Much as I’m not paying attention to the Olympics, it’s pretty hard to totally ignore them. Whether it’s the daily medal wrap-up, or stories about how people on Twitter are mad at NBC for tape delaying the “big” events so they can show them in prime time (note to Twitterers out there: they’ve always done this, partly because many of us have jobs and can’t sit around and watch the Olympics all say, but mostly because they paid, like $1.8 billion for the damn games, and they need to get their money back. Second note: I’m assuming that if you use Twitter, you have access to a thing called the Internet, where NBC is streaming all the events live, and on-demand replays. Though I think you need to have cable or satellite with MSNBC).
This morning on the way in to work, I heard a story about a 16-yr old Chinese swimmer who suddenly swam faster than Michael Phelps and set a world record.
China has become embroiled in the first doping controversy of the London Games after one of the world’s most respected coaches described the swimming prodigy Ye Shiwen’s gold medal performance as “unbelievable” and “disturbing”.
The American John Leonard, executive director of the World Swimming Coaches Association, said the 16-year-old’s performance was “suspicious”….
[…]
Ye was more than seven seconds faster in the Olympic 400m individual medley final than she had been in the World Championship equivalent last July.Leonard said that although this vast improvement was possible, it would be very hard to achieve. “But the final 100m was impossible. Flat out. If all her split times had been faster I don’t think anybody would be calling it into question, because she is a good swimmer. But to swim three other splits at the rate that she did, which was quite ordinary for elite competition, and then unleash a historic anomaly, it is just not right.”
I found this story interesting, not because of the “doping” thing. Because of this kid’s name, Ye Shiwen, which is pronounced, “Yay! She win!”
I mean, with a name like that, how could she lose?
If you live in India, there’s a pretty good chance you’re not reading this right now, mostly because half the country – so far – is in the dark with no power, including the capital, New Delhi. That’s about 600 million people (which is twice as many people as we have here in the US).
They’re investigating the cause, but, if it’s anything like the power company around here, I have no doubt that the cause will be “squirrel in the transformer” (which is electric company code for “our shit’s old and falling apart, and we fired 2/3 of our maintenance crews so we could increase profits”).
Well, time to get busy, I guess.
I can almost ignore the Olympics altogether and intended to. I can’t get NBC without cable as you know by now. I did not realize that this big hoo-hah about everything else being available live in real time meant that you still had to have PayTV to ‘enjoy’ and NBC/Universal/Comcast/GE/… seems to be pretty aggressive about keeping any other online coverage from cable-disabled ‘murkuns looking for better coverage from some offshore source.
The other night during the time zone tape delays of the opening ceremonies I was watching some friends commenting on the FB and got interested a bit so I tried to dial it up and it was mostly blacked out on the internets. I did find a re-broadcast in the wee hours from BBC 3 which had no commercials and no Costas/Seacrest. I also found a full uninterrupted BBC edition that I can watch anytime if I really care. The interesting thing about that remembrance that NBC pre-empted to me was that MSNBC had been giving a fair amount of air and self-righteousness in the previous days about the Olympic ‘snub’ of the 1972 victims of the Munich Olympics killings.
The upside of this and MSNBC being partially taken over for coverage is that I am almost caught up on The Daily Show and Colbert and can finally wade into the first 5 episodes of Newsroom.