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50 days and counting

Ben Gallop Ben Gallop | 18:29 UK time, Thursday, 19 June 2008

I've mentioned before that we like a landmark at the BBC and today marks 50 days until the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics.

Yes, I know it's not quite the same as a decent anniversary (and I'll be honest, my research merely consisted of looking at the countdown at the top of our Olympics homepage) - but 50 days to go still feels like a good enough reason to report on how our plans are progressing.

The first point to mention is that Beijing offers the BBC particular challenges, not just from the logistical perspective of all major sporting events, but also because there are so many political and cultural dimensions to these Games.

Our coverage needs to reflect the complexity of China and tell the story in the kind of impartial and independent fashion that people expect of the BBC.

My colleague Dave Gordon, who as Head of Major Events for BBC Sport runs the whole of our Beijing operation, knows more about this than most, having covered the Olympics for 30 years - and he believes the 2008 Games are the most challenging he has worked on.

One way we hope to reflect all the elements of this multi-faceted Chinese story is through our new China portal which pulls together all the best material from across the BBC in a single, easy-to-use page - with everything from the latest news stories to the fabulous Wild China documentary series and even a beginner's guide to Mandarin.

The second major point, and one that is close to my heart, is that the Beijing Games will be an opportunity for BBC Sport to offer even more choice to our audiences.

BBC Sport's Olympics homepage

There is a lot of talk in media circles about slightly dry subjects like 'multi-platform broadcasting', 'time-shifting' and 'convergence'. I know this kind of jargon can grate with some people and to be honest it doesn't tend to mean too much when it's used out of context.

But what excites me is when all the theory and strategy starts to turn to reality - and that's what I'm convinced we are starting to see this summer, firstly with Euro 2008 and secondly, I hope, with the Olympics.

Back in the spring we re-designed the BBC Sport website to give more prominence to video and it's been great to see the results of that over the past couple of weeks.

We've offered live streaming of all the BBC's Euro 2008 matches as well as clip highlights of every game - and we're seeing record numbers of people watching the football on our site.

It feels like we're getting to a point where watching video on the web is no longer the preserve of a fairly niche audience. It's now hitting the mainstream, as the advent of the BBC's iPlayer has shown.

I'm convinced the Olympics can help take that process to the next level, not least because the time difference in China will mean much of the meaningful action will be taking place overnight and in the morning, UK time. Our audiences will want to follow the Olympics on their terms and it's up to us to offer that, with as much choice and convenience as we can possibly provide.

For Beijing we'll provide up to six different streams of live action on the red button and broadband; an in-depth website with all the latest reports and analysis; and an Olympics blog, which will draw on the best journalism the BBC has to offer. We're also looking to take our mobile services to another level, building on our successful WAP site by adding in more video options.

There is a lot still to get done. We'll keep toiling away, working on all our new media output, so that by the time 8 August comes around we'll be ready to put on the kind of show that the Olympics demands.

Suddenly it feels like those 50 days are going to slip by really fast...

Comments

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  • 1. At 8:46pm on 19 Jun 2008, Brekkie wrote:

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the House Rules.

  • 2. At 01:03am on 20 Jun 2008, U12354595 wrote:

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the House Rules.

  • 3. At 08:38am on 20 Jun 2008, Secret Love wrote:

    I'm also looking forward to the olympics, though I disagree with the venue being awarded to China.

    Lets all hope that we're reading the right headlines in 51 days time.

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  • 4. At 10:50am on 20 Jun 2008, Harry_Potts wrote:

    Why isn't Barry Davies doing the opening ceremony?
    I can't wait to hear Eddie Butler commentate on Archery :)

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  • 5. At 3:44pm on 20 Jun 2008, Brekkie wrote:

    An edited version of my above comment then - basically it's scandalous that John Inverdale isn't at the core of the coverage as the main male host considering both the calibre of a sport presenter he is and that he's been waiting in the wings for over a decade.


    Excellent that Adrian Chiles is involved though, but it should be John paired up with Sue Barker for the flagship afternoon (evening) shift.

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  • 6. At 8:55pm on 20 Jun 2008, U12354595 wrote:

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the House Rules.

  • 7. At 9:03pm on 20 Jun 2008, U12354595 wrote:

    Why isnt the BBC using Manish Bhasin?
    Thats all I ask!

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  • 8. At 9:09pm on 20 Jun 2008, redtimbo wrote:

    Can I quickly ask where I can find out which presenters you are using as I was wondering how comment 5 knew about presenting duties.

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  • 9. At 11:12pm on 20 Jun 2008, U12354595 wrote:

    Redtimbo - Post 8
    Look at the BBC Press Office and you will find the information under the Olympic link, it will have information on presenters, commentators and programmes that are on during the BBC's Coverage.
    www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice is where you need to go.

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  • 10. At 00:06am on 21 Jun 2008, Jordan D wrote:

    I may have missed something, but where does it make references to who is presenting what?

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  • 11. At 5:28pm on 21 Jun 2008, r1_fan wrote:

    For those who've asked this is who's presenting what -

    6am-midday: Adrian Chiles and Hazel Irvine
    Midday-6pm: Sue Barker and Jake Humphrey
    7pm Highlights show: Gabby Logan
    Overnights: Clare Balding and Rishi Persad

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  • 12. At 7:38pm on 21 Jun 2008, Brekkie wrote:

    The link your after:
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2008/06_june/19/olympics3.shtml


    Anyhow, back to another battle we'e long since lost but I've just noticed that it's all branded as "Olympics 2008". Now really, you can't seriously say that is a better brand for the programme than "Olympic Grandstand".


    Also, will their be any "Olympic Report" programmes during the day catching up on events?

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  • 13. At 9:57pm on 21 Jun 2008, batsnumbereleven wrote:

    re: website redesign, the top banner is still a mess. Get it smaller with the info on one line.

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  • 14. At 11:23pm on 21 Jun 2008, Jordan D wrote:

    Thanks to Posters 8 and 11 for responding to my comment above.

    Ben - original poster - can you explain why the BBC is not using Barry Davies for the Ceremonies and using a newsreader instead?

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