Paris 2024 Summer Olympics
#91

This year's Olympic film is taking on a very different format: the film is being directed and produced by the Naudet brothers (Jules and Gédéon), which produced the CBS documentary "9/11"; hence, its storytelling will be fly-on-the-wall, immersive and human-interest-led, in the line of their own documentaries, with cues from "Drive to Survive" and "Welcome to Wrexham", and it prioritizing a day-by-day behind-the-scenes look of the Organizing Committee, event organisation, and the volunteers.

Produced by Elephant Doc and France TV Studio, the film will be made in two versions: one will be structured as a limited TV series, with three 52 minute episodes airing before the Games on France 2, and two additional ones airing after the Paralympics; the other will be the feature-length 90 minute version screened in cinemas, which will be cut from the five TV episodes; the IOC will also sell subtitled versions of both the series and the film to RHBs worldwide.

x.com 

variety.com 


Netflix has also teamed with the IOC to produce three Olympic Channel documentaries exclusive to the platform, as part of the network's ongoing expansion into other streaming platforms, plus licensing and content agreements with international RHBs.

twitter.com 
[-] The following 1 user Likes Medianext.MX's post:
  • RhysJR
Reply
#92

France Télévisions is having a press conference currently, and with some SVG articles, we have new details on the editorial and programming offer from the PSB:

A major and surprise programming change has been announced: France 4 won’t air overflow coverage at all during the event. That task will be assigned to France 5, whose regular schedule will be displaced by live coverage when France 2 and France 3 are airing news or religious programming, the first time it has aired any sports programming. This means France 4 will be on its regular Okoo/Culturebox guise through the Games. The overseas La Première network will also simulcast France 2’s coverage, but with a special magazine programme designed for the network. France 2 and France 3 will be on-air from 9:30 to 23h00 during the Games, with F2 airing its evening magazine at 23h00. Both channels will air curated repeats overnights.

The presenting team alternating between both stations is led by Cécile Grès, Matthieu Lartot, Laurent Luyat, Marianne Théoleyre, Jean-Baptiste Marteau, Inès Lagdiri-Nastasi, Cédric Beaudeau and Céline Rousseaux. France 2’s newscasts will have its regular presenters in line for the games, Julian Bugier and Anne-Sophie Lapix on weekdays, and Laurent Delahousse and Leïla Kaddour on weekends. Télématin will presented by Thomas Sotto and Louise Ekland (filling in for Marie Portolano) on weekdays, and Damien Thévenot and Maya Lauqué on weekends. The evening magazine, Quels Jeux ! (a special edition of the Saturday polemical Quelle époque !) will be presented by Léa Salamé and Laurent Luyat.

x.com 

Franceinfo will also air a special schedule through the Games: after a special edition of La Matinale with Matthieu Belliard (weekdays) and Djamel Mazi (weekends) and the 8h30 interview, the special Les Informés edition simulcast on Franceinfo Radio will air. From 9h30 up until 18h00, rolling Olympic news bulletins will be on-air, and, from 18h, Patrice Rodemenne and Louis Laforge, with Christophe Gascard and Lucie Chaumette (newsreaders) will alternate to present Le Club Franceinfo from the Grand Halle de la Villette studio, mixing interviews and highlights of the day.

x.com 



The team at the Games will be made of 65 expert commentators and 80-90 reporters, of which 40 will be covering events on the ground. Half will be made by reporters from the FTV newsroom, and the other half by reporters from France 3’s regional stations. Additionally, teams will be equipped with 4G equipment for special segments featuring voxpops from volunteers and spectators; around 5 to 7 of these reports will air per day. All images generated by the news teams will be fully centralised and distributed through France 3’s content distribution network Info Vidéo 3 to all of the production teams producing content during the event, including the news programmes. Further help has been required in the process, with calls for reinforcements on the editorial and technical departments coming mostly also from France 3’s regional teams. 10 videographer teams in the regional football sites, plus 8 technical posts and 5 coordinating teams are also in line, plus FTV’s OB units from Toulouse and Strasbourg. In total, nearly 600 staffers for the Olympic team have been accredited.

