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Photo taken on Aug. 8, 2008 shows the fireworks of the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympic Games held in the National Stadium, also known as the Bird's Nest, in north Beijing, China. (Xinhua/Yang Lei) Photo Gallery>>> |
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 9 (Xinhua) -- NBC's coverage of the Opening Ceremony of the 2008 Summer Olympics drew the largest U.S. television audience ever for a non-U.S. Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony, according to figures released on Saturday.
Some 34.2 million viewers watched the Opening
Ceremony, smashing the previous record of 27.3 million for NBC's coverage of the
2000 Summer Olympics from Sydney, Australia, according to Nielsen Media
Research, which released the figures.
The largest U.S. television audience for a Summer
Olympics Opening Ceremony was 39.77 million for the 1996 Atlanta Games.
Television coverage of Olympiads held in the United States traditionally draw
larger audiences than those from outside the country because of larger overall
interest in the Olympics.
Viewership was up 35 percent from the 25.38 million
that watched the Opening Ceremony of the 2004 Athens Games.
Friday's ceremony from Beijing also drew the highest
rating for a non-U.S. opening ceremony -- 18.6 -- beating the previous record of
18.1 for the 1960 Rome Games on CBS, the first Summer Olympics to be extensively
televised in the U.S.
The rating is the percentage of television sets tuned
to a particular program. Ratings for most forms of programming have declined in
recent years because of increased competition for viewers from cable television,
the Internet, home video and video games.
The highest rating for a Summer Olympics Opening
Ceremony was 23. 9 for the 1984 Los Angeles Games.
"The Olympic Opening Ceremony captivated the American
public in unprecedented numbers for a non-U.S. Olympics," said Dick Ebersol,
chairman, NBC Universal Sports & Olympics. "It was a magical and memorable
spectacle and a great way to start the Beijing Olympics."
The heavy amount of interest in the Opening Ceremony
also extended to NBC's Olympics Web site, BCOlympics.com, which had a record 70
million page views Friday, 10 times more than the 7 million the opening day of
the Athens Games.
NBC's coverage drew criticism from some television
critics and viewers who said the ceremonies were interrupted by too many
commercials and tape- delayed for 15 hours on the West Coast rather than being
shown live.
NBC reportedly paid 894 million dollars for the
rights to broadcast the Beijing Games, and is spending more than 100 million
dollars to transmit the games and pageantry. The network has already sold more
than 1 billion dollars worth of advertising on NBC, the Spanish-language network
Telemundo and NBC Universal cable networks.