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Tag: Olympics

  • The Return of Hannibal Lecter, the Trump Hack, and a ‘Hard Knocks’ Check-In With Alan Siegel

    The Return of Hannibal Lecter, the Trump Hack, and a ‘Hard Knocks’ Check-In With Alan Siegel

    Hello, media consumers! Bryan welcomes The Ringer’s own Hollywood bureau chief, Alan Siegel. They both share some of their lukewarm takes on the media and the following subjects:

    • Donald Trump’s love affair with Hannibal Lecter (01:31)
    • The Donald Trump hack: documents sent to Politico emails (8:42)
    • A sports documentary check-in on Hard Knocks and Receiver (18:15)
    • The essence of cable news (28:01)
    • Australian B-girl Raygun breaks her silence (37:26)
    • Alan closes out with a few of his only-in-journalism words (43:22)

    Plus, David Shoemaker Guesses the Strained-Pun Headline.

    Host: Bryan Curtis
    Guest: Alan Siegel
    Producer: Brian H. Waters

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Bryan Curtis

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  • Gymnastics officials let down Chiles and others, but unwilling to give 3 bronzes

    Gymnastics officials let down Chiles and others, but unwilling to give 3 bronzes

    If it was up to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, Jordan Chiles would keep her bronze medal for her routine in the women’s gymnastics floor exercise at the Paris Olympics, and Romanian gymnasts Ana Bărbosu and Sabrina Maneca-Voinea would each get one, too.

    But in a 29-page detailing of its ruling that led Olympic officials to strip Chiles of her first individual medal, CAS said the global governing body for gymnastics botched its officiating of the event and was unwilling to make up for it by awarding all three gymnasts medals, even though each of the athletes had arguments for the bronze.

    The International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) also did not keep track of the timing of an inquiry from Chiles’ coach about her score during the Aug. 5 competition, a lapse CAS called a “failure.” Ultimately, the court ruled the inquiry came four seconds after the allowed one-minute window for Chiles’ score to be checked.

    The details from CAS on Wednesday squarely blamed FIG for the problems that arose during one of the most dramatic moments of the Paris Games. After the competition, Romanian officials appealed to the court, which had set up a three-person panel at the Olympics specifically to arbitrate disputes.

    The panel said it was limited in its review, leading to heartbreak for the athletes.

    “If the Panel had been in a position to apply equitable principles, it would surely have attributed a bronze medal to all three gymnasts in view of their performance, good faith and the injustice and pain to which they have been subjected, in circumstances in which the FIG did not provide a mechanism or arrangement to implement the one minute rule,” the court said.

    The explanation of the ruling also detailed other serious issues with the administration of the floor exercise, which ended with Rebeca Andrade of Brazil winning gold and Simone Biles of the United States winning silver.

    Since then, the scoring for Chiles, Bărbosu and Maneca-Voinea has become one of the most disputed and closely followed sagas of the Paris Games.

    “The Panel expresses the hope that the FIG will draw the consequences of this case, in relation to these three extraordinary Athletes and also for other Athletes and their supporting personnel, in the future, so that this never happens again,” CAS wrote in its ruling.

    The gymnastics federation did not return requests seeking comment.

    USA Gymnastics, which was denied a chance to give new evidence to CAS, promised yet another appeal to the Swiss Federal Tribunal, the body that gives CAS its legitimacy for arbitrations. Successful appeals to the Swiss tribunal are uncommon.

    USA Gymnastics said Wednesday the CAS details released earlier in the day showed USA Gymnastics did not have enough time to properly make its case for Chiles, and that it believes Chiles’ coach, Cecile Landi, submitted her review 47 seconds after the score was published.

    “We will pursue these and other matters upon appeal as we continue to seek justice for Jordan Chiles,” USA Gymnastics said.

    In her first time speaking directly about the controversy, Chiles posted on X on Thursday saying, “I will approach this challenge as I have others — and will make every effort to ensure that justice is done.”

    She is holding out hope that her bronze stays just that. Her bronze.

    “I believe that at the end of this journey, the people in control will do the right thing,” Chiles said.

    GO DEEPER

    Chiles on being stripped of medal: ‘This decision feels unjust’

    In a separate statement Wednesday, CAS pushed back on a New York Times report that the panel itself had a question of conflict because its head, Hamid G. Gharavi, had represented Romania for nearly 10 years in separate arbitration cases.

    Gharavi serves as legal counsel to Romania for disputes handled by the World Bank’s International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes, The Times reported.

    CAS said it “condemns the outrageous statements published in certain US media alleging, without knowledge of the above and before review of the reasoned award, that the Panel, and more particularly its chairman, was biased due to other professional engagements or for reasons of nationality.”

    The court said that Gharavi’s participation was not challenged during the gymnastics arbitration, so “it can reasonably be assumed that all parties were satisfied to have their case heard by this Panel.”

    USA Gymnastics said it had not seen disclosures about Gharavi or any other panelist, “nor have we seen the disclosures to date.”

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    What we know about Jordan Chiles’ Olympic bronze medal case and what comes next

    At the heart of the competitive dispute is the inquiry placed by Landi, Chiles’ coach, about how Chiles’ floor routine was scored. Chiles initially scored a 13.666 to place fifth. She was the last of nine gymnasts to compete, which gave her just one minute to place an inquiry under FIG regulations.

    The judges allowed the inquiry in the moment, and raised Chiles’ score by 0.1 to 13.766. That moved her ahead of Bărbosu and Maneca-Voinea, who each scored a 13.700. (Bărbosu had an advantage over Maneca-Voinea due to a better execution score, meaning the judges believed she had a cleaner routine.)

    In one of the more emotional scenes of the Games, Chiles screamed in celebration, while Bărbosu, who thought she had won bronze, dropped her Romanian flag out of shock and left the floor in tears.

    But the appeal to CAS by the Romanian Gymnastics Federation found the timing of the inquiry was late.
    After CAS released its initial ruling Saturday, FIG changed the final standings and the International Olympic Committee said it would reallocate Chiles’ medal to Bărbosu.

    Bărbosu is set to receive her medal in a ceremony Friday, according to the Romanian federation.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    IOC’s handling of the Jordan Chiles ruling is disturbing and shameful

    In the ruling shared Wednesday, CAS said FIG did not have a mechanism for figuring out immediately whether an inquiry was late, even though the inquiry was submitted electronically.

    Donatella Sacchi, president of FIG’s Women’s Artistic Gymnastics Technical Committee, said when the inquiry arrived, “the information offered no indication that it had been received late.”

    CAS said it made sense for Sacchi to proceed under the assumption that the inquiry was on time, because there was no setup to immediately show it was late.

    “If the FIG had put such a mechanism or arrangement in place, a great deal of heartache would have been avoided,” CAS said.

    FIG could also not identify the name of the person who took the inquiry, because the person was appointed by local organizers, Sacchi said.

    Landi appeared as a witness at the hearing and said she knew the one-minute rule and “believed she had made the inquiry as fast as she could.”

    CAS continued: “She was not able to state with certainty whether she made the inquiry within or beyond the one-minute time limit, as everything had happened in a great rush.”