As for the expert commentators, these will be distributed by discipline rather than by sport: for example, for fencing, there will be a commentator for each discipline: one for foil, one for épée and one for sabre. There will be nearly strict parity in the number of commentators: 33 will be women and 32 will be men. All of the commentary will be made on-site from the venues. Some of the star commentators include Tony Parker (basketball), Laure Manaudou (swimming), Marie-José Pérec (fencing), Sami El Gueddari (swimming) and Brahim Asloum (boxing).

As for the production of channels, France 2 will use two UHD OB units for production: UM1 will serve as a MCR unit, located at France Télévisions’ HQ, with UM3 parked near the Musée de l’Homme, and will serve as a production gallery for the production of the live schedule. France 3 will be limited to HD (their UHD feed will be upscaled), with live production done from one of FTV’s existing galleries at their HQ, which will be connected to a remote unit and the Grande Halle studio.

As for France.tv Paris 2024, their studio will be located at their HQ, in a temporary glassbox and sofa space at their main atrium space, as part of their emphasis on a "Fan Zone" interactive format in the style of Twitch streams, featuring a live chat. Additionally, cross-flexing in schedules will be used in the case of schedule conflicts, or even if a French is in the possibility of medals, promoted to one of the main linear networks. Influencers Rivenzi and Zack Nani, former professional tennist Alizé Lim and sports blogger Manon Lanza will be the daily presenters of the digital streaming network.

x.com 

Further details:
www.svgeurope.org 

www.svgeurope.org 
[-] The following 1 user Likes Medianext.MX's post:
  • RhysJR
Reply
#93

(11-06-2024, 01:27 PM)Medianext.MX Wrote:  France Télévisions is having a press conference currently, and with some SVG articles, we have new details on the editorial and programming offer from the PSB:

The presenting team alternating between both stations is led by Cécile Grès, Matthieu Lartot, Laurent Luyat, Marianne Théoleyre, Jean-Baptiste Marteau, Inès Lagdiri-Nastasi, Cédric Beaudeau and Céline Rousseaux. France 2’s newscasts will have its regular presenters in line for the games, Julian Bugier and Anne-Sophie Lapix on weekdays, and Laurent Delahousse and Leïla Kaddour on weekends. Télématin will presented by Thomas Sotto and Louise Ekland (filling in for Marie Portolano) on weekdays, and Damien Thévenot and Maya Lauqué on weekends. The evening magazine, Quels Jeux ! (a special edition of the Saturday polemical Quelle époque !) will be presented by Léa Salamé and Laurent Luyat.

Franceinfo will also air a special schedule through the Games: after a special edition of La Matinale with Matthieu Belliard (weekdays) and Djamel Mazi (weekends) and the 8h30 interview, the special Les Informés edition simulcast on Franceinfo Radio will air. From 9h30 up until 18h00, rolling Olympic news bulletins will be on-air, and, from 18h, Patrice Rodemenne and Louis Laforge, with Christophe Gascard and Lucie Chaumette (newsreaders) will alternate to present Le Club Franceinfo from the Grand Halle de la Villette studio, mixing interviews and highlights of the day.

Some quick corrections and extra info: Marie Portolano is taking maternity leave during the Games, hence Louise Ekland on Télématin; additionally, as for Club Franceinfo, Rodemenne and Laforge will anchor weekdays, with Gascard and Chaumette on weekends.

Additionally, we got our first look at France 2's and France 3's studio designs:

www.francetvpro.fr 
Web Image


www.francetvpro.fr 
Web Image


France TV Pro has all the details of FTV's mammoth coverage, plus extra information on its surrounding programming in the run-up to the event, including the 5-part Naudet brothers documentary film, an exclusive documentary film by Mickaël Gamrasni, Olympiques ! La France des Jeux, which premiered in this year's Cannes Film Festival, special editions of Fort Boyard and Okoo-koo, and the yearly Bastille Day classical concert, which will feature the arrival of the Olympic Flame to Paris, which will continue onto the next day with a pop concert at the Place de la République, both broadcast live by FTV, plus live coverage of selected Cultural Olympiad events.

www.francetvpro.fr 

www.francetvpro.fr 
[-] The following 1 user Likes Medianext.MX's post:
  • RhysJR
Reply
#94

Does Eurosport/Discovery have a free to air presence in France?

