ShootWithStyle wrote:
Well if it IOC weren't so driven by money, power, and lunacy maybe all of us would be better off...and not just the shooting athletes. Remember when the Games were about the athletes and the spirit of International competition with some very heated international rivalries (think USA vs. USSR), but it wasn't the media, corporate, sponsor driven circus it's become now.
Has anyone ever seen the IOC list of "demands/requirements" for a potential host city. It's 8000 pages long!
Of course it is. We're talking about the biggest sporting event in the world. The host country is going to spend multi-billions on building venues, which the IOC will fill. The IOC
needs the delivery of the Games to be underwritten at a Governmental level, because they can't afford for it not to happen if they award the Games and then sponsors flake or the organisers run out of money.
It is deeply unfortunate that the media have taken over. But the option is to have fewer sponsors, or smaller sponsors. That means the teams have to pay more per athlete to enter them and put them up in the village. The money has to be found from somewhere. Or the Games starts culling events and shrinks - 8000/6000/5000 athletes instead of 10500. Would shooting do well out of that? I think not.
And of course there is a reason the Games became commercialised in the first place - as they grew (and with it, not only an increased burden by the competitions on local infrastructure, but a need for larger venues to accommodate more spectators, house the press, etc), it became harder to find host cities. We can bemoan the commercialisation, and wish they had taken a different path in the 80s, keeping the Games compact and affordable. But they didn't, and any shrinkage today is going to impact the less-watched sports first, leaving media-friendly and "adrenaline" sports.
ShootWithStyle wrote:
•They demand to meet the king prior to the opening ceremony. Afterwards, there shall be a cocktail reception. Drinks shall be paid for by the Royal Palace or the local organizing committee.
•Separate lanes should be created on all roads where IOC members will travel, which are not to be used by regular people or public transportation.
•A welcome greeting from the local Olympic boss and the hotel manager should be presented in IOC members' rooms, along with fruit and cakes of the season. (Seasonal fruit in Oslo in February is a challenge ...)
•The hotel bar at their hotel should extend its hours “extra late” and the minibars must stock Coke products.
•The IOC president shall be welcomed ceremoniously on the runway when he arrives.
•The IOC members should have separate entrances and exits to and from the airport.
•During the opening and closing ceremonies a fully stocked bar shall be available. During competition days, wine and beer will do at the stadium lounge.
•IOC members shall be greeted with a smile when arriving at their hotel.
•Meeting rooms shall be kept at exactly 20 degrees Celsius at all times.
•The hot food offered in the lounges at venues should be replaced at regular intervals, as IOC members might “risk” having to eat several meals at the same lounge during the Olympics.
Look, some of those demands are a bit dubious and schmoozie, but a lot of them have realistic backgrounds.
Coca Cola is a prime sponsor. It is not an unreasonable requirement that Official Hotels stock Coke rather than Pepsi. If I was a sponsor and I was dumping tens of millions of dollars into an event I would be
fucking pissed if I walked into an official venue or hotel and they were serving a rival's product.
Extended opening hours for hotel facilities? Of course - the actual IOC officials "at the coal face" will be working 18+ hour days ensuring the whole gig runs smoothly. They need to be able to come in and get food whenever organisational and media demands allow them to grab food. For each of the people swanning around glad-handing VIPs, there are a bunch of assistants, flunkies and underlings working their asses off, and they have to eat sometime.
Hot food buffets? Certainly in the UK, food hygiene standards
legally require that a buffet can only be out for two hours. Food can only be out for two hours before it must be removed/replaced so that everyone doesn't get food poisoning. If you have an all-day buffet out in the official lounges for people to grab between duties, then yes, that buffet will be replaced at regular intervals and evolve - breakfast stuff in the morning, to be replaced by brunch-lunch stuff and changing through the day.
Main Dining will do the same thing for athlete and team food.
This is not a surprise.
Separate exits? Yes, the main airport in the host city will usually have a separate Games terminal which is part of the Games Security Bubble. IOC delegates and VIPs will use it, as will athletes getting onto buses to the Games Village.
Avery Brundage (former IOC President in the post-WW2 years) very laudably worked to keep the Olympics un-commercialised, and declared the IOC "should have nothing to do with money".
The question though is whether that's realistic. It's a laudable ideal. The reality is that host cities certainly can't foot the bill of the enlarged games (5k athletes in 1952, 7k in 1972, 10500 today). One can suggest that maybe host cities could be responsible for their own sponsorship and media rights, rather than having the IOC managing that on an ongoing basis (with the potential backhanders and corruption that goes alongside such massive sums). In either case though, the gig has to be paid for.
Someone somewhere has to foot the bill.