    (Photo: Naomi Baker / Getty Images)

    The New York Times

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  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

    Usain Bolt, the eight-time Olympic gold medalist, has three children with unique names: Olympia…

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  • The Paris Olympics wanted a fast track and it got one – this is how it was made

    The Paris Olympics wanted a fast track and it got one – this is how it was made

    There were two requirements for the Stade de France track for the 2024 Paris Olympics: make it purple and make it fast.

    The colour was, in fittingly Parisian fashion, about creating a unique stage for athletes to perform. A lighter hue than the typical red tracks, following in the footsteps of the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, where the track was navy blue and not red for the first time.

    Making it faster is not as straightforward as a design choice. In fact, a ‘fast track’ has become the most hackneyed of athletics sayings — no host city is going to ask for a slow one, are they?

    But Paris was fast: seven Olympic records and three track and field world records were set at the Games. This excludes world-best decathlon performances and field events (hammer throw, shot put), which do not use a runway or the track.

    Combined, the number of Olympic/world records has trended upwards at recent Games: five in London (2012); six in Rio; 10 in Tokyo (2020) and the same again in Paris. It is an oversimplification that athletes are getting bigger, faster and stronger. Humans are also getting smarter and technology is getting better.

    T&F Olympic/World records, Paris 2024

    Athlete(s) Event Nation Record

    Team USA

    4x400m mixed relay

    USA

    World record

    Joshua Cheptegei

    10000m

    Uganda

    Olympic record

    Mondo Duplantis

    Pole vault

    Sweden

    World record

    Cole Hocker

    1500m

    USA

    Olympic record

    Winfred Yavi

    3000m steeplechase

    Bahrain

    Olympic record

    Arshad Nadeem

    Javelin

    Pakistan

    Olympic record

    Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone

    400m hurdles

    USA

    World record

    Marileidy Paulino

    400m

    Dominican Republic

    Olympic record

    Faith Kipyegon

    1500m

    Kenya

    Olympic record

    USA men

    4x400m

    USA

    Olympic record

    It was not just that records went in Paris, but how. Thirteen men ran quicker than Kenenisa Bekele’s 10,000m Olympic record from 2008 (27:01), with Uganda’s Joshua Cheptegei winning in 26:43.


    Thirteen men ran under Kenenisa Bekele’s 10,000m Olympic record (Michael Steele/Getty Images)

    Four men broke Jakob Ingebrigtsen’s 1500m Olympic record from Tokyo, including Ingebrigtsen, only for him to not medal. Four women broke Faith Kipyegon’s 1500m Olympic record, also from Tokyo, with Kipyegon winning in 3:51.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    How the Ingebrigtsen-Kerr 1500m rivalry was pushed to new heights – even though neither man won

    The women’s 400m final was the fastest ever, with all nine athletes going under 50 seconds. The men’s 100m final was the hardest to qualify for in Olympic history. Never before had a sub-10 second semi-final not guaranteed a spot.

    The final itself was the deepest of all time, the only instance of all nine men going sub-10 in a wind-legal race, and the smallest first-to-eighth gap in a global final — 0.12 seconds separated Noah Lyles’ gold and Oblique Seville.

    Similarly, the men’s 800m final was the first instance of four men running under 1:42 in the same race and that was a race where the Olympic record wasn’t broken.


    The 100m final is the only instance of all nine men going sub-10 in a wind-legal race (Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

    Maurizio Stroppiana is the vice president of Mondo, an Italian company that produces synthetic athletics tracks. Mondo first made an Olympics track for Moscow in 1980, 12 years and three Games after they were first introduced at Mexico City in 1968. Mondo have manufactured every track since Barcelona in 1992.

    “Mondo tracks are known to be the fastest in the world, with 300-plus records to date and over 70 per cent of all current records,” says Stroppiana.

    If you think numbers like that mean Mondo have cracked the science of making quick tracks, they kind of have, but the science is less perfect than you might expect. Mondo’s tracks are made from “vulcanised rubber”, says Stroppiana.

    When Paris hosted the Olympics in 1924, it was on a cinder track. “It was like dirt,” explains Stroppiana. “So, apart from getting dirty, it was more like running in a field as opposed to running on a 400m (synthetic) track”.

    ‘Fast tracks’ is something of a misnomer. The athlete is fast (or not), it is about making a track efficient. “We are trying to minimise the energy that is lost. The track compresses (as the foot hits the track) and it will then return that energy in the most efficient way, although a part of it will certainly be lost,” says Stroppiana.


    The 1968 Olympics in Mexico City was the first to use a synthetic track (AFP via Getty Images)

    Athletes produce around three times their body weight in vertical force when running. How much of that is translated into horizontal force — them moving forwards — depends on the “braking and propulsive forces”, Stroppiana says.

    Mondo implemented “elliptical air cells within the base layer of the track”, which they found to have a double benefit: a 2.6 per cent increase in net horizontal energy return, and a 1.9 per cent improvement in shock absorption.

    It is about protecting athletes while trying to maximise performance, though those things are interrelated. “The track has to provide a certain level of comfort and cushion,” says Stroppiana.

    He outlines that the determinants of maximal energy return are the “type of material, the elasticity of the material. We have these aerosols on the bottom of the track. That helps the cushioning effect and how that energy is returning as equally as possible”.

    “What we noticed in the previous track (Tokyo) is that, depending on where the athlete stepped (with the foot), you get different results. We modified the shape to provide a more uniform response and to increase the area of depression of the track,” says Stroppiana.

    “This makes the track better because they will not feel any difference, the elastic response is exactly the same throughout the track to guarantee that the rhythm of the athlete (will) be maintained.”

    If that sounds straightforward and simple, it isn’t. Stroppiana says “it took us about two years to fine-tune this new solution. We developed this mathematical model at the University of Milan”. It lets them run simulations and test new combinations faster. The four-year Olympic cycle gives ideal preparation time.


    Washing the Olympic track in Tokyo in 2021 (Antonin Thullier/AFP via Getty Images)

    One myth Stroppiana is keen to bust is track hardness. “These narratives started in the 1996 (Atlanta) Olympic Games because they had some great record times,” he says. “They started saying, ‘Yes it’s fast, it’s fast because it’s hard’. And since then we haven’t been able to change that point of view.”

    How hard is the Paris track? “It’s softer than before,” says Stroppiana. “We really came to realise that is not a good solution making the track hard. And also, (it) doesn’t necessarily translate into faster times. In fact, it can actually lead to injury. So we have changed that in the last, six, seven years.”

    They use a lower-carbon production method and more sustainable materials now than before, including calcium carbonate from mussel shells.

    Unsurprisingly, it isn’t cheap. Stroppiana prices the Paris track at “anywhere from two to three million”, explaining that the top synthetic part “is only 14 millimetres thick. It’s quite thin”. He says that tracks tend to last around 15 years before needing replacement or relaying.


    Mondo manufactured Rio’s blue track for the 2016 Games (Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

    Decades of academic research detail the impact of altitude (positively for sprints, with the reduced air resistance; negatively for distance running, with the reduced oxygen) and wind.

    The 1968 Olympics had the added impact of being the highest-altitude summer Games ever, at over 2,000m (7,000 feet). Sprinting and jumping records were smashed to pieces. Of the 12 sprint events, only the women’s 400m did not see an Olympic or world record, but distance races were slow.

    Sprint performances over 1,000 metres are not considered legal and ‘altitude-assisted’, with a following wind of up to two metres the threshold for wind-legal sprint performances.

