1st Edition

Olympic Media Inside the Biggest Show on Television

By Andrew Billings Copyright 2008
    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    Located in the United States, NBC (National Broadcasting Company) is the biggest and most powerful Olympic network in the world, having won the rights to televise both the Summer and the Winter Olympic Games. By way of attracting more viewers of both sexes and all ages and ethnicities than any other sporting event, and through the production of breathtaking spectacles and absorbing stories, NBC’s Olympic telecasts have huge power and potential to shape viewer perceptions.

    Billings’s unique text examines the production, content, and potential effects of NBC’s Olympic telecasts. Interviews with key NBC Olympic producers and sportscasters (including NBC Universal Sports and Olympics President Dick Ebersol and primetime anchor Bob Costas) outline the inner workings of the NBC Olympic machine; content analyses from ten years of Olympic telecasts (1996-2006) examine the portrayal of nationality, gender, and ethnicity within NBC’s telecast; and survey analyses interrogate the extent to which NBC’s storytelling process affects viewer beliefs about identity issues. This mixed-method approach offers valuable insights into what Billings portrays as "the biggest show on television".

    1. Investigating the Biggest Show on Television  2. Meet the "Framers": The Olympic Producers  3. Chronicling History: The Olympic Sportscasters  4. The Star-Spangled Games? Nationalism and the Olympic Telecasts  5. Competing on the Same Stage: Gender and the Olympic Telecasts  6. Dialogue Differences in Black and White? Ethnicity and the Olympic Telecasts  7. What Do Americans Think Happened in Torino? Examining Media Effects  8. Looking Forward by Looking Back: Reflections on the Olympic Telecasts

    Biography

    Andrew Billings