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NBC streams Olympics hockey live on web
Fri, 24 Feb 2006 18:53:12 -0500
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NBC Streaming Gold Medal Hockey Game
By Ben Grossman
As a possible precursor to live online video coverage of some events
for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, NBC will stream this Sunday’s
men’s hockey gold medal game live on NBCOlympics.com.
While NBC’s prime time ratings have been a disappointment, the network
found a degree of success online, where its Olympic website will
record upwards of 350 million page views and 8 million video streams
by the end of the Games.
According to NBC, Feb. 23 set the single-day record for Web traffic
for the game at 29.7 million, fueled by its best hour ever from 4-5
p.m., with 5.5 million views as surfers sought info on the ladies
figure skating final.
“We wish prime time would have performed at the high end of our
expectations,” says NBC Universal Television Group President and COO
Randy Falco, who added NBC decided to stream the hockey final online
“because we have been pleasantly surprised by the enormous appetite
for video coverage of the Games online. We will likely have nearly
100,000 hours of video seen on the web by the time we leave here.”
Sunday’s hockey final between Sweden and either Russia or Finland will
be the first time NBC has put live video on the site. Previously, NBC
made video highlights available only after the event had aired on
television.
Jack Bauer's Spunky Sidekick, Ian J. Ball...
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OK, *WHEN* will they make it available?!
Mark Mellin...
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The game is scheduled for 14:05 (GMT+1) Sunday.
- Mark
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Ian (I might actually watch it...)
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Falco also estimated NBC will make a $60-70 million profit off of $900
million in revenue for the Torino Games. NBC Olympics chair Dick
Ebersol had put the profit figure at $50 million-75 million earlier in
the week.
Falco also said that roughly 45% of NBC’s Olympic revenues came from
network prime time, down from about 75% for the Atlanta Games in 1996.
“That is probably the clearest indication I have of how our business
is changing,” he says of moving event coverage onto multiple
television outlets and the Internet.
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