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Olympic Channel

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Olympic Channel is an over-the-top Internet television service to be operated by the International Olympic Committee (IOC). It was launched on August 21, 2016, alongside the closing of the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Goal

The service's main goal is to maintain year-round interest in Olympic sports between iterations of the Summer and Winter Olympics, especially among a younger audience; it will feature coverage of competitions in Olympic sport, as well as short and long-form programmes focusing on Olympic athletes. The service will initially broadcast in English, but with subtitles available in nine other languages on-launch.[1] Yiannis Exarchos, overseer of Olympic Channel and CEO of Olympic Broadcasting Services, stated that the service's content would focus primarily on the stories of athletes, arguing that "We need to take some risks and it’s better to take risks now because we're stronger than we’ve ever been. The personalities of athletes, their lifestyles, are something very, very attractive."[2]

History

IOC president Thomas Bach, who originally proposed the concept of an Olympics-oriented television channel in 1994 when he was a junior officer of the IOC,[2] stated that the service would be "the start of an exciting new journey to connect the worldwide audience with the Olympic Movement all year round".[1] The channel will be produced out of Madrid, and was allocated a seven-year budget of US$600 million.[2] The initial digital service will have an international focus, but the IOC stated that it plans to work with National Olympic Committees and local rightsholders to develop local versions of the Olympic Channel, which may optionally include linear television channels.[1] The streaming platform will be provided by Playmaker Media, a division of NBC Sports Group.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "IOC Sets Post-Rio Launch for Olympic Channel Free Over-the-Top Video Service". Variety. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  2. ^ a b c "IOC Plans Year-Round TV Channel to Appeal to Young Fans". Bloomberg. Retrieved 16 August 2016.

External links