Unlike the BBC France TV (and in Germany ZDF/ARD) didn't sacrifice their 2020 additional streams in order to get access to the 2024 games but are still stuck with the two stream limit for Paris (and indeed through to 2032) - woefully insufficient for any summer ganes but especially a home games.
[-] The following 1 user Likes Brekkie's post:
  • chrisherald
Reply
#95

(11-06-2024, 04:44 PM)Brekkie Wrote:  Does Eurosport/Discovery have a free to air presence in France?

They don't. But with the launch of Max this week, they'll probably have a larger reach than before.

(11-06-2024, 04:44 PM)Brekkie Wrote:  Unlike the BBC France TV (and in Germany ZDF/ARD) didn't sacrifice their 2020 additional streams in order to get access to the 2024 games but are still stuck with the two stream limit for Paris (and indeed through to 2032) - woefully insufficient for any summer ganes but especially a home games.

It's three streams actually this time around: France 2, France 3 and the temporary France TV 2024 channel
[-] The following 1 user Likes DamC's post:
  • London Lite
Reply
#96

I was around Trocadéro earlier this week and managed to take pictures of the "TV tower" being built to house some of the broadcasters. This three-floor structure is made up of ten studios with a view of the Eiffel Tower.

I was around Trocadéro earlier this week and managed to take pictures of the "TV tower" being built to house some of the broadcasters. This three-floor structure is made up of ten studios with a view of the Eiffel Tower.

ibb.co 

ibb.co 

Another temporary structure is being built a few hundred meters away near Pont de l'Alma. It's a two-storey wooden building with large windows.

After doing some research online, I found out it's going to be where ARD and ZDF set up their studio:

story.ndr.de 

story.ndr.de 
Web Image


story.ndr.de 
Web Image

[-] The following 3 users Like DamC's post:
  • London Lite, RhysJR, scottishtv
Reply
#97

A big break in tradition coming for the 2028 Games in LA - the athletics will move from the second week to the opening week.

A number of venues have been switched - with two events moving to Oklahoma City.

www.reuters.com 
[-] The following 1 user Likes lookoutwales's post:
  • AJB39
Reply
#98

(22-06-2024, 08:34 PM)lookoutwales Wrote:  A big break in tradition coming for the 2028 Games in LA - the athletics will move from the second week to the opening week.

A number of venues have been switched - with two events moving to Oklahoma City.

www.reuters.com 

And the reason that athletics is going to the first week because they've had the bold idea of putting an Olympic swimming pool in the SoFi/Olympic Stadium and doing the swimming events there.

No I couldn't believe it myself either.
www.nbcsports.com 
[-] The following 1 user Likes UTVLifer's post:
  • AJB39
Reply
#99

(22-06-2024, 08:34 PM)lookoutwales Wrote:  A big break in tradition coming for the 2028 Games in LA - the athletics will move from the second week to the opening week.

A number of venues have been switched - with two events moving to Oklahoma City.

www.reuters.com 

I think the Swimming also gets higher TV ratings then the Athletics in the US, so it makes sense from that point of view as well.
Reply

(22-06-2024, 08:51 PM)UTVLifer Wrote:  And the reason that athletics is going to the first week because they've had the bold idea of putting an Olympic swimming pool in the SoFi/Olympic Stadium and doing the swimming events there.

No I couldn't believe it myself either.
www.nbcsports.com 

There seems to be a trend developing to put swimming championships in big stadia (something I can get behind). The Paris Olympics is doing this on a slightly smaller scale at the Paris La Defense Arena, a 40 000 capacity indoor stadium that is home to Racing 92 rugby team. And this week the US Olympic trials have been hosted at another large NFL venue, the Indianapolis Colts' Lucas Oil Stadium - capacity 70 000.

I can't find any concrete data, but it is generally accepted that the swimming is more popular than athletics on US TV at the Olympics. Infamously in 2008 and 2021, the swimming finals were moved to the morning local time to be in US prime time, whilst in 2016 the evening session began at 22:00 local time, with a similar reason likely to blame.

Although I am stickler for tradition, I think I might prefer this new order. I sometime find the Olympics athletics a bit anticlimatic; the swimming has plenty of world records being broken, and then it's a good meet if there's one in the athletics.
[-] The following 1 user Likes RhysJR's post:
  • UTVLifer
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)