    It means a good track needs the right location to be optimal for (legal) records. Saint-Denis, where Stade de France is situated in northern Paris, is within 50 metres of sea level. Stroppiana talks about the stadium creating a “microclimate” to “provide more favourable (performance) conditions”.

    He explains that “the stadium’s architecture, including its oval shape and partially covered roof, helps to reduce wind interference. The stadium’s seating arrangement and the height of the stands contribute to shielding the track”.

    Looking ahead, the 2028 Games in Los Angeles, USA, and the 2032 Games in Brisbane, Australia, are both in coastal cities.


    The Stade de France’s ‘microclimate’ provides favourable conditions for fast times (Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

    For Stroppiana, the future of track-making lies in Mondo working with shoe/spike brands, who are notoriously “secretive about their own knowledge. Now there is this movement toward open innovation, which means collaborating within an industry, but not through competing brands”.

    “I think the next evolution of the track surfaces is to make adjustments for these different (field) disciplines — an area of improvement for all the runways,” says Stroppiana.

    He went on to say that Mondo works with Adidas, Nike, Asics, ON and Puma, among others, and collaborated with the latter for Paris.

    “Before Tokyo, we worked with Asics because they gave us some insight. We installed our track at their research laboratory and they were testing different types, different solutions, to see which one (track) would be best.

    “They do their own evaluation and they try to make sure that the (track/spike) interaction is as good as possible, concerned about how the spike will grab onto the surface, which is critical.”

    Different events require different length spikes. Stroppiana speaks of 400m spikes having “different properties on the right-hand side” to aid bend running (as the outside of the foot hits the track first on landing and athletes run around to the left).

    There is a trade-off to be achieved: Mondo “want to guarantee the proper traction but minimise the friction. So if the spikes were to penetrate too much on the surface, then it slows the athletes down”, says Stroppiana. “This is one of the characteristics of the top wear layer: it has to be spike resistant.”

    Exceptions from that are pole vault and javelin because athletes are moving with so much force that the spike needs to penetrate the surface to avoid injury.

    “In Paris, if you look closely at the javelin runway, the last portion is slightly different in colour (to the track)” says Stroppiana. “Why? Because that section has been specifically engineered for javelin throwers. We worked with the German team and the Finnish team to test different solutions”. He says they wanted a runway with “more spike resistance and to have a better grip.

    “Normally the track has to be the same. You cannot have different properties for different areas. But for javelin, they (World Athletics) accepted these changes.” It worked: Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem smashed the Olympic record by over 2.5m, throwing 92.97m, to earn Pakistan’s first athletics gold.

    Stroppiana is optimistic about a future with more adjustments. “For the long distance, you could create a section where it’s specifically made,” he says, suggesting an inside lane. “In fact, we have done some tracks like this — only for training, not for competition — where you have a differentiated elastic response”.

    There’s no doubt the 2028 LA track will be even more efficient. Mondo have four years to test and re-test new combinations and spike brands to work with. The main question that remains is: what colour will it be?

    (Top photo: Nathan Laine/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    The New York Times

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  • NBC Sent 27 Creators to Paris. It Only Needed Snoop and Olympic Athletes

    NBC Sent 27 Creators to Paris. It Only Needed Snoop and Olympic Athletes

    In mid-June, when NBCUniversal announced it was partnering with Meta, Overtime, Snapchat, TikTok, and YouTube to send 27 influencers to the 2024 Paris Olympics, it seemed like a big deal. These were huge content creators like Kai Cenat, Daniel Macdonald, and Zhongni “Zhong” Zhu, people with millions upon millions of followers. The hope was that their presence would engage members of Gen Z and Gen Alpha and get them interested in the Games.

    Mostly, that didn’t pan out. Though the move generated fawning “age of the influencer” pieces from outlets like The New York Times and Bloomberg, neither consumers nor advertisers (who NBCUniversal said could create sponsored posts with the influencers, should they desire) seem to have responded all that well to the network’s “Paris Creators Collective,” which spent the past two weeks bopping around between Olympic events.

    Instead, what caught the public’s attention was content from athlete creators like USA rugby team star Ilona Maher, who gained almost 2 million new followers in the past couple of weeks thanks to her witty fit checks and Love Island–like references to the “Olympic Villa.” Norwegian swimmer Henrik Christiansen became famous for his love of a gooey chocolate muffin served in the Olympic Village, while other fans consumed seemingly dozens of national kit unboxing videos made by athletes from all around the globe.

    People have also fallen for hip figures, like Olympic shooters Kim Yeji and Yusuf Dikeç or Stephen Nedoroscik, the bespectacled American gymnast who really should work on getting a Warby Parker endorsement deal if he hasn’t landed one already. People have also gone nuts (again) for the reportedly highly valuable Olympics commentary of Snoop Dogg, who NBCUniversal officially brought on board for the first time for these Games.

    The videos that NBC’s influencers are posting, on the other hand, don’t seem to be hitting—or going viral, at least. Part of that could be due to the limitations handed to the creators, who weren’t allowed to post videos of the actual events.

    Most tried to work around the actual athletics, sharing clips from the venues, of their reactions, their meals, and their cartwheels, or of their outfits. Others tried to play coy around the whole conceit, using their TikToks to poke fun at European architecture or, in the case of “Apprentice of Jesus” creator Lecrae, addressing the “sincerity of his faith” for profiting off the same Games that people (incorrectly) believe did a parody of the Last Supper.

    The resulting videos feel a little thin, with commentary that’s less biting or immediate than what’s been making the rounds elsewhere. (After all, if NBCUniversal flies you to Paris and puts you up, you’re probably not going to comment on how goofy the Australian breakdancer’s moves were or how you couldn’t see squat from your expensive seat at the Opening Ceremony.)

    Marah Eakin

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  • The best photos from the 2024 Olympics closing ceremony

    The best photos from the 2024 Olympics closing ceremony

    How the Paris Olympics will be remembered


    How the Paris Olympic Games will be remembered

    04:13

    After 16 days of spectacular competition, the 2024 Olympic Games came to an end on Sunday with the traditional closing ceremony. 

    The Olympic flame was extinguished at Paris’s Stade de France during a ceremony called “Records,” directed by Thomas Jolly, who was also the artistic director of the much-discussed opening ceremony

    The ceremony featured performances by Billie Eilish, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and H.E.R, as French President Emmanuel Macron and various royals and heads of state looked on.

    Here are some of the best photos from the event.

    Paris 2024 - Closing ceremony
    Olympic teams enter Stade de France during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Michael Kappeler/dpa via Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    Athletes from Team USA enjoy the atmosphere during the closing ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France. 

    Steph Chambers/Getty Images


    Flagbearers Nick Mead and Katie Ledecky of Team USA hold their nation’s flag during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Arturo Holmes/Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    Gold medalist Masai Russell of Team USA looks on during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Jamie Squire/Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    Thomas Bach, President of the IOC, French President Emmanuel Macron, Bridgette Macron, and Tony Estanguet, President of the Paris Organising Committee for the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games seen alongside members of the IOC in the stands prior to the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    Albert II, Prince of Monaco, Queen Silvia of Sweden, King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden and Queen Sofía of Spain applaud during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    A general view of the Olympic Cauldron and air balloon as French Singer-Songwriter Zaho de Sagazan performs during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France. 

