Marcus Livebey on SVT’s WC Broadcast: Hard Currency

When SVT broadcasts Eugene’s World Athletics Championships, we undoubtedly get viewers hard currency for the license money.

It was a fairly strong tournament in the summer, after all.

The European Football Championships and the World Championships in Athletics made the holiday a bit stagnant, so instead of Yatzi and the dirty guy, I go away in the evening with a bag of dill chips to see what Jacob Hard is eating before I try to do short hurdles.

In SVT Play (in the browser) there is a setting that makes it possible to put a camera on commentators, we will return to it.

On-site studio adds something

SVT is the only broadcasting company that has a studio on site and I think it adds something to the feeling, viewers know they are there anyway, and the difference becomes especially evident when we can compare the parallel broadcasts of the European Championships in SVT and TV4 with the studio in Junibacken and in the buildings In Gärdet in Stockholm.

SVT has a group of reporters on site, André Pops is the broadcaster in the studio but the dalb dive is Jacob Hård.

Hård, since starting at SVT after taking over Hasse Sven’s job since Hasse moved to Finland to become a reporter in 1985, has commented on all of the world athletics tournaments that SVT broadcasts.

How fun it is when things are as they always have been.

When Hård last night commented on the 3,000m obstacle course final at a light pace, at the same time as the skinny Italian high jumper in a terrible hairstyle in the high jump final, I was struck by the one in which she can get shivers from the various AV experiences.

See also  Torstein Træen was tested for doping - he had cancer

Orgasm in the brain.

A Moroccan ran away from everyone in the last corner and we sat in the safest sports course available on TV.

Niklas Nord, Christian Olsson and Jacob Hard in the commentator’s booth.

André Pops and Alhaji Jeng at SVT’s on-site studio in Eugene.

As a high jump perfectly executed

Hård comments on competitions with Niklas Nord and Bilhandlar-Olsson, Hård Ging is also present in the subjects and even if he does not reach the category of Hård-Rosenberg-Ulfbåge, he is very knowledgeable, sharp, deep, broad, loud and safe.

As a high jump it was executed perfectly above 2.33.

Compared to simulcast football, there also appears to be an elevation of speech and intellectual space among former athletes that former footballers lack.

I really don’t want to object to something, but I have to, because Jeng is probably the coolest expert we’ve seen in the box since A Lennart Julin?

Another wedge on summer nights is the commentator cam that can be captured on SVT Play.

Through it, the viewer can follow the commentators when they comment.

He is out of sync well, and rarely gives much away, but this evening Jacob Hard sat down and donated his preparations while the walking competition went on.

Pick up small notes vigorously on a piece of paper, with the pen cap in his mouth, and then eat.

Sometimes he would make the kind of movement that some do with the tongue when they eat, and also the tongue sticking out towards the cheek and narrowing a little.

See also  Lasse Johansson signs a three-year contract with Frölunda

I thought how happy he was, in a location in the United States, in the arena of the World Athletics Championships right in front of him.

Jacob Hård eats into the commentator cam available on SVT Play.

awesome in a horrible way

This technical advantage is respectable and unworthy at the same time, in a strange way, part of me feels that Jacob Hard shouldn’t be sitting and eating on live TV, but on the other hand I don’t know what I would have done without pictures when Jacob Hard sits and eats.

It’s awesome in a horrible way.

What if the same technology existed when Bengt Griff hung on Wimbledon (an empty chair, mostly) or when Bo Hanson followed VI Dan Glanz during the 3000m hurdles final in Montreal in 1976.

The production had some audio issues, and the long-running images of the helicopter don’t give a good feel.

I had time to think there was another school shooting before I realized it was a marathon, and it wasn’t fun either.

Skilled Sportnytt reporter Rickard Ekman was given the honorable task of commenting on a four-mile race by taxi in Stockholm in mid-July, and it was the most colonial lubrication ever, splitting runners into dark and light. Africans and Europeans.

Even if interest in marathons is not high, those interested should care a little more.

Usually it’s a long mara, and now it feels endless.

Leave a Comment