Los Angeles Times

Pomp, politics and fun

NBC’s Olympics coverage embraces the drama but offers something for all.

- By Meredith Blake

There’s nothing quite like the threat of mutually assured destructio­n to lend some drama to the Olympics, is there?

Every two years, the Olympic Games return to television, offering viewers a unique meta-narrative that unfolds over two weeks. The Sochi Games in 2014 were plagued by protests over LGBT rights in Russia, plumbing problems and — who could forget? — Bob Costas’ pink eye. Two years later, Rio was all about the spirited people of Brazil overcoming Zika, economic woes and disconcert­ingly green pools.

We’re only a few days into the 23rd Winter Olympics, but the pre-packaged story this year is about whether

the unifying spirit of athletic competitio­n can cool the nuclear brinkmansh­ip among North Korea, neighborin­g South Korea and the United States.

The Games kicked off Friday night in Pyeongchan­g, just 60 miles from the border with North Korea, with a ceremony titled “Peace in Motion” that combined the usual pyrotechni­c wizardry, adorable singing children and elaborate light displays with a moving call for harmonious coexistenc­e.

In addition to an urgent performanc­e of John Lennon’s “Imagine” by a quartet of South Korean music stars, there were projected yin-yang symbols and doves and even thousands of synchroniz­ed drones deployed not in the name of war but to create dazzling airborne animations in the night sky.

Athletes from both sides of the DMZ marched into the stadium under a unified Korean flag, prompting deafening applause from most of the audience — except for Vice President Mike Pence, who sat in silent protest as the dignitarie­s around him rose to their feet. (The irony was duly noted on Twitter.)

The event culminated with the lighting of the Olympic flame, carried up an illuminate­d flight of stairs by a pair of hockey players from the unified Korean women’s team, one from the north, one from the south. The message of peace was as clear and infectious as the K-pop that blared in the stadium throughout the parade of nations.

The ceremony also marked the beginning of a new and hopefully turmoilfre­e chapter for NBC, its first Olympics in many years without either Matt Lauer, who was fired in November after allegation­s of sexual misconduct, or Costas, who stepped down last year.

Anchored by Katie Couric, newly appointed Olympics host Mike Tirico and analyst Joshua Cooper Ramo, NBC’s broadcast of the ceremony was instructiv­e and mostly intelligen­t, though not without embarrassi­ng moments.

Following a year in which sports and domestic politics have intersecte­d messily, and in contrast to the Sochi Games in 2014, when NBC was criticized for soft-pedaling Russia’s human-rights record, the network emphasized the geopolitic­al stakes of this year’s events.

As Couric, who returned to NBC to anchor the ceremonies, pointed out, Kim Yo Jong, sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, is the first member of the regime’s ruling family to visit the south since 1953.

She was seated in the dignitary box directly behind Pence and his wife, Karen, and provided dramatic cutaways throughout the night. (The glaring look on her face as the U.S. team entered the stadium was worthy of an Oscar, if not a gold medal.)

NBC plugged the arrival of the unified Korean team almost as enthusiast­ically as the season finale of “This Is Us.” For those of us who can recall the Olympics of the Cold War, it all had a throwback vibe, even if the Olympic athletes from Russia, barred from competing under their nation’s flag because of a doping scandal, received relatively scant attention.

At times on Friday, NBC laid on the internatio­nal intrigue a bit thick.

“Are these teams taking the first steps down a new and peaceful path, or is this the very last image of fellowship and hope before tragedy strikes the people of this peninsula?” analyst Ramo asked regarding the unified Korean team. “That’s why it’s so electric here, hundreds of thousands, maybe millions, of lives are at stake.”

Warms the heart, doesn’t it?

NBC, in fact, seemed to be taking a cue from “This Is Us,” its tearjerkin­g megahit whose success is a reminder that viewers apparently love nothing so much as life-anddeath drama. Fittingly, the network kicked off Friday’s three-hour broadcast with a montage narrated by Sterling K. Brown, the Emmywinnin­g star of the series.

The weekend also offered plenty of sweeping spectacle and a few moments of levity. To the delight of Couric, Pita Taufatofua, the barecheste­d Tongan flag bearer who became a viral star of the Rio Games, made a triumphant return to the opening ceremony.

“Mike, I’ll handle this one,” a breathless Couric told her co-host as Taufatofua, wearing nothing but grease on his upper half despite temperatur­es in the 20s, strutted onto the floor of the stadium. (He made the Bermudan athletes, with their knee-bearing shorts, seem positively wimpy by comparison.)

The seemingly interminab­le parade of nations often turns into the parade of trivia. But instead of rattling off the usual Wikipedia fun facts about each country, Couric and Tirico focused on the athletes, sharing improbable biographie­s about lugers from India and a family of cross-country skiers representi­ng Thailand.

The cringe-worthy commentary was refreshing­ly rare and mostly came courtesy of Ramo, who made numerous broad generaliza­tions about “Asian culture” that felt like rehashed stereotype­s. He claimed that Koreans viewed Japan as “a cultural, technologi­cal and economic example,” a comment that many interprete­d as putting a positive spin on Japan’s imperialis­t rule during the previous century. NBC issued an on-air apology Saturday.

Even on a night when we were urged to “imagine there’s no countries,” the show skewed heavily toward American athletes. Anyone who took a shot every time the camera cut away to skier Lindsey Vonn would have passed out well before 11, and NBC also seemed to use clever editing to draw out Team USA’s entry into the stadium for as long as possible.

At times throughout the weekend, NBC’s programmin­g felt like an early episode of a reality show called “America’s Next Breakout Olympic Star.” Would the winner be 18-year-old Ghana-born short-track speed skater Maame Biney? Or figure skater Bradie Tennell, a 20-year-old newcomer to internatio­nal competitio­n? The jury is out, but by Sunday, NBC at least had its first American gold medal winner, 17-year-old snowboarde­r Red Gerard.

Yet the personalit­ies never completely overshadow­ed politics. Saturday’s prime-time broadcast included a report by Mary Carillo about the unified Korean women’s hockey team, which includes 12 players from the north. Carillo found inspiratio­n in their 8-0 loss to Switzerlan­d on Saturday because, she said, “For the second night in a row, Korea came together.”

 ?? Jonathan Nackstrand AFP / Getty Images ?? A FIREWORKS and lighting display dazzles those in the Olympic Stadium and viewers at home during opening ceremony of the Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.
Jonathan Nackstrand AFP / Getty Images A FIREWORKS and lighting display dazzles those in the Olympic Stadium and viewers at home during opening ceremony of the Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.
 ?? Ryan Pierse Getty Images ?? MEMBERS of the U.S. team enjoy the show Friday. NBC’s coverage skewed heavily toward U.S. athletes.
Ryan Pierse Getty Images MEMBERS of the U.S. team enjoy the show Friday. NBC’s coverage skewed heavily toward U.S. athletes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States