    Richard Pelham/Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    The Golden Voyager performs during the closing ceremony of the Olympic Games on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Steph Chambers/Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    The Golden Voyager performs during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Carl Recine / Getty Images


    OLY-PARIS-2024-CLOSING
    French swimmer Leon Marchand takes the Olympic flame from the cauldron at the Jardin des Tuileries on August 11, 2024, ahead of the closing ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

    LOIC VENANCE/AFP via Getty Images


    Parisienne Projections
    A photograph of swimming gold medalist Leon Marchand of Team France projected in Montmartre overlooking the fireworks during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Ryan Pierse/Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    Dancers perform during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Carl Recine / Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    A general view of the inside of the stadium as a pyrotechnics display takes place during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Carl Recine / Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    PARIS, FRANCE – AUGUST 11: Thomas Mars, lead singer of French Indie rock band Phoenix, high-fives fans during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Carl Recine / Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    Actor Tom Cruise jumps from the roof of the Stade de France during the closing ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Fabrizio Bensch/Pool/Getty Image


    OLY-PARIS-2024-CLOSING
    Tom Cruise leaves with the Olympic flag as Simone Biles and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass look on during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024.

    FRANCK FIFE/AFP via Getty Images


    OLY-PARIS-2024-CLOSING
    Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass gives the Olympic flag to Simone Biles during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024.

    FRANCK FIFE/AFP via Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    Singer H.E.R. performs the American national anthem during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Arturo Holmes/Getty Images


    LA28 Olympic Games Handover Celebration
    Finneas and Billie Eilish perform at the LA28 Olympic Games handover celebration on August 11, 2028.

    Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for LA28


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend performs with French indie rock band Phoenix during the Olympics closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Jamie Squire/Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    A general view of the inside of the stadium as a pyrotechnics display takes place during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Luke Hales / Getty Images


    Paris Olympic Games 2024 - Closing Ceremony
    People arrive at the Olympics closing ceremony on August 11, 2024 in Paris, France.

    Mustafa Ciftci/Anadolu via Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    French Singer-Songwriter Zaho de Sagazan performs during the closing ceremony on August 11, 2024, in Paris, France.

    Richard Pelham/Getty Images


    OLY-PARIS-2024-CLOSING
    French singer-songwriter Yseult performs during the closing ceremony in Saint-Denis, on the outskirts of Paris, on August 11, 2024.

    BERTRAND GUAY/AFP via Getty Images


    Closing Ceremony - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 16
    General view of fireworks during the closing ceremony on August 12, 2024, in Paris, France.

    BSR Agency / Getty Images


    Table showing the number of medals won by each country or delegation in the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris

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  • Tom Cruise performs crazy stunt jump from stadium roof during Olympics closing ceremony

    Tom Cruise performs crazy stunt jump from stadium roof during Olympics closing ceremony

    The Olympic Games are about to go Hollywood, and Tom Cruise just gave everyone a taste of what it’s going to be like.During Sunday’s closing ceremony, the “Mission: Impossible” star performed a daredevil stunt jump from the top of the Stade de France.As the spotlight found Cruise on the roof, he was lowered down to the arena floor on a cable. He then made his way through the athletes to the stage, shaking hands and taking selfies along the way, including one very enthusiastic embrace from a female athlete.That wasn’t all.As part of the Hollywood handoff to Los Angeles, who will host the Games in 2028, Cruise took the Olympic flag, fixed it to a motorcycle and drove out of the stadium through a crowd of athletes. In a bit of movie magic, Cruise was next seen in an apparent pre-taped segment riding through Paris until he reached a plane that defied space and time to reach Los Angeles.As the camera zoomed out, Cruise was seen at the Hollywood sign, where the Olympic rings replaced the double “o”s in the word Hollywood.Yes, all of that really happened.Cruise is, of course, known for his love of stunt work.The actor famously has put his body on the line for many films, especially the multibillion-dollar “Mission” franchise, in which he plays spy Ethan Hunt. An eighth installment is expected in 2025.”It’s not that I don’t get scared,” the actor told CNN last year. “It’s that I don’t mind being scared.”

    The Olympic Games are about to go Hollywood, and Tom Cruise just gave everyone a taste of what it’s going to be like.

    During Sunday’s closing ceremony, the “Mission: Impossible” star performed a daredevil stunt jump from the top of the Stade de France.

    As the spotlight found Cruise on the roof, he was lowered down to the arena floor on a cable. He then made his way through the athletes to the stage, shaking hands and taking selfies along the way, including one very enthusiastic embrace from a female athlete.

    That wasn’t all.

    As part of the Hollywood handoff to Los Angeles, who will host the Games in 2028, Cruise took the Olympic flag, fixed it to a motorcycle and drove out of the stadium through a crowd of athletes.

    In a bit of movie magic, Cruise was next seen in an apparent pre-taped segment riding through Paris until he reached a plane that defied space and time to reach Los Angeles.

    As the camera zoomed out, Cruise was seen at the Hollywood sign, where the Olympic rings replaced the double “o”s in the word Hollywood.

    Yes, all of that really happened.

    Cruise is, of course, known for his love of stunt work.

    The actor famously has put his body on the line for many films, especially the multibillion-dollar “Mission” franchise, in which he plays spy Ethan Hunt. An eighth installment is expected in 2025.

    “It’s not that I don’t get scared,” the actor told CNN last year. “It’s that I don’t mind being scared.”

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  • Who is the “My Way” Singer at 2024 Paris Olympics Closing Ceremonies?

    Who is the “My Way” Singer at 2024 Paris Olympics Closing Ceremonies?

    Many viewers are unsure about who the “My Way” singer is at the 2024 Paris Olympics closing ceremonies. The event’s final performance revealed a female singer dressed with a large circular hat, wearing diamond, heart-shaped earrings, and dressed from head to toe in a black outfit. She sang Frank Sinatra’s “My Way” live, starting soft and understated in the first half of the song before finishing the last few bars with stunning high notes that came paired with fireworks all along the rim of the Stade de France stadium. Here is more information on who sang “My Way” at the end of the 2024 Olympic Games.

    Who sang “My Way” at the 2024 Olympic Games?

    Yseult Marie Onguenet is the “My Way” singer at the closing ceremonies. The French singer-songwriter, who goes simply by “Yseult,” came into prominence after finishing near the top of a singing competition.

    “My Way” was chosen as the last song of the ceremony since the music track comes from the song “Comme d’habitude” by Jacques Revaux. It connects France with the United States, who will be hosting the 2028 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

    Born to Cameroonian parents in Tergnier, France in 1994, Yseult became a well-known figure in France after coming in second place in the reality-tv “Nouvelle Star” singing competition, which is a French adaptation of American Idol. She released an album entitled “Yseult” in 2015 with Polydor Records, but has since released three extended plays as an indie artist. In 2021 the singer became an international spokesperson for L’Oréal Paris, and she was one of the featured voices for the 2024 song “Alibi” by Sevdaliza that has more than 63 million hits on YouTube.

    The closing ceremonies had many surprising moments, including a vertical piano player, Tom Cruise doing a jumping stunt, and a performance on the Los Angeles beach that featured Red Hot Chili Peppers, Billie Eilish, and Snoop Dogg.

    Nicholas Tan

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  • Clare Balding’s furious complaint over cruel “dyke on a bike” jibe: “Enough is enough!”

    Clare Balding’s furious complaint over cruel “dyke on a bike” jibe: “Enough is enough!”

