Tuesday, September 21, 2004

The lack of American television coverage for the Paralympics that I've been banging on about is finally gaining traction, with the AFP newswire picking up on the story.

By the way, I've still haven't received a reply to the e-mail I sent to NBC:

Paralympics a TV success story in Europe and Asia, but not in US

by Harry Papachristou

ATHENS, Sept 21 (AFP) - More and more broadcasters across the world, especially in Europe and Asia, are putting the Paralympics into the spotlight, but the major sporting tournament for people with disabilities remains off screen in the world's biggest television market -- the United States.

The BBC "made history" on Sunday when broadcasting for the first time ever live coverage of the Paralympics, Dave Gordon, director for major events at Britain's public broadcaster said.

"There is a clear audience appetite for world class disability sport," he said. Audiences exceed two million viewers, "a perfectly respectable figure," Gordon said.

The BBC has sent a 100-strong crew to Athens to provide Paralympic coverage on its nationwide BBC2 channel for around 90 minutes a day.

"People are coming to grips with and love Paralympic sports," said International Paralymic Committee (IPC) President Phil Craven.

In 1996 the Atlanta Paralympics Games broadcast rights were sold for the first time. This year, the Athens Paralympics broadcast package is valued at 1.5 million dollars (1.2 million euros), according to IPC figures. The IPC spends all of that to cover a
large part of the Games' transmission costs, which total 3.5 million dollars.

"We are very disappointed about the fact that US networks decided not to buy the rights," Miriam Wilkens, media director of the International Paralympic Committee (IPC), told AFP.

According to Wilkens, the US networks turned down the rights, citing a combination of cost and supposed lack of viewers' interest.

"We believe there is a broad public that would like coverage. We have e-mails coming to us from both athletes and viewers in the United States, asking us where they could see the Games," the IPC official said.

Negotiations are currently under way with the US Outdoor Live cable network to air a summary of the Paralympics in November.

"We hope that the US networks will be more proactive in the next Games," Wilkens said.

"I think that if the BBC is successful, then a US commercial entity will enter," said Steve Goldberg, a US journalist covering the Paralympics. "Interest in the States is building," he said.

"It's so embarrassing when you see there are no Americans at all," said Gordon.

Other broadcasters across the world, mainly on public television in China, Germany, Spain, and Greece, also attach greater importance to the Paralympics. "There is live coverage every day. Athletes winning medals make headlines in news bulletins back home," a Chinese journalist said.

Television viewers are not just people with disabilities. "We know from audience research for the Sydney (2000 Paralympics) that the able-bodied enjoy watching the Paralympics as they enjoy watching other sports," said Gordon.

Paralympics' television ratings even beat similar high-profile athletics events where able-bodied stars competed."During the weekend, the Paralympics even scored higher ratings than the Monaco Athletics Grand Prix," said Gordon. "You can't fool
the audiences. The viewer knows the Paralympics matter because that's when athletes win medals. In other competitions it's just athletes earning money".

5 Comments:

Blogger Doug said...

pleased to report from Canada that I saw Wheelchair Basketball covered on CBC sunday night. They often show sporting events on tape after 11pm on Sundays.

4:11 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Just out of curiousity, Stuart, did YOU watch much of the Sydney Paralympics in 2000?

7:27 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good to see Clare Balding and Colin Jackson discussing this issue during the BBC2 coverage yesterday evening. They wondered just how this lack of coverage might affect the New York bid for the 2012 games.
We watch the coverage every evening as a family and find it every bit as absorbing as the Olympics. It helps, of course, that the BBC commentators are just the best. They know so much about the athletes themselves - their families, their training, their previous performances.
Long may it continue!

10:29 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

check out http://www.b3ta.com/board/3739293 for some topical web-art. is it bad taste or gentle fun?

1:35 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

As a parent of a US Paralympian competitor who witnessed the entire Paralympics firsthand (well, that I could get to with the long travel times between the far-flung venues), I can add that the athletes were told that "the Athens unions could not come to an agreement with the US" and that is why the US did not cover the Paralympics.
hmmmmm....

6:07 PM  

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