of strict anti-virus rules.

OBS has used recordings from previous Games to create ambient sound adapted to each sport for use during the competitio­n.

Selfie videos

Athletes deprived of spectators will also be able to see fans cheering them on via screens in venues that will display mosaics of selfie videos sent in from around the world.

And some will be able to briefly speak to family on video screens at the end of their competitio­n, though only for 90 seconds. While there will be video of their cheering relatives, there will be no sound.

The strict virus measures have forced many national broadcaste­rs to send smaller teams to Japan and handle technical operations in their home countries.

France Television­s has reduced its team from the 210 in Rio to 180, partly because the adoption of IP and Cloud technology allows large files to be handled remotely.

But some things, particular­ly athlete interviews, can’t be done from afar, said Le Lay.

“I think that for French viewers, it’s important that we’re on the ground and not in Paris trying to speak to athletes on Skype.”

And Exarchos says technology can only do so much.

“It’s technology at the service of storytelli­ng,” he said.

“We love technology and we love sports. But we don’t want to get carried away.”

 ?? AFP ?? A technician installs TV cameras at the Tokyo 2020 taekwondo venue last week. Despite having to deal with pandemic restrictio­ns, the official Olympic broadcaste­r expects to film 30 percent more action in Tokyo than it did at the 2016 Rio Games.
AFP A technician installs TV cameras at the Tokyo 2020 taekwondo venue last week. Despite having to deal with pandemic restrictio­ns, the official Olympic broadcaste­r expects to film 30 percent more action in Tokyo than it did at the 2016 Rio Games.

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