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Why You Should Stop Complaining About NBC's Tape-Delayed Olympics Coverage Before You Start

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Watch the live stream online. And don’t tell other people how to live.

The Rosa Khutor Alpine Skiing mountain resort in Sochi.

Leonhard Foeger / Reuters / Reuters

NBC's coverage of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, begins tomorrow with a tape-delayed broadcast of the preliminary rounds of snowboarding, freestyle skiing, and figure skating.

Soon after, complaints will start to show up on social media from a small but very vocal minority of people about NBC's failure to understand the internet, and its greed in saving these events for primetime, when it can sell the priciest advertising. These people may even revive the now infamous #NBCfail hashtag that went so viral during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. They will probably get a lot of media attention.

But this complaint makes almost no sense, and we should stop taking the complainers seriously. They don't actually have a problem with the availability of the Olympics, which they can watch live online; they have a problem with people who still watch television in the incipient digital age.

Despite Sochi's being nine hours ahead of New York, most of NBC's 500 hours of TV programming will air live across its suite of cable networks, which includes NBC Sports Network, CNBC, MSNBC, and USA Network. For the first time ever, every phase of all 15 events will be available for live streaming via NBCOlympics.com or the NBC Sports Live Extra mobile app for authenticated cable subscribers. The only part of the Olympics that won't be available in some form live will be the opening ceremonies, which will air in primetime on Friday evening.

"We think it's very important that we package that event with all the Russian culture and history that's being creatively expressed, much of that program might not make sense to viewers without the context that Matt Lauer and Meredith Vieira are going to bring to that," said NBC Sports Group Chairman Mark Lazarus. "We think it's very important that we do that, and it's the right model. It worked for us in London, and it's going to work for us again."

(There is one small catch: while most full-event replays and highlights will be available on demand immediately following their conclusion, some will only be available towards the end of the competition day, around 3:30 pm ET, and highlights will not be available on demand until the event is shown to NBC's primetime TV viewers.)

Snowboarder Mark McMorris of Canada.

Mike Blake / Reuters

The basic complaint with NBC is that the company, while adjusting to the digital age with its live streams, is also trying to run a business. And in fact, there are a number of reasons why NBC airs Olympics coverage on tape delay during primetime — not just for these games, but for past and future ones as well — among them the time difference, the return on investment, and availability to hardcore fans to stream events live with a verified cable subscription. The main one is that its large television audience seems to appreciate it.

NBC's business logic is rather straightforward: this isn't a charity. Neither, for that matter, are the Games, despite the International Olympic Committee's public line that it is a high-minded sort of parallel government body. The reality is that both entities, for better or worse, are in this for the money.

Once critics have realized they can stream the Olympics, their chief gripe is that by requiring a cable subscription to stream events live, NBC is taking advantage of those who lack one by depriving them of the chance to watch in real time either digitally or on its cable networks and forcing them to watch the tape-delayed primetime broadcast. They argue that since broadcast networks are supposed to be freely available and the Olympics are a global bonding experience, NBC is being particularly evil for not airing live programming around the clock on its main network.

The answer to that is in the numbers. In 2011, after being acquired by Comcast, NBC agreed to pay $4.38 billion for the U.S. rights to broadcast the Olympics beginning with Sochi this year and continuing through the 2020 games. Prior to that, the network paid $2 billion for the 2010 Vancouver Winter Games and the 2012 London Summer Games, or a combined $6.38 billion for a decade's worth of Olympics coverage. Yet, NBC lost more than $200 million on the Vancouver Olympics and only turned a small profit on the London Games. (The network has sold around $800 million in advertising for Sochi and expects to again turn a small profit this time around.)

More important, NBC went from expecting a roughly $200 million loss of the London Olympics to turning a small profit not because people suddenly signed up for pay-TV service en mass to watch them, but because massive numbers of viewers tuned in for its tape-delayed primetime broadcasts. Despite the seemingly apparent displeasure with tape delays, the London Games ended up averaging 31 million viewers per night in primetime and 219.4 million viewers overall, making it the most-watched event in U.S. television history. (The 111.5 million viewers who watched last week's Super Bowl ranks as the largest audience for an individual show.)

