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Olympics: 21,000 journalists swarm into London

With less than two weeks to go before the Olympic Games, hordes of competitors are pouring into London from across the globe and limbering up -- but they're not athletes.

Promising coverage on an unprecedented scale and record-breaking use of social media, the 21,000 journalists, photographers, cameramen and technicians will in fact be twice as numerous as the athletes they are covering.

The BBC, Britain's official Olympic broadcaster, will offer up 2,500 hours of live coverage and "more online and mobile services than ever before".

A general view of the Tower Bridge decorated with the Olympic ring symbol, in central London, on July 15, 2012, as Britain prepares for the beginning of the Olympic Games. The London 2012 Olympic Games will begin on July 27, 2012. (AFP-Yonhap News)
A general view of the Tower Bridge decorated with the Olympic ring symbol, in central London, on July 15, 2012, as Britain prepares for the beginning of the Olympic Games. The London 2012 Olympic Games will begin on July 27, 2012. (AFP-Yonhap News)


"This will be the first truly 'Digital Olympics', with the BBC offering viewers the most comprehensive coverage of an Olympic Games ever," the public broadcaster said.

With 765 staff accredited for the Games, the BBC's team will be a third bigger than the one it sent to the Beijing Olympics in 2008.

The broadcaster's Facebook page will stream the TV coverage live for the first time, and in a second innovation, viewers with 3D televisions will be able to watch athletes lurching off the screen into their living rooms.

The BBC will show the opening and closing ceremonies in 3D along with nightly highlights. The men's 100 meter finals will be the only sporting event shown live in the format.

NBC, the Games' broadcaster in the United States, is also planning to air more than 200 hours of 3D coverage with a next-day delay.


 
A worker constructs scaffolding in Trafalgar Square where clock displays the days and hours until the start of the 2012 Summer Olympics, Sunday, July 15, 2012, in London. (AP-Yonhap News)
A worker constructs scaffolding in Trafalgar Square where clock displays the days and hours until the start of the 2012 Summer Olympics, Sunday, July 15, 2012, in London. (AP-Yonhap News)


The US giant is sending a 2,700-strong team to London to produce at least 5,500 hours of coverage across several channels. And in another first, its website is set to broadcast every sporting event live.

"This will be the most comprehensively covered event in television history," said Mark Lazarus, NBC Sports Group chairman.

Of the international news agencies, Agence France-Presse will deploy a multilingual team of around 150 text, photo and video journalists to the British capital, plus thirty journalists from its German subsidiary SID.

The U.S. newswire Associated Press will have around 200 staff on the ground, while Yahoo!, the U.S. website which aggregates news articles and agency dispatches, will send 26 journalists -- 10 more than it sent to Beijing.

In addition to the 21,000 "accredited" journalists reporting from the venues, between 6,000 and 8,000 of their colleagues are due in London to cover the "non-sport" aspects of the Games, from transport to security.

Games organizers have built two huge press centers at the heart of the Olympic Park in east London, with state of the art IT facilities and a miniature "high street" designed to cater for their occupants' every need.

Banks, newsagents and a post office have been set up, along with a gym, grocery store, hair salon and medical centre. Stressed reporters can even relax at their very own massage parlor.

"The media are with us for such a long time, and they're working such long hours," said Mandy Keegan, manager of the Main Press Centre.

"They don't have the opportunity to live normal lives while they're here, so we aim to provide all of those services," she told AFP.

A 4,000-seater restaurant will serve some 480,000 meals to journalists -- with a broad international menu reflecting their 190 different home countries -- along with 1.6 million cups of tea and coffee.

Journalists working into the small hours, meanwhile, will be able to order pizza and beer directly to their desks.

Keegan wants journalists to be comfortable -- but not too comfortable.

"At previous Games there have always been reports of people sleeping in the media centre," she said. "We want to avoid that."

St Bride's church on central London's Fleet Street, once the legendary home of Britain's newspapers, is offering a bed to around a dozen cash-strapped journalists from countries including Togo, Croatia and Romania.

On the technical side, British Telecom (BT) has the formidable task of maintaining the Internet and telephone networks that the thousands of journalists will depend upon.

The company predicts that at the busiest times, some 60 gigabytes of information -- equivalent to 3,000 photographs -- will travel across the Olympic Park's network every second.

After slow Internet connections left many journalists frustrated in Beijing, BT have pledged a network capacity four times bigger than that of 2008. (AFP)



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