The London Olympics ended on a sour note in terms of coverage. And some audiences blamed NBC and DirecTV for spoiling their last hours of viewing. The Numbskull Broadcasting Company once again edited the heck out of its tape-delayed primetime broadcast Sunday night of the Closing Ceremonies. The network cut performances by The Kinks’ Ray Davies, Muse, Kate Bush, the Royal Ballet, and Eric Idle singing a swear word. The network also decided George Michael performing a track from his new record wasn’t worth sharing with America. (NBC did include Michael’s rendition of his classic ”Freedom”. Some bigwig must be a fan of the song…)
Related: Stephen Daldry’s London Olympics Closing Ceremony
But NBC’s most controversial move was to squeeze in a commercial-free preview of Animal Practice before airing The Who’s grand finale. It fell to poor put-upon NBC Olympics host Bob Costas to make the following announcement to viewers: ”We’ll be back from Olympic Stadium in about an hour for the London closing party featuring The Who. But stay tuned now for a full episode of Animal Practice, the new NBC comedy presented commercial free.” The network brass changed plans to air Crystal The Monkey et al after the closing ceremony. Granted, the embattled network is desperate for more eyeballs for its 2012-2013 primetime. But NBC forfeited audience goodwill last night. Viewers were merciless on Twitter at #NBCfail and #closingceremonies.
In the Los Angeles area, DirecTV subscribers watching NBC’s last hours of Olympic coverage in HD experienced a 30-minute service outage. Some claimed to have missed the Spice Girls and Eric Idle. A message on the screen instructed viewers to change their settings and switch to the SD feed of Channel 4. As if most people are that tech savvy. KNBC sent out this tweet to its customers: ”Sorry for the @NBCLA outage with @DIRECTV. We’re working to get it resolved as soon as possible. Thanks for your patience.” And DirecTV later apologized with this statement: “A technical issue at our broadcast center caused a brief disruption of the Los Angeles-based NBC HD signal this evening. The signal was down for approximately a half hour and was restored at 10:06 PT. We are looking into the cause and apologize to those customers who were affected.”
Back to NBC primetime, Ray Davies didn’t perform “Waterloo Sunset”, there was no dance piece to Kate Bush music, and George Michael was not seen singing a second song. The Muse was an odd cut because the group is fairly well-known Stateside from their Twilight Saga soundtracks. (Not just because they wrote the London Olympics theme song, or because the lead singer dates actress Kate Hudson.)
Also edited was Eric Idle singing “Always Look On The Bright Side of Life” from the iconic Monty Python movie Life Of Brian. He’s clearly heard cursing on the song lyric, “Life’s a piece of shit when you look at it,” on the NBC live-stream. But the network bleeped the swear word for the primetime broadcast.
U.S. viewers also didn’t hear UK officials thanking the volunteers, which prompted Olympic Stadium to erupt into thunderous applause. And deleted were some performance art pieces: one where a pyramid was built, and another of a phoenix with dancers dressed as flames.
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So who runs NBC anyway, the peacock or the monkey from Animal Practice?
That sucks but in Charlotte my digital cable for the last two weeks havent been working for NBC but first thing at 12am it started working
Why was Prince Harry’s introduction and speech cut.That is an insult to Britain and the Royal family.
And please did Ryan Secrist have to spoil the Olympics for many.
They cut pat of the opening ceremony to show an inane interview with Phelps….
It sucks that ALL the networks are controlled by mega/corps who are run by the 1% / 5% / 10% people with business fiancee ponzi scheme education and backgrounds, that have no creative clue as to what makes good TV and movies for that matter. NBC made their Billions, they could not care less what the viewer thinks after the show…
NBC should not be permitted to have the Olympics- it all sounds like a Reality Show and Bob Costas is an untalented Howard Kosell
Somwhow someway NBC is going to pay for those editing mistakes at the Olympics. I can see Animal Practice and several more shows biting the dust for it.
I’m just happy in Canada we have CTV which airs everything live, including the closing with nothing taken out.
I can’t believe they cut out Judas Priest, Iron Maiden and Led Zep too… what jerks!
NBC’s cutting the Closing Ceremony to shreds was really unforgiveable. With the profits they derived from the event as a whole, you would think that they could have reduced the commercial content and provided quality airing of a moving tribute/party.They could have saved a ton of money by eliminating Seacrest. His primary function appeared to be “spoiler in chief”. The Eric Idle surprise, brilliant in the live feed, was prefaced by him telling us what was coming, as well as the Spice girls appearance. The BBC simply said something about this being an interesting cab ballet and then…
If he had done the open, It would have been “Coming up, Rowan Atkinson plays Chariots of Fire”. Thanks Ryan
Yeah, good thing NBC cut Ray Davies, et al and instead showed the whole bit of vapid British Models strutting to “Fashion” by David Bowie. That was just sooooo worth it.
i wonder with all the constant, loud complaining about NBC
since the opening ceremony thru to the end, whether they’ve made any statement about it, even in defense of their vandalism.
do they acknowledge there’s a problem even behind closed doors?
it’s all a bit sinister, kinda 1984
The NBC coverage sounds terrible. In the UK we have had 26 channels (25 of which had HD equivilents) streaming live all day every day.
My solution is simple. I will pirate all of the NBC shows I want to watch next year. No commercials = no revenue. If they get cancelled, it’s a shame. But as a message to showrunners and studios, “don’t sell your shows to NBC! They will mismanage them and ultimately cancel them. People are activly avoiding the network and your show will never be seen because of it”.