Part of the reason why NBC's primetime broadcasts were so successful was because the tape delays allowed its production team to create stories and narratives around the athletes and competitions. They were able to turn the athletes into characters in a compelling drama by highlighting their backstories, rivalries, motivations, training regimes, and the like. The Olympics in essence became television's ultimate family-friendly form of entertainment.

The second reason the tape-delayed programming performed so well is precisely because people were able to stream it live first. What basically happened is that die-hard fans who tuned into the live stream not only ended up watching it again on TV, but also raised the interest of casual viewers through the excited conversations on social media about what they just witnessed. The reality is that most people didn't feel cheated by social media spoilers. Instead, they got them to tune into events that they might not have otherwise.


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The 33 Best Instagram Accounts To Follow During The Winter Olympics

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They’re taking the #selfie game to an Olympic level.

Below are the best Instagram accounts to follow for the Sochi 2014 Winter Games. These accounts were chosen because they are active and offer a decent amount of pictures, have awesome photos, and give you a neat behind-the-scenes look at the games.

Got it? Cool.

The Olympics Official Account

instagram.com

Sochi 2014

instagram.com

Team USA

instagram.com


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Los Angeles Lakers' Center Fouls Out And Keeps Playing Thanks To Little-Known NBA Rule

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With the Lakers down to just five players, Robert Sacre’s sixth foul meant he had to keep playing.

Los Angeles Lakers' Robert Sacre (left) shoots over Cleveland Cavaliers' C.J. Miles (0) and Anderson Varejao (right).

AP Photo/Mark Duncan

Once a player commits their sixth foul in the NBA, that usually means they're done for the rest of the game. But thanks to a little-known league rule, that wasn't the case for Los Angeles Lakers center Robert Sacre Wednesday night.

When Sacre committed his sixth foul with 3:32 left in the game, the injury-depleted Lakers were down to only five players and had no choice but to leave him in the game.

NBA rules mandate that each team has to have five players on the court at all times. So with no other options left on the bench, Lakers coach Mike D'Antoni was told by officials that he could leave Sacre on the floor and that every additional foul on the center would result in a technical. The Lakers were then assessed a technical foul.

"That was just crazy," Sacre told the Associated Press. "When I got my sixth foul, I was just like, 'Oh, dang!' Then I got to come back in, so I thought it was something special. I didn't know what was going on."

The Lakers, who entered the game with only eight players, managed to hold off the Cavs and end a seven-game losing streak in a 119-108 victory.

On the second night of back-to-back games, the Lakers entered the game without Kobe Bryant (knee), Pau Gasol (groin), Xavier Henry (knee), Jordan Hill (cervical strain), Jodie Meeks (ankle), and Steve Nash (rest).

Then in the first half of Wednesday night's game, Nick Young left the game with a knee injury. Jordan Farmar suffered a calf injury and was unable to finish the game. Then Chris Kaman fouled out early in the fourth quarter, leaving the Lakers with five available players: Steve Blake, Kendall Marshall, Wesley Johnson, Ryan Kelly, and Sacre.

The Lakers' situation was so dire that Nash, who was on the bench in street clothes, slipped into his uniform late in the game. D'Antoni said he had no plan to put Nash in the game.

"That was, by far, one of the strangest games I've ever seen," D'Antoni said.

Orcas Won't Be On Display At The Sochi Olympics After All

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Reports that two wild-caught orcas would be on display during the 2014 Winter Olympics had sparked outrage.

Narnia (above) was captured off the coast of Russia in 2012, and was originally intended to be on display in Sochi during the Winter Olympics.

Russian Orcas / Via facebook.com

Contrary to previous reports, two orcas captured in the Sea of Okhotsk off the coast of Russia will no longer be on display in Sochi during the Olympics, but will stay in Moscow, Erich Hoyt of Whale and Dolphin Conservation confirmed to BuzzFeed via email.