    Olympics presenter Clare Balding was previously the victim of a vile “dyke” insult – and she soon did something about it.

    The telly favourite was embroiled in a furious row back in 2010 when a newspaper columnist allegedly made “homophobic” remarks about her sexuality.

    As a result, she lodged a complaint with the Press Complaints Commission. And luckily the end result “delighted” Clare – who is hosting the Olympics today (August 11).

    Clare was not impressed over a remark made by a journalist (Credit: ITV)

    Olympics host Clare Balding furious over ‘homophobic’ insult

    In 2010, the Sunday Times’ TV and restaurant critic, AA Gill reviewed Clare’s new programme, Britain by Bike.

    Not impressed with the terminology used in the review, Clare complained to the newspaper’s editor, John Witherow, about the article and its tone. However, John’s response left her horrified.

    AA Gill had written: “Some time ago, I made a cheap and frankly unnecessary joke about Clare Balding looking like a big lesbian. And afterwards somebody tugged my sleeve to point out that she is a big lesbian.”

    After a mock apology, he continued: “Now back to the dyke on a bike, puffing up the nooks and crannies at the bottom end of the nation.”

    Clare ‘appalled’ by response

    Clare was quick to complain to John Witherow. However, she was “appalled” after reading his reply.

    He said: “In my view some members of the gay community need to stop regarding themselves as having a special victim status and behave like any other sensible group that is accepted by society. Not having a privileged status means, of course, one must accept occasionally being the butt of jokes. A person’s sexuality should not give them a protected status.

    “Jeremy Clarkson, perhaps the epitome of the heterosexual male, is constantly jeered at for his dress sense (lack of), adolescent mindset and hairstyle. He puts up with it as a presenter’s lot. And in this context I hardly think that AA Gill’s remarks were particularly cruel. Especially as he ended by so warmly endorsing you as a presenter.”

    Clare Balding speaking on Loose Women
    The TV star made a complaint (Credit: ITV)

    ‘Too often used as an insulting term’

    Clare then responded: “When the day comes that people stop resigning from high office, being disowned by their families, getting beaten up and in some instances committing suicide because of their sexuality, you may have a point.

    “This is not about me putting up with having the [expletive] taken out of me, something I have been quite able to withstand. It is about you legitimising name calling. ‘Dyke’ is not shouted out in school playgrounds (or as I’ve had it at an airport) as a compliment, believe me.

    “I am happy to be described as a lesbian, as and when relevant. But ‘dyke’ is too often used as a pejorative and insulting term.”

    ‘Enough is enough’

    At the time, Clare told the Guardian: “I just think there is a time when you say enough is enough. I can take pretty much anything. Words are just words. I’ve been through a lot worse. But this has a huge impact on lots of other people and that’s why I thought, that’s not on.”

    Clare Balding
    Clare’s complaint was upheld (Credit: BBC)

    Clare Balding ‘delighted’ by result

    A few months later, and in September 2010, it was revealed Clare’s complaint had been upheld.  The PCC ruled that some of the words were used in a “demeaning and gratuitous way”.

    After the judgement, Clare said she was “delighted” with the verdict in a statement.

    “It was important for me and, crucially, for millions of other people quietly going about their work, to make the point that we deserve to be judged on our ability to do our jobs and not on the basis of our race, religion, gender or, in this case, sexual orientation,” she said.

    Clare went on: “I would like to thank all those who offered their support via email, letter and Twitter. They gave me the strength to stand up and be counted.

    “I hope that this decision shows we are moving on from the days when derogatory comments about a person’s sexuality were regarded as clever or funny.”

    The Olympics airs on Sunday (August 11) on BBC One at 7pm.

    Read more: Clare Balding’s mum had ‘suspicions’ about wife Alice early in their romance due to her background

    So what do you think of this story? You can leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know.

    Joey Crutchley

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  • Breaking down the Olympic medals won in Paris

    Breaking down the Olympic medals won in Paris

    Team USA has a reputation for taking home the most medals at the Olympic Games — and this year was no different. The United States won the most medals overall, most bronze, most silver and tied for most gold medals with China.

    The charts that follow break down Team USA’s grand medal sweep in Paris.

    Some argue that gold medals are what matter the most, and the United States and China were locked in a tight race throughout the Olympics. Here’s how it played out:

    Team USA had a medal surge on the eighth day of competition, hauling in 18 total medals. Here’s how the rest of the days looked:

    Throughout the Games, Americans medalled more consistently in women’s events than men’s. Athletes competing in women’s events clinched nearly twice as many gold medals as those competing in men’s events.

    Some sports showed a greater disparity in gender events than others. The most notable gaps appeared in gymnastics (women led by 5 medals), cycling (6) and swimming (9).

    The United States and Australia continued their battle for supremacy in the pool. While the overall swimming medal count wasn’t that close, the United States edged Australia in golds by one.

    Although Team USA often excels across the board, the U.S. is stronger in some sports than others. At this year’s Games, the sports in which the U.S. won the most medals were track and field (34 medals) and swimming (28).

    These sports offer many events in which the U.S. can medal, compared to sports like basketball or soccer, where only one bronze, one silver and one gold medal are awarded.

    Swimmer Torri Huske won the most medal of any Team USA athlete, with five. Gymnast Simone Biles and swimmers Gretchen Walsh, Katie Ledecky and Regan Smith tied for second with four medals.

    Huske, Biles and runner Gabby Thomas tied for most gold medals, with three each.

    Every four years, countries like the U.S., China, Russia and the United Kingdom tend to outperform in the Olympic medal race.

    But it’s not surprising that these nations perform well at the Olympic Games. These countries have a larger pool of potential Olympians and more national wealth to invest in their Olympic teams.

    When medals won are compared to a country’s population or gross domestic product, overall medal rankings change significantly.

    Click through the slides below to see how Team USA’s performance changes when considered against certain advantages.

    Explore the table below to see how countries performed proportional to population, GDP and number of athletes in the Paris 2024 Olympics.

    Countries’ Olympic performances can be broken down in many ways. But at the end of the day, viewers’ main interest lies in the gold, silver and bronze. The table below details all medals won in the Paris 2024 Olympics.

    Nelson Hsu, Annetta Stogniew and Alex Ford

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  • Paris and the Olympics have changed each other during their summer fling

    Paris and the Olympics have changed each other during their summer fling

    PARIS – In French, there are no goodbyes.

    Instead, Olympic crowds from Paris to the surfing venue in Tahiti were saying “au revoir” — see you again — as the 2024 Games drew to a close Sunday.

    After the 100-year wait since Paris’ last Games, no one can say when France’s capital and the Olympics will next embrace. But this much is certain: They’re both emerging changed — in some ways for the better — from their summer romance.

    Paris’ third Games — it also hosted in 1900 — have been filled with passion. French fans surprised even themselves with their enthusiasm for two and a half weeks of sports, plunging into the party like Léon Marchand parting the waters for his four swimming golds.

    Marchand, in particular, stopped time with his feats — forcing pauses in play at other Olympic venues because spectators cheered so intensely when France’s new darling won again and again. Other French medal winners like judo icon Teddy Riner and mountain biker Pauline Ferrand-Prevot also whipped up hometown joy.

