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Sports / Rio in Spotlight

Games a global TV gold mine

By Agence France-Presse (China Daily) Updated: 2016-08-23 07:41

If you tuned into the Olympics, whether on television or your smartphone, then you belong to a multi-billion dollar club of 5 billion people.

As the International Olympic Committee launches its Olympic Channel, here are five things to know about the biggest broadcasting operation on the planet, a combination of technology and business being raised by the digital revolution to ever-new levels.

Broadcasting Bolt

From New York to Tokyo and Buenos Aires to London, people all over the world tuned in for the few seconds it took Jamaica's Usain Bolt to run the 100m.

To make that happen, the signal was sent by the Olympic Broadcasting Services, which is under the control of the International Olympic Committee, and sent to four satellites, then beamed back down.

More than 7,000 technicians in blue T-shirts worked in a center resembling mission control, with the walls covered in screens, to deliver footage from the Games filmed by 1,200 camera operators. More than 7,000 hours of content were beamed around the world.

$3.5 billion business

The Olympics is about money as much as sport and one major exchange of money is in selling broadcast rights.

The rights holders, as they are known, pay a premium for exclusive transmission of the Games. Non-rights holders are not even allowed to bring cameras into Olympic competition sites.

Although this exclusivity is shared among many different outlets, each tailors the content to its local market.

TV channels in Brazil or China or Jamaica provide a very different experience, focusing on their own country's athletes and favored sports to ensure a maximum audience - and maximum price tag for commercials run alongside.

"Revenue for transmission rights keeps going up. At Rio, it came to more than $3.5 billion," said Yiannis Exarchos, CEO of Olympic broadcasting.

That business, plus sponsorship, oils the financial wheels of the huge sporting extravaganza. About 9 percent of the rights revenues go to the IOC and the rest to international sporting federations and national Olympic committees.

"The world of sport, other than in a few very profitable disciplines, would have a lot of difficulty to survive without this," Exarchos said.

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