According to Hoyt, who is a research fellow with WDC and the author of Orca: The Whale Called Killer, the WDC learned of the whales' transport to Sochi after the group "intercepted" two tweets from a spokeswoman at Vnukovo International Airport (southwest of Moscow) at the end of November. One said that the animals were set to arrive at the airport, while a second about six hours later said that their shipment was postponed. A week later, Hoyt said, "two orcas (maybe the same ones intended for Sochi, maybe not) were shipped to Moscow to an aquarium still in the process of being built." Now it seems the animals will remain there indefinitely, according to shipping records from the beginning of December.

Hoyt originally posted that the whales were no longer going to Sochi, with confirmation from the president of the Sochi Olympic Committee, on his Facebook page on Feb. 5. International Olympic Committee Director of Communications Mark Adams told BuzzFeed back in December that neither the IOC nor the Sochi Organizing Committee had any knowledge of orcas arriving in Sochi or being used during the opening ceremonies on Feb. 7.

The orcas, a female named Narnia and a young male, were part of a group of eight whales that were captured in August 2012 and September 2013. The Sochi Dolphinarium had some of the permits to capture the animals, and "it was logical to think they would display some of them and sell others," Hoyt said.

The dolphinarium seemed to have plans to profit off the whales' display alongside the dolphins and belugas it already keeps captive at a time when there would be many tourists in the area, but Hoyt said it's not clear exactly what has happened that has prevented their arrival. "Maybe the orcas weren't trained and ready; maybe there were logistic[al] problems; we don't know ... Maybe there was concern about possible activist action at that point, but that's speculation," Hoyt said.

The to-be-built Moscow oceanarium will be one of the few places in the world, along with the United States' three SeaWorld parks, where orcas are kept in captivity.

h/t One Green Planet

Photographic Proof That Sochi Is A Godforsaken Hellscape Right Now

Meet The 27 Latino Athletes Competing In Sochi 2014

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Some of these countries don’t even have snow, but that doesn’t stop these athletes from training.

Salome Bancora

Salome Bancora

Sport: Alpine Skiing
Age: 20
Nationality: Argentina
Fun Fact: She began skiing at age 3 and competing at age 6 in San Carlos de Bariloche, Argentina.

facebook.com

Macarena Simari Birkner

Macarena Simari Birkner

Sport: Alpine Skiing
Age: 29
Nationality: Argentina
Fun Fact: Both her parents are ski instructors.

upload.wikimedia.org

Cristian Javier Simari Birkner

Cristian Javier Simari Birkner

Sport: Alpine Skiing
Age: 33
Nationality: Argentina
Fun Fact: He started skiing as soon as he could walk — his parents had him skiing between their legs at Cerro Catedral, Argentina.

facebook.com


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Google Comes Out For LGBT Rights, The Day Before Opening Ceremonies

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“The practice of sport is a human right.”

On Thursday night, Google debuted a new doodle that both celebrates the 2014 Sochi Olympics while also alluding to LGBT rights and, presumably, Russia's anti-LGBT propaganda law. If you click the image, you're taken to a page of search results for the Olympic charter and the Google logo itself becomes a rainbow flag.

BuzzFeed has reached out to Google for comment.

Update: The same doodle appears on Google Russia.

Update: The same doodle appears on Google Russia.


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Out Olympian Cheryl Maas Raised Rainbow Glove After Yesterday's Competition

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The first gesture of LGBT solidarity in Sochi.

Cheryl Maas, a Dutch snowboarder who is married to a woman, raised a rainbow glove toward a camera after competition in Sochi yesterday.

The Towleroad website posted a clip from Dutch television this morning; the site Whitelines noted yesterday that the BBC also caught the moment, though it's not clear that their announcers noticed what had happened.

Maas has criticized the choice to hold the Winter Games in Sochi: "With the choice of Russia, the IOC is taking a step back in time," she told a Dutch news site last year.


14 Photos That Prove That Skeleton Is The Most Badass Sport At Sochi

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These helmets, man.