    Initial grumbling about barricades and other intense security measures that disrupted locals’ lives — not to mention arson attacks on France’s high-speed rail network — gave way to choruses of “Allez les bleus!” or “France, let’s go!”

    There were uplifting stories galore for non-French fans, too. Quite literally in the case of Armand Duplantis, the Swedish pole vaulter who broke his own world record in winning Olympic gold.

    Simone Biles shone, again. Having set the brave example of prioritizing mental health over competition at the 2021 Tokyo Games, she came back to win three gymnastics golds and a silver.

    The Eiffel Tower peering over beach volleyball made that arena Ze Place To Be. Celine Dion’s musical comeback at the Olympic opening, belting out Edith Piaf’s “Hymne à l’amour” (“Hymn to Love”) from the tower’s first floor, was high in emotion.

    Rain drenched VIPs and fans alike but didn’t dampen the wacky and wonderful opening ceremony. Its displays of LGBTQ+ pride and French humor were too much for some: Donald Trump and French bishops were among those who took offense.

    As well as many highlight-reel moments, the Games also experienced lows. The ugliest were torrents of online vitriol targeting female boxers Imane Khelif and Lin Yu-Ting as well as the opening ceremony’s creative teams.

    Still, like all good romances, the Paris-Olympics affair left fans yearning for more. That couldn’t be said of all Games of late.

    China — as host of the Summer Games in 2008 and Winter Games in 2022 — faced accusations of human rights abuses. There was Russia’s doping cover-up at its Sochi Winter Games in 2014, quickly followed by the beginnings of its land grabs in Ukraine. All left stains on the Olympic brand.

    So, too, did the wastefulness and corruption of the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro that made authorities in Paris determined to do things differently.

    “Breaking the norms” became the unofficial motto of Paris Olympic organizers, who worked to slash the Games’ carbon emissions and revamp the Olympic model to make it less anachronistic.

    The results were evident. The Paris Games weren’t perfect — can flying thousands of athletes across the world ever be with the climate in crisis? But the French capital provided new examples of how the Olympics can be improved.

    Take the Olympic cauldron, for example: Paris’ use of electricity and LED spotlights to make it seem that its cauldron was ablaze puts pressure on Los Angeles, the next host city, and Brisbane, Australia, in 2032 to not go back to burning tons of fossil fuels.

    Also gone? Expensive new venues that don’t get used much, or at all, once the Olympics have left town. Paris instead widely used existing or temporary arenas.

    Marchand and other swimmers raced in a came-as-a-kit pool that will be dismantled and rebuilt in a Paris-area town where kids can’t wait to splash around in it. Breaking (another innovation) and other urban sports played out on Concorde Plaza, where French revolutionaries removed King Louis XVI’s head.

    When the lawns have grown back, there will mostly be only memories of other temporary arenas where archery, equestrian events and other sports looked as glamorous as Paris catwalk shows, set against iconic backdrops.

    The Eiffel Tower, Versailles Palace, the domed Grand Palais (turned into a breathtaking arena for fencing and taekwondo) and other monuments became Olympic stars in their own right. The use of Paris’ cityscape showed that the Olympics can — and should — adapt to their hosts, not the other way around.

    The sole purpose-built signature sports venue was the new aquatics center in Seine Saint-Denis, where China won all eight diving golds, an unprecedented sweep.

    The northern suburb of Paris is mainland France’s poorest region and had such a shortage of pools that many of its kids can’t swim. Regional leader Stéphane Troussel told The Associated Press that thanks to Games-related refurbishments and newly built swim centers that teams used for Olympic training, much of Seine Saint-Denis has now largely caught up — in pools at least — with better-off parts of France.

    But the city’s ambitions flirted at times with an excess of zeal.

    Making triathletes and marathon swimmers do something that many Parisians recoil at themselves — plunge into the murky River Seine — proved problematic. Its waters were repeatedly deemed too dirty for training swims and forced a postponement of the men’s triathlon — moved to the same day as the women’s race, near the majestic Pont Alexandre III.

    The mayor of Paris, who took a pre-Games dip in the Seine to demonstrate that its long-toxic waters are now swimmable, says 1.4 billion euros ($1.53 billion) plowed into a cleanup of the river is one of the Games’ most transformative legacies. Still, the water quality concerns raised questions about whether many Parisians will dive in when City Hall plans to open the Seine for public swimming next summer.

    Massive security required to safeguard the opening ceremony along the river — in a city hit repeatedly by extremist attacks in 2015 — proved financially painful for nearby businesses that were sealed inside the security cordon and lost customers.

    French authorities also made unprecedentedly broad use of discretionary powers under an anti-terror law to keep hundreds of people, often minorities, they deemed to be potentially dangerous away from the biggest event modern France has ever organized. The use of AI-assisted surveillance also fueled critics’ complaints that the Games are leaving an unwanted legacy of police repression.

    Inside the high-security bubble of the athletes’ village, some complained about the eco-friendly cardboard beds, rooms that weren’t air-conditioned and shortages of some foods — byproducts of Paris’ drive for sustainability and waste reduction. Squaring the circle of how the Olympics can be viable in a warming world is going to be an ever-increasing challenge for hosts.

    Still, the joyful crowds showed that the popular verdict was more positive than negative. The organizers’ slogan was “Games Wide Open.” Seeing such happiness on streets that felt so unsafe when al-Qaida and Islamic State gunmen and suicide bombers sowed terror in 2015 seemed to complete Paris’ long recovery.

    After the Paralympics from Aug. 28 to Sept. 8, normal life will resume. But the Games will keep ringing in Paris.

    A victory bell in the Olympic stadium that winning athletes rang in celebration will get a new home — a restored Notre Dame. The cathedral’s planned reopening in December, following more than five years of rebuilding after its 2019 fire, is the next big milestone on Paris’ horizon.

    The cathedral’s rector, Rev. Olivier Ribadeau Dumas, said the bell will hang in the roof above the altar and be rung whenever Mass is celebrated.

    The chimes will serve as lasting reminders of the Games’ “extraordinary atmosphere” and Olympic-inspired “unity of the French people that was very beautiful,” he said.

    “This bell will be the sign of how these Games have left an imprint on France,” Dumas said. “That really makes me happy.”

    ___

    Paris-based correspondent John Leicester has reported for AP from 10 Summer and Winter Olympics.

    ___

    AP Summer Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    John Leicester, Associated Press

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  • Here Comes the Sun:

    Here Comes the Sun:

    Here Comes the Sun: “The Sopranos” cast and more – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Stars of “The Sopranos” speak with Anthony Mason about the hit show celebrating its 25th anniversary this year. Then, Luke Burbank learns about breakdancing, the latest Olympic sport. “Here Comes the Sun” is a closer look at some of the people, places and things we bring you every week on “CBS Sunday Morning.”

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  • Team USA holds off France to win gold in Olympic men’s basketball thanks to Steph Curry’s heroics

    Team USA holds off France to win gold in Olympic men’s basketball thanks to Steph Curry’s heroics

    Stephen Curry was thinking about this two years ago, after winning his fourth NBA title. The only thing left for him to win was Olympic gold.

    And in the ultimate moment, he made sure that medal would be his.

    The U.S. is atop the international men’s basketball world once again, after Curry scored 24 points and led the way to a 98-87 win over France in the final at the Paris Games on Saturday night. It was the fifth consecutive gold medal for the U.S. — and the 17th in 20 all-time appearances for the Americans at the games.

