Ikarus360 Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 Back then, i didnt tought the handover was so terrible. In fact i was somewhat surprised at how much it was bashed by canadians. It was just a handover, not like its going to represent everything about Canada (i remember aussies also got ashamed of their handover in 1996)
olympian Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 i heared back in 2006 that people found vancouver's handover youthful which they say is rare. it wasn't that bad for me. i could've been better but certainly not worst. and again, they only had 8 mins.
mr.x Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 At Jack Poole Plaza at the convention centre: The outdoor cauldron
graymccarty Posted February 10, 2010 Author Report Posted February 10, 2010 Yikes. Not a fan to be honest.
Ikarus360 Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 Just a little complaining, maybe the cauldron pics should only have been posted on the cauldron thread, i think it will become confusing later when it comes to talk about it
Sir Rols Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 LOL...It looks like 5 Cigarettes Well, Athens had its One Giant Joint. Vancouver obviously had to go one better!
Faster Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 I love it. It is a perfect representation of Canada, the joining of many peoples to create one nation and one people.
olympian Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 the cauldron if that's the one looks like one giant bonfire at the top.
flying.jay Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 @Baron - You thought that 90 was a lot...it's actually 94 camera's total for the OC. Just got the word today. Keep in mind that there are quite a few outside the venue covering the outdoor stuff. My dad wouldn't tell me much more because of his confidentiality agreement...and quite frankly, I'm looking forward to the surprise. He insists that we won't be disappointed. And yes...it is a 2.5 hour show. He did confirm that today. Wow...three more days...
mr.x Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 I have doubts it's 2.5-hours...that's a pretty short opening ceremony compared to previous (Beijing and Torino were 3 hrs), and the Parade of Nations usually goes over.
baron-pierreIV Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 I have doubts it's 2.5-hours...that's a pretty short opening ceremony compared to previous (Beijing and Torino were 3 hrs), and the Parade of Nations usually goes over. X, I think it's 2.5 for the insiders; but for those viewing it on TV, it will be at least 3 hours w/ all the commercials thrown in.
mr.x Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 X, I think it's 2.5 for the insiders; but for those viewing it on TV, it will be at least 3 hours w/ all the commercials thrown in. That doesn't make much sense...???
Kenadian Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 Won't it be live in most areas across North America? Then again, there's always the pre-show segment.
IceNarcissus Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 Won't it be live in most areas across North America? Then again, there's always the pre-show segment. I was just going to say that. There is so much pre-show and post-show material, especially from the big broadcasters.
mr.x Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 Here's a rough breakdown based on previous opening ceremonies: - Host city/nation cultural segment: 1 HOUR - Protocol (Olympic Hymn, oaths, speeches): 15-minutes? - Parade of Nations: 50-minutes - Lighting of the cauldron: 5-7-mins Does that look right? edit.... - First host city/nation cultural segment: 1 HOUR - Parade of Nations: 50-minutes - Protocol (Olympic Hymn, oaths, speeches): 15-minutes? - Second host city/nation cultural segment: 15-30-mins - Lighting of the cauldron: 5-7-mins
Torchbearer AA Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 Does that look right? edit.... - First host city/nation cultural segment: 1 HOUR - Parade of Nations: 50-minutes - Protocol (Olympic Hymn, oaths, speeches): 15-minutes? - Second host city/nation cultural segment: 15-30-mins - Lighting of the cauldron: 5-7-mins You forget the difference between Summer and Winter opening ceremonies. In summer it's first a welcome show when the Olympic rings appear and after that the dignitaries will come in to the stadium and the national anthem will be played (15 mins). Than the artistic show (1 hour). After that the athletes parade (2 hours). And than the protocol part with speeches, Olympic anthem and oaths and peace part of the ceremony (20-30 mins). Lighting of the flame will be some 10-15 minutes including fireworks. For Winter Games the order of ceremony has been changed in Salt Lake City 2002. It's like this: - Welcome show, entrance of dignitaries, national anthem and another short show (20 mins) - Athletes parade (50 mins) - Artistis show (30 mins- 1 hour) - Protocol part with speeches, raising Olympic flag etc. (20-30 mins) - Lighting of the Olympic flame (10 mins) - A final song (Pavarotti in 2006 and Lee Ann Rimes in 2002) (5 mins)
mr.x Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 ^ oh right i forgot...winter athletes get to go into the stadium earlier so that they get to see more of the snow and because unlike the summer edition they won't be taking up any of the floor where cultural performances would go on.
Citius Altius Fortius Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 The ARD (the first German TV-channel) has planned to show the OC from 03:00-06:20 (CET) so far ARD - Programm scedule (Feb 12th) scroll down to the bottom ARD - Programm scedule (Feb 13th) on the top the German coverage is commented by Katharina Witt and Ralf Scholt
olympian Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 here in manila, it'll be shown at 10am on saturday (16 hour time difference)
Dinhu4ever Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 Here in Brazil, SPORTV 2 starts schedueled the OC from 00:00 to 3 AM, since we're on daylight savings right now. I'm throwing a party here to watch the ceremony with my friends! XD
IceNarcissus Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 ^ oh right i forgot...winter athletes get to go into the stadium earlier so that they get to see more of the snow and because unlike the summer edition they won't be taking up any of the floor where cultural performances would go on. Yep that's right.
baron-pierreIV Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 That doesn't make much sense...??? Not everybody carries it live. Where it's tape-delayed they can throw in as many commercials as possible. But even the 'llive' version, there are designated points in the show where the TV networks can throw in like 3-4 mins of commercials. Who do you htink pays for the show? Those "94" cameras are the TOTAL number of cameras spread out across the Vancouver venues. It's insane to have that huge number just for BC Place and probably the cauldron by the IBC. Also, wasn't it reported that more OC tickets were released because certain camera locations inside BC Place were no longer required. So how many camera positiosn were there to begin with? 120? (I've worked in TV production and that number is quite absurd.)
Olympian2004 Posted February 10, 2010 Report Posted February 10, 2010 The ARD (the first German TV-channel) has planned to show the OC from 03:00-06:20 (CET) so far ARD - Programm scedule (Feb 12th) scroll down to the bottom ARD - Programm scedule (Feb 13th) on the top the German coverage is commented by Katharina Witt and Ralf Scholt We're getting a little bit off track of the topic "spoilers", but just a correction: According to the schedule you posted, the ceremony's commentators will be Jens-Jörg Rieck and Ralf Scholt. If I understand the schedule correctly, Katarina Witt will just be a co-moderator (not commentator) for ARD's opening ceremony coverage, that means she will do the coverage directly before and after the ceremony, preparing for respectively analysing the ceremony. She did the same already in 2002, where she didn't commentate the Salt Lake opening ceremony at all (besides a short period when Kristi Yamaguchi skated on the ice as a ceremonial performer and Kati Witt was "allowed" to commentate that live, since back then, Yamaguchi was her partner in some ice show). Back then, the commentators were Gerd Rubenbauer and German-American journalist Ben Wett.
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