OK, so skeleton is like luge except WAY better. Athletes lie down on their stomach and speed down the track FACE FIRST. Like seriously, that is insanely badass. You know what else is cool? The uniforms and helmets...

OK, so skeleton is like luge except WAY better. Athletes lie down on their stomach and speed down the track FACE FIRST. Like seriously, that is insanely badass. You know what else is cool? The uniforms and helmets...

This is Ben Sandford of New Zealand.

Alex Livesey / Getty Images

Tomass Dukurs of Latvia

Tomass Dukurs of Latvia

Look at this beautiful ode to Daft Punk! It's flawless.

Alex Livesey / Getty Images

John Fairbairn of Canada

John Fairbairn of Canada

Did someone say brains? Because John's is THE BEST brain we've ever seen.

Alex Livesey / Getty Images

John Farrow of Australia

John Farrow of Australia

Look at that air! You try throwing yourself on a fucking tray and see how it goes. Amazing.

Alex Livesey / Getty Images


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Bob Costas Is Reporting From Sochi With A Lovely Eye Infection

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The show must go on!

Yesterday Bob Costas went on NBC's Today show to report from Sochi. But it wasn't what he was saying that caught people's attention. It was the fact that something was going on with his eye.

Yesterday Bob Costas went on NBC's Today show to report from Sochi. But it wasn't what he was saying that caught people's attention. It was the fact that something was going on with his eye.

Twitter: @LizHabib


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The Fifth Olympic Ring Failed To Open During The Sochi Opening Ceremony

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Is this the biggest #sochiproblem yet?

So the opening sequence of the Sochi Opening Ceremony included floating islands and loads of Russian things.

So the opening sequence of the Sochi Opening Ceremony included floating islands and loads of Russian things.

BBC Two / Sochi

Leading to the stars forming the Olympic rings.

Leading to the stars forming the Olympic rings.

bbc.co.uk / Sochi

Then this happened. The fifth ring didn't open.

Then this happened. The fifth ring didn't open.

I don't know about you but I don't think this was planned.

I don't know about you but I don't think this was planned.

Bruce Bennett / Getty Images


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Women To Watch Out For At Sochi

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We found the most tenacious female Olympians and the most inspiring stories so you know which ladies to keep an eye on at Sochi.

Australian Snowboarder Belle Brockhoff

Australian Snowboarder Belle Brockhoff

Why you should watch: At only 21 years old, this will be Brockhoff's first trip to the Olympics. She took up snowboarding at the age of 10 — three weeks later, she won her first interschool nationals title. The Aussie came out of the closet earlier this year in direct protest to Putin's anti-LGBT laws. So, if her snowboarding doesn't catch your attention, you won't want to miss her "rip on Putin's ass" in her Sochi interviews. She will compete in women's snowboard cross.

David Gray / Reuters

Doug Pensinger / Getty Images

David Gray / Reuters


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17 Reasons You Should Love Bob Costas

Russian Pop Duo T.a.T.u Performed During The Pre-Show To The Olympic Opening Ceremonies

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The group that made a name for itself by posing as a lesbian couple performed in Sochi, despite Russia’s “gay propaganda” law.

Rumors that Russian pop duo t.A.T.u. would be performing at the Sochi opening ceremonies were finally confirmed as the women took the stage in Fisht Stadium today.

Rumors that Russian pop duo t.A.T.u. would be performing at the Sochi opening ceremonies were finally confirmed as the women took the stage in Fisht Stadium today.

Twitter: @ILovetATupage

Lena Katina and Yulia Volkova performed during the pre-show, which was not broadcast internationally.

Lena Katina and Yulia Volkova performed during the pre-show, which was not broadcast internationally.

tatulove.tumblr.com

instagram.com

Some footage of their performance:

instagram.com


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Watch India's Luger Make A Spectacular Save After Falling Off His Sled At High Speed

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Luger Shiva Keshavan fell off his sled on the track, but got back on it with incredible athleticism.