    Steph Curry
    Steph Curry (R) celebrates with Kevin Durant front of France coach Vincent Collet (L) after winning the men’s gold medal basketball final between France and Team USA during the Olympic Games at the Bercy Arena in Paris on Aug. 10, 2024.

    THIBAUD MORITZ/AFP via Getty Images


    Curry made four 3-pointers in the final 2:43, including the one that just sealed the win with 1:19 remaining. It put the U.S. up 93-84 and he skipped down the court letting out a yell, shaking his jersey so everyone could see the “USA” across the front.

    If that wasn’t enough, one more followed with about 30 seconds left — with the “go to sleep” move where he puts his hands on the side of his face.

    Good night. Game over. Gold won. Again.

    Kevin Durant — the first four-time men’s gold medalist in Olympic basketball history — scored 15 for the Americans, as did Devin Booker. And LeBron James, wearing metallic gold shoes that needed no explanation, scored 14 for the U.S. as he won his fourth Olympic medal and third gold.

    For the second consecutive Olympics, the French had to watch the Americans hold out U.S. flags in celebration after the title game. The French lost to the U.S. 87-82 in Tokyo three years ago, and this one was down to the final minutes. That is, until Curry took over.

    Victor Wembanyama
    Victor Wembanyama of France reacts after his team’s loss against Team USA during the men’s gold medal game at the Olympic Games at Bercy Arena on Aug. 10, 2024 in Paris, France.

    Getty Images


    Victor Wembanyama, in his first Olympic final, was brilliant for France, scoring 26 points, covering his face in a towel afterward as the Americans celebrated. Guerschon Yabusele scored 20 for the hosts.

    The U.S. lead was 14 early in the third, looking poised to pull away. But the offense quickly went cold and when Evan Fournier connected on a 3-pointer with 3:05 left in the quarter the lead was down to 65-59 — a 12-4 run by the hosts.

    And with a chance to go up double-digits headed to the fourth, a big U.S. blunder gave France another jolt of momentum. Anthony Edwards and Durant got their signals crossed on a pass that led to a turnover, Nando De Colo scored to beat the buzzer and the U.S. lead was only 72-66 going into the final 10 minutes.

    It got as close as three. No closer, thanks to Curry.

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  • Olympic arenas often fall into disrepair, so LA vows to rely on existing venues in 2028

    Olympic arenas often fall into disrepair, so LA vows to rely on existing venues in 2028

    The Olympics are revered for their storied legacy, but there is one tradition that isn’t so celebrated – once opulent Olympic venues repeatedly neglected and turned into forgotten relics once the games are over.

    “We’ve got the ruins of ancient Olympia in Greece, but now we’ve got the ruins of modern Olympia,” said historian Miles Osgood, a Stanford University lecturer who has been studying the cultural impact of the Olympic games for nearly a decade.

    “You have all of these single-use stadiums in the suburbs…that saw a little bit of action for the Olympics and then we’re allowed to crumble.”

    An entire aquatics park was left abandoned in Brazil after the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, athlete housing is now nothing more than rundown apartments in Greece following the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, and bobsled tracks – covered in graffiti – lead to nowhere after they were showcased in the 1984 Winter Games in Bosnia.


    Getty Images

    The bobsled tracks used in Bosnia’s 1984 Olympic Games are now covered in graffiti and overgrown weeds.

    Venues at Paris Summer Games resemble Olympic roots

    Paris has noticeably tried to return to the glory days of the Olympics by hosting the games in the heart of the city, instead of constructing new and permanent facilities in the outskirts of town.  The Seine river was used for the swimming portion of the triathlon, while temporary seating helped transform the Eiffel Tower into the world’s most vibrant beach volleyball court.  In fact, roughly 95% of the Olympic venues used during the current Paris Games either already existed or were designed to be temporary, according to the Paris 2024 Olympic Organizing Committee.

    “Paris 2024 is proving that it’s possible to stage a spectacular, inclusive, and unique games in a more responsible, more sustainable and more useful manner,” said Tania Braga, Head of Olympic Games Impact and Legacy for the International Olympic Committee.



    Getty Images

    Temporary seating setup at the base of the Eiffel Tower allowed Paris to create one of the most iconic beach volleyball courts in the world.

    LA vows to rely on existing or temporary arenas for 2028 Games

    Los Angeles is set to host the next Summer Olympics in 2028 and has already pledged to be the first Olympic Games in modern history to forgo building any permanent venues.  Instead, LA will make use of existing facilities like the Lakers’ home arena downtown and the nearby LA Memorial Coliseum.

    “The combination of all that allows us to a deliver a games that’s not about construction projects,” said Casey Wasserman, chair of the LA28 planning committee, who made the comments in a promotional video released by his group.

    “It’s about embracing the community, embracing the city, welcoming the world into our existing facilities, into our existing infrastructure, and doing it in the most innovative and dynamic way we can do it.”

    Los Angeles followed a similar mantra the last time it hosted the Summer Games in 1984, which many experts still consider the only modern Olympics that was profitable.

    While building less certainly brings environmental benefits, the decision for cities to use what they already have is largely about cost.  The Olympics are notorious for running overbudget by billions of dollars.  On average, Olympic host cities pay 159% more than what was originally budgeted, according to researchers at the University of Oxford.

    In fact, Budapest, Hamburg, and Rome all pulled out as potential host cities for the current games because of budget concerns, leaving just Paris and Los Angeles.

    The International Olympic Committee then took the unusual step of simultaneously offering Paris the 2024 Games and LA the host spot for the 2028 games – essentially skipping the selection process for the next Summer Olympics amid concerns the IOC would struggle to find a willing host.

    Historian Miles Osgood says the best way to recruit cities in the future is to look to the past.

    The founder of the Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin, really cared about the games being beautiful and incorporating arts and culture – a beautiful architectural surrounding and then a beautiful civic surrounding, Osgood said.  “So for Paris to bring things back into some of its most iconic spaces and before some of its most iconic landmarks…I think fulfills that esthetic legacy.”

    At an expected price tag of nearly $9 billion, the Paris Olympics will likely be one of the cheapest Summer Games in decades.  Los Angeles hopes to cut costs even more in 2028 with an estimated budget of roughly $7 billion, but even that figure has already ballooned by about 30 percent from the original budget.

    The push for cities to build less, however, could carry unintended consequences of dramatically reducing the number of countries eligible to host the Olympic games in the future.

    “It immediately shrinks the group of potential hosts to cities who have already hosted the Olympic Games,” said Alexander Budzier, who has studied the economic impact of the Olympic Games dating back to the 1960 Olympics in Rome.

    “It will be very, very unlikely that we will see another city from an emerging economy or…that hasn’t hosted the games already to stage a new edition of the games,” Budzier added.

    “On the other hand, you have the Olympic movement, that has the goal and objective and the value to increase sport participation globally.”


    Contact The Investigative Unit

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    Bigad Shaban and Jeremy Carroll

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  • Nikola Jokic posts fifth triple-double in Olympics history to lead Serbia to bronze medal – The Cannabist

    Nikola Jokic posts fifth triple-double in Olympics history to lead Serbia to bronze medal – The Cannabist

    PARIS — Nikola Jokic had the fifth triple-double in Olympic history and Serbia beat Germany 93-83 to win the Olympic men’s basketball bronze medal on Saturday.

