By John Corry on 2.12.02 @ 11:27AM
This is not your father's Winter Olympics. It may not even be your older brother's.
This is not your father's Winter Olympics. It may not even be
your older brother's. Salt Lake City is giving us a hip, so very
now Winter Olympics, with exuberant young competitors to match. As
18-year-old Kelly Clark said on Sunday after she had won a gold
medal, "It means a lot to me, and all of the rest of America. We've
had a tough few months. It's important to give people something to
have pride in."
Kelly was first in the women's halfpipe competition, and if you
don't know what that is, or why you should be thrilled, you are not
at all now, and probably think Sonia Henie is still around. Anyway
halfpipe competition is snowboard competition, and a snowboard is
like a skateboard, except that a snowboard is ridden down a course
dug into a mountainside, and a skateboard belongs on city streets.
The International Olympic Committee sanctioned snowboarding to show
it was hip, and also to get more young people to watch television.
NBC, which is doing the televising, wants this too, of course, and
it is also being hip.
The little bios of the athletes are less sentimental now than in
previous Olympics, and are meant to appeal more to the young. When
it was clear, for example, that Finns would finish one, two in the
Nordic combined, NBC showed a film clip of Samppa Lajunen, the
winner, with his rock band in Finland. The band played its big hit,
"The Lightest Man in Finland." Then, when Lajunen neared the finish
line, he tore off his hat, and you could see his blue hair. Then an
excited announcer said it was "impossible to overestimate the
importance" of his victory "to the psyche of Finland." Apparently
Finland gets very depressed this time of year.
Meanwhile back at the women's halfpipe, there was another
excited announcer. There is "massive public support," she said, for
snowboarding. But if there is, it is found among members of the hip
hop generation, and not the people who remember Sonia Henie, or
maybe even Peggy Fleming. It is the same with the event called
moguls, where a skier races between bumps, and then jumps off
ramps, and does helicopter spins in the air. On television, a
little of this goes a long way, and is best appreciated by viewers
in, or close to, their teens.
At the same time, some of the Winter Olympic events are
spectacular -- ski jumping, for one -- and some have a goofy charm.
Salt Lake City is predominantly Mormon -- "a great religion,"
President Bush said when he showed up for the opening ceremonies on
Saturday -- and though Mormons frown on smoking, drinking, and many
other earthy pleasures, there is an effort underway to show they
are fun-loving people who live in a fun-loving place. NBC cut away
several times over the weekend to what looked like a big party for
no apparent reason other than that.
The weekend also gave us a truly memorable example of
over-reaching. Someone in Salt Lake City had decided to dress up
the ceremony in which athletes were awarded their medals. In
previous Olympics, winter and summer, the athletes just stood on
boxes.
Sunday night, however, we saw a big geodesic dome. Dancers
seemed to be writhing around on the outside of the dome. Then
banners with acrobats wrapped in them dropped down from the ceiling
inside the dome. It was as if Busby Berkeley had choreographed for
Ringling Brothers, Barnum and Bailey's. Bob Costas, the capable NBC
announcer, looked stunned. Most likely, he said, the elaborate
setting would only be used that night. He was right, and on Monday
the athletes were once again standing on boxes.
Monday also brought the Winter Olympics first disputed call. It
was, in fact, a very bad call. Jamie Sale and David Pelletier won
silver medals for second place in pairs figure skating, when they
should have won gold medals for first place. Sale and Pelletier,
who are Canadians, lost to Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze,
who are Russians. Old right-wingers should take notice, and
probably some of them will. Even the New York Times seemed
annoyed.
The frozen-faced judges who favored the Russians were from the old
Communist bloc, while the other judges liked the Canadians.
John Corry is a former New York Times media
reporter.
topics:
Television, Religion, Russia