A message to Comcast: “Clean house. Re-hire Warren Littlefield (or damn near any competant executive) and try to recapture the magic that NBC once had”
A message to NBC Executives: Polish that resume up. I hear McDonalds is hiring.
As did we. The downside to the live cast was that the sound was a muffled 2.0, without direct lines to the singers.
I watched the entire live cast and was looking forward to watching the show again in full HD and 5.1 sound.
The discrepancy between the broadcasts was shocking.
Why weren’t they shown live? I watched the entire closing ceremonies live from start to finish unedited on Canada’s CTV. Why wouldn’t NBC do the same?
The page and anyone who likes it are pretty pathetic. No need to take it out on the show.
I don’t have a problem with the time-shifting to maximize their audience. And Saturday night’s kick-off with the interesting, but inappropriately scheduled one-hour
“history channel-style” documentary on Winston Churchill was bad enough (and I admire Churchill). But, the final blow was not only delaying The Who until after the sitcom sneak peek, but to find out they deleted entire performances should get people really upset. I think NBC did a very good job, with what they actually decided to share with the audience. But, with all the hours there are to broadcast, to use much of this time as NBC’s personal showcase for their programming is a disservice to the IOC, the Brits, the American audience, and to the spirit of the Olympics. The audience expects to see the ceremony in its entirety and for NBC to offer what amounts to a highlight reel is nothing short of offensive, disrespectful, and, well, disgusting. I’m sure NBC will issue another of their infamous apologies over the next day or two. But, the real losers in all of this are the British people who deserve to have their farewell “love letter” to the world be viewed by all Americans who wish to view it. The IOC should demand more from those they award the broadcasting rights.
Richard, that was originally supposed to have aired in their daytime Saturday coverage but NBC switched it at the last minute to air in primetime but I never saw it but again, cheap plugs for Brokaw and History Channel and such. NBC edited the hell out of the ceremonies broadcast as I saw it on BBC One and what a difference between live and tape delay. I wish NBC would stop this craziness of airing sneak peaks of shows that are destined for failure and whomever though AP was funny last night, should have their head examined.
Tom Brokaw had had a one hour primetime special during every Olympics in this century. It’s part of his post-Nightly News contract with NBC.
The complainers seemed to have forgotten that.
I could see the outrage if it were 1984. Today if you want to see the Closing Ceremony uncut I bet you’re a quick Google search away. Two weeks ago, I was watching the opening ceremony in Mexico City. It’s not all about NBC.
BBC.com? YouTube?
Bueller????
PS: Animal Practice was funny.
Shame on NBC. I’m in awe at how incredibly horrible the coverage and edits were. Also, while I understand the time delay and need for a taped broadcast, I would have loved if the NBC promos didn’t give away who WON. And if CNN and HuffPost would have added a ‘spoiler alert’ before they announced the winners of the events during the day prior to anyone in the US seeing and experiencing it first hand. This was the most anti climatic Olympics I have ever watched.
Also, simply because it was being shoved down my throat, I refuse to watch Animal Practice. Hey Producers/Execs of AP, way to sign off on a sure fire way to have people immediately hate your show.
So I called Direct TV and of corse they blamed NBC. And if there was a way to call NBC I am sure they would have blamed Direct TV. Just like Congress. So …. My Nielsen box will not be Viewing “Animal Practice” NBC. That was just stupid!
NBC blew it big time. Animal Practice felt like a show from the ’80s-obvious over the top acting, really juvenile situations and a boring cast. I gave it 10 minutes and predict this show will head directly to the ER with orders of DNR shortly after admission.
I wanted to watch the closing ceremonies live stream – I knew I probably wouldn’t care for the musical acts anyway, but just to watch 20-30 minutes of it. But of course, you have to be a cable/satellite subscriber to see the live stream – gah. For some stupid reason, I thought NBC’s change of heart to live-stream meant that it would be available to anyone. How silly of me…
Why in thw world did NBC pull this stunt yet again with airing one of their soon-to-fail shows and interrupt the closing ceremonies and such? Didn’t NBC learn from this stupidity two years ago with Marriage Ref? I mean seriously NBC…get a damn clue and forget trying so hard to get eyeballs for your miserable primetime shows and just allow the broadcast of the ceremonies to air nonstop like you did in years past. Enough of the shameless promotions of shows that have no chance of surviving past this season and just focus on what you paid a shitload of money for…to cover the games and not airing drivel such as Ref and this nonsense from last night!
Haha… Only in America!!
The opening and closing ceremonies were ruined by the announcers feeling the need to babble. Singing along to a Beatles song? Yeah, who needs the original composer when you can listen to a Karaoke singer. Trashing props when you are just a talking head? It was like someone talking out loud during a movie in a theater. I also didn’t appreciate Ryan Seacrest spoiling the artist lineups and ruining the surprises of what songs were chosen by the artists. Show a super. We can all read.
Knowing it was on time delay, they could of paused both events during the commercials and not missed a frame when resuming the ceremonies. What an insult to Danny Boyle and Kevin Gavin, jump-cutting the productions that they had created so perfectly. The two nights presentations could of been their actual lengths and NBC could of sold more premium ad space.
The opening showcased how compassionate a country can be to each other and the closing showed how important Britain has been in their breadth of pop and classical music through the decades. NBC showed how important they thought it was to constantly interrupt and distract a viewer into thinking they need to go buy something.
I guess I’ll just have to let it be and imagine.