The 2010 Winter Olympics could be a programming disaster for CTV

Published Wednesday September 3rd, 2008
D4

The 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing proved to be not only the most watched games in history, it also gave a chance to two of its marquee broadcasters to show the world, yet again, why its reporters and cameramen, are considered some of the best sports journalists on the planet.

However, it’s too bad this year’s unofficial world title finals could be the last one our nation’s taxpayerfinanced channels show for a long time.

CBC-SRC, for those who haven’t heard the news yet, will not be Canada’s broadcaster for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver and the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.

This contract has been awarded to CTV-TVA and its myriad of affiliated channels, including ATV, which will no doubt provide the same strong content it gave its viewers during the 1980s and 1990s when Canada’s “other” Big Corp owned the rights to the Winter Olympics.

The only problem I have with CTV capturing the broadcast rights to what will be, in the minds of many Five Rings fans, the two greatest Olympics of all-time is that CTV’s higher-ups will have to do some network show-juggling to make it all work from a financial standpoint.

If CTV plans to show all of Vancouver’s events live, or live-to-tape, where do the fans of Lost, American Idol, the CSI franchise, and all its cult-fan-driven drama, soap opera, and comedy devotees go to get their fix over those two-and-a-half weeks in early 2010 – especially when February is a sweeps month south of the border? The majority of the big shows down in the Lower 48, which are simulcast in Canada, often get bigger pushes, and more viewers, from the second to fourth week of February.

By the way – guess when the 2010 Olympics are scheduled for? You got it – Feb. 12 to 28! Does CTV have a plan in place to give what the viewers who don’t watch the Olympics want? Can you imagine the lost revenue in 18 months time — combined with the fact they have paid truckloads of money to show the 2010 games? Yes, CTV will sell a ton of ads for the games. However, they will also, albeit indirectly, lose revenue because the sweep month shows they rely on for the other 11 months of the year will not air at the time they should.

If they have a back-up plan to show these series episodes, that’s fine.

Let’s hear it! There’s no way NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox and the CW will hold off from their big shows just because Canada’s CTV will be going from dawn to well past dusk at Vancouver 2010.

CBC-SRC, as well as NBC — which held the U.S. rights to the 2008 Summer Olympics — could afford to show the games, by bumping its normal schedule, because each of the three national networks don’t show many first-run series in the dog days of August.

Maybe CTV can rely on TSN to show some of the minor sports, but there’s no you can make up for the loss of four hours of prime time non-Olympic programming per evening - especially on ATV and some of its Ontario channels — by showing curling and speed skating on pay cable.

My solution? For those two weeks, CTV should offer an alternate feed of its main network.

That way, if people are tired of the games, and want more of Kate and Sawyer from Lost, or the latest on the new girl in town on Gossip Girl, they could get it.

Right now, CTV’s dilemma is a Titanic situation — with still no rescue in sight.

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What an odd article. You don't seem to be taking into account the fact that most Canadians watch tv via cable, so can still catch the US network broadcast of the shows. Or that CTV owns "A" which might be the closest realistic thing to "an alternate feed of its main network" during the Olympics.

Besides, you don't think CTV thought about the financial aspects of their prime time programming before shelling out that much money for the Olympic rights? It might be a bit premature to sound the alarm about how to watch Lost in February 2010 just yet.
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Dee Kay, Vancouver on 03/09/08 05:49:58 PM AST
This vividly illuminating editorial discussing the perils faced by television executives in making programming decisions and illustrating their pending impact [for two two-week periods over the next 4 years] on an avid tube lover (if the author's enthusiasm to the subject is any indication) was deeply engrossing. I would be interested to learn historical facts relating to this situation- what has happened to television programming during Olympics in the past? In what ways has NBC (an American television broadcaster that has broadcast many past Olympics) addressed this issue in yesteryear, and is there opportunity for us [and CTV] to learn from their experiences?

Something leads me to believe that we will end up seeing that NBC, CTV, and most major broadcasters will likely put their prime time money makers on a short hiatus until the conclusion of the games. I think it's unlikely that they won't discover a [not at all complicated] solution to the [non] problem you've outlined.
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I M, TO on 03/09/08 10:13:44 PM AST
CTV already has an alternate feed. It's called A, formerly known in these parts as ASN.

No biggie.
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JP Kirby, Fredericton on 04/09/08 09:34:10 AM AST
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