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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

No rest for the West

TV schedule makes area viewers choose what to know, when to sleep

Gina Kim Sacramento Bee

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – First we have to shun broadcast news, social media and the Internet to keep from learning who won gold, silver and bronze. Then we have to stay up to midnight and beyond to see the results.

There’s a lot of bleary-eyed West Coasters this Olympics, even though the Games in Vancouver and Whistler, British Columbia, are happening in our time zone.

The International Olympic Committee set the schedule so that much of the ice skating and snowboarding competitions are shown live after 7 or 8 p.m. in prime time for Central and East Coast audiences, which make up about 75 percent of the U.S. market. But the West Coast is getting a tape delay so the events are shown in prime time here as well.

“It really suits those with anxiety disorders who don’t want the stress of not knowing who’s going to win,” said Miriam Smith, an associate professor of broadcast and electronic communication arts at San Francisco State University. “But for most people, it ruins the whole thing.”

Television brought the world into people’s living rooms. Technological developments keep making the screens bigger and the picture crisper so people can feel almost as if they’re experiencing it all in person.

NBC packages the events so audiences get a show worth the picture, so they don’t have to sit through the competition of every athlete from every country, Smith said.

But the tape delay means Pacific viewers can know who won what before competitions even air. Even knowing the results, they still wait, fight sleep to see the drama play out, knowing it could all have been on three hours earlier.

“I’m not watching for the drama and excitement,” Smith said. “I’m watching for the aesthetics to see how these gold medalists behave and the way they look.”

Ratings from the first four nights of the Olympics show people are watching in prime time no matter what part of the country they live in, said NBC Sports spokesman Chris McCloskey.

An average of 27.9 million people have been watching the Games so far, more than a 25 percent increase over the 2006 Winter Games.

“Our research shows, people in the Western time zone want to watch the Olympics when they are available to watch them, which in most cases mean when they are at home and in prime time,” McCloskey said.

NBC offers live Olympic coverage on three cable channels and its Web site, he added.

Elaine Chan, an assistant professor at San Francisco State, said NBC seems to be limiting its audience’s options, especially for people used to everything on demand.

“People generally like more flexibility,” she said. “With social media and online news, none of that is waiting for the West to catch up.”