India's best hope for a medal at Sochi is 31-year-old luge athlete Shiva Keshavan, who is competing at his fifth Olympics.

India's best hope for a medal at Sochi is 31-year-old luge athlete Shiva Keshavan, who is competing at his fifth Olympics.

nbcolympics.com

During his practice run at Sochi, Keshavan fell off his sled at 70 mph in a bend on the track.

During his practice run at Sochi, Keshavan fell off his sled at 70 mph in a bend on the track.

nbcolympics.com

But in a spectacular show of calmness and athleticism he got back on it and completed the run without any injuries.

But in a spectacular show of calmness and athleticism he got back on it and completed the run without any injuries.

nbcolympics.com

Watch it again.

Watch it again.

nbcolympics.com


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LGBT Activists In Moscow Arrested On Video, Beaten In Police Station

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“They [beat] two of us … before that they took us upstairs and said that we have to “suck their cocks” and that we have to be burned,” the activists texted from inside the police station. Update: The eight Russian protestors were released around 12:30 Moscow time.

Elena Kostyuchenko being arrested in Moscow on Friday during a protest in Red Square.

facebook.com / Via Facebook: elena.kostyuchenko.7

Police arrested a group of around 10 LGBT activists in Moscow's Red Square on Friday evening as they sang the Russian national anthem as the Olympic opening ceremonies began while holding a rainbow flag. The detentions follow the arrest of four LGBT activists earlier in the day in St. Petersburg for taking photographs while holding a banner opposing discrimination during the Olympics.

This video captured the police breaking up the group in Red Square before taking them to the Kitai-Gorod police station:

youtube.com


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Former Russian Olympian Who Lit Olympic Flame Once Tweeted Racist Photo Of Obama

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Irina Rodnina, a member of Putin’s parliamentary party, gets a big honor on the opening day of Sochi Games.

Irina Rodnina and Vladislav Tretiak light the Olympic cauldron during the opening ceremony.

AP Photo/Matt Slocum, Pool

Former Russian figure skater Irina Rodnina, who had the honor of lighting the Olympic cauldron to close the opening ceremony, once tweeted out a racist photo of America's first family.

The photo shows a hand waving a banana between President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama. It was tweeted from Rodnina's personal account in Sept. 2013 but was quickly deleted.

Rodnina, a member of parliament from Vladimir Putin's United Russia party and a triple Olympic champion figure-skater, said in September that she had originally received the photo from friends in America, and refused to apologize.

"Freedom of speech is freedom! Answer for your own complexes yourselves!" Rodnina tweeted in response.

There has been no further comment on the incident from Rodnina as the picture re-circulated on the Internet Friday.

Additionally, four of the six torchbearers at the opening ceremony voted for Russia's anti-LGBT law and another law that banned Americans from adopting Russian children.


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Russian Olympian's Snowboard Appears To Be A Tribute To Pussy Riot

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Alexey Sobolev’s snowboard features a feminine figure wearing a ski mask — the signature look of the dissident Russian punk group.

Though he hasn't said so outright, Russian Olympian Alexey Sobolev's snowboard appears to be a tribute to Pussy Riot, the dissident Russian punk collective known for performing in ski masks. The group became internationally known after performing an anti-Vladimir Putin anthem in a Moscow cathedral, an act for which two of their members were jailed. (They were released six weeks ago.)

TAR-TASS / Landov

"I wasn't the person who designed it," Sobolev told the Associated Press reporter who asked him if the similarity was intentional. He'll be back in competition tomorrow in the semifinals of the slopestyle event.

h/t Business Insider


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Ranking The New Winter Olympic Events By Their Level Of Awesomeness

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More speed, more flying, more tricks, more competition.

The Sochi Games will be the largest, in terms of medal events, in Winter Olympics history. Here are the new sports, judged for their relative levels of badasser-y and awesomesauce-itude.

Biathlon Mixed Relay:

Biathlon Mixed Relay:

youtube.com

KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV / Getty


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The Sochi Mascot Known As "Nightmare Bear" Will Haunt Your Life

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