    Jokic finished with 19 points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists to help Serbia claim its first medal since winning silver in Rio de Janeiro in 2016. Serbia bounced back after nearly upsetting the four-time defending gold medalist U.S. in the semifinals.

    Vasilije Micic added 19 points and Bogdan Bogdanovic finished with 16. Jokic joined Sasha Belov of the former Soviet Union, the United States’ LeBron James (twice) and Slovenia’s Luka Doncic as the only players with Olympic triple-doubles.

    Read the rest of this story on TheKnow.DenverPost.com.

    The Cannabist Network

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  • U.S. claims fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer on Coloradan Mallory Swanson’s game-winning goal – The Cannabist

    U.S. claims fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer on Coloradan Mallory Swanson’s game-winning goal – The Cannabist

    PARIS — The U.S. women’s soccer team is golden again.

    And, as has been the case throughout the team’s run at the Paris Games, the Americans have Colorado to thank.

    The United States won its fifth Olympic gold medal by beating Brazil 1-0 on Colorado native Mallory Swanson’s early second-half goal in the tournament final Saturday at the Paris Games.

    Read the rest of this story on TheKnow.DenverPost.com.

    The Cannabist Network

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  • USWNT wins its fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer with a 1-0 victory over Brazil in final

    USWNT wins its fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer with a 1-0 victory over Brazil in final

    PARIS — The U.S. women’s soccer team is golden again.

    And, as has been the case throughout the team’s run at the Paris Games, the Americans have Colorado to thank.

    The United States won its fifth Olympic gold medal by beating Brazil 1-0 on Colorado native Mallory Swanson’s early second-half goal in the tournament final Saturday at the Paris Games.

    The Americans, who hadn’t won gold since the 2012 London Olympics, closed out an undefeated run to the title in their first international campaign under new coach Emma Hayes.

    Along the way, it was the golden feet of Coloradans Swanson, Sophia Smith and captain Lindsey Horan who did the most damage. Swanson finished the tournament with four goals and two assists, while Smith had three goals and one assist.

    Goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher preserved Saturday’s win with a one-handed save on Adriana’s header in stoppage time at Parc des Princes. At the final whistle, the U.S. players celebrated as Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the U.S.A.” played in the stadium.

    The loss is more heartbreak for Brazil and its iconic star, Marta. The six-time world player of the year has never won a Women’s World Cup or an Olympics. This is expected to be her last major international tournament.

    It was the third victory for the United States over Brazil in an Olympic final. The Americans also beat the Brazilians in the 2004 in Athens and four years later in Beijing.

    Brazil has never finished better than runner-up at the Olympics.

    “I’m very emotional. It’s been a dream of mine to be in this position,” said Hayes, a London native. “I have to thank my dad because he’s the one who pushed me to this point to be able to come and coach an unbelievable group of players that have received me so well and taken on board everything I have asked. They are tremendous people and players and role models. Yeah, I love them.”

    United States team players celebrate after defeating Brazil during the women’s soccer gold medal match between Brazil and the United States at the Parc des Princes during the 2024 Summer Olympics, Saturday, Aug. 10, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

    Three years ago in Tokyo, the U.S. settled for the bronze medal. The Americans were knocked out in the quarterfinals at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.

    Swanson’s 57th-minute goal came in her 100th appearance with the United States.

    Tom Cruise and former U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe were among those in the crowd.

    The U.S. also won gold in 1996 at the Atlanta Games in the first women’s soccer tournament at the Olympics.

    Anne M. Peterson

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  • U.S. women’s soccer team beats Brazil 1-0 to win gold medal at Paris Olympics

    U.S. women’s soccer team beats Brazil 1-0 to win gold medal at Paris Olympics

    The U.S. women’s soccer team is golden once more after beating Brazil in a highly anticipated final match at the Paris Olympics on Saturday.

    A goal from Mallory Swanson, playing in her 100th match for the U.S., in the 57th minute, was the difference between the two rivals.

    Brazil v United States: Gold Medal Match: Women's Football - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 15
    Mallory Swanson of the United States celebrates scoring a goal against Brazil in the second half during the Women’s Gold Medal match during the Olympic Games Paris 2024.

    Brad Smith/USSF / Getty Images


    The U.S. was undefeated heading into the game, but Brazil had the best chances early. Brazilian forward Ludmila was alone in front of the goal in the second minute, but her shot went straight into the arms of goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher.

    Brazil thought they had a goal when Ludmila appeared to score in the 16th minute, but it was quickly ruled out for offside.

    In stoppage time, some heroics from Naeher preserved the win with a one-handed save on Adriana’s header.

    The loss signals more heartbreak for Brazil and its iconic star, Marta. The six-time world player of the year, who announced early this year that she will retire after this year’s Games, has never won a Women’s World Cup or an Olympics. The 38-year-old first stepped onto the Olympic turf 20 years ago at the 2004 Games in Athens.

    To get to the final, both teams had to weave their way through a competitive field of rivals. Twelve nations in total qualified for the Paris 2024 Olympics.

    The United States and Brazil rose to the top of the pack after beating opponents Germany and Spain, respectively, during semifinal matches earlier this week. 

    The Americans won 1-0 Tuesday in a fierce battle with Germany. Forward player Sophia Smith scored the winning goal in the first 15-minute half of overtime after an assist from teammate Mallory Swanson.

    “I’m so proud of us for finding a way in these last few games to get the win,” Smith said after Tuesday’s match. Smith turns 24 on Aug. 10, the day of the gold medal matchup. 

    Brazil v United States: Gold Medal Match: Women's Football - Olympic Games Paris 2024: Day 15
    Marta of Brazil walks on the field in the second half during the Women’s Gold Medal match against the United States during the Olympic Games Paris 2024.

    Brad Smith/USSF / Getty Images


    Brazil had their work cut out for them going into Tuesday’s semifinals against Spain, which boasted an undefeated record at the Summer Games. Still, the South American team managed to defy the odds when they beat the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup champs 4-2.

    The U.S. women’s team is now the winningest team in the Olympics with five gold medals. The Americans have defeated Brazil twice in an Olympic final — in 2004 and 2008. The last time the U.S. women’s team brought home gold was at the 2012 Games in London

    Germany won the 2016 women’s finals in Rio and Canada took home gold in 2021 in Tokyo.

    Paris 2024 Olympic Games - Day 15 - Women's Football - Gold Medal Match
    Actor Tom Cruise celebrates during the women’s gold medal match between Team Brazil and Team United States.

    Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile via Getty Images


    Tom Cruise, former U.S. star Megan Rapinoe and former NBA star Sue Bird were among those in the crowd at Parc des Princes.

    It was the third victory for the United States over Brazil in an Olympic final. The Americans also beat the Brazilians in 2004 in Athens and four years later in Beijing.

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  • USWNT wins fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer with a 1-0 victory over Brazil in final

    USWNT wins fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer with a 1-0 victory over Brazil in final

    The U.S. women’s soccer team won its fifth Olympic gold medal by beating Brazil 1-0 on Mallory Swanson’s early second-half goal in the tournament final Saturday at the Paris Games.The Americans, who hadn’t won gold since the 2012 London Olympics, closed out an undefeated run to the title in their first international campaign under new coach Emma Hayes.Goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher preserved the win with a one-handed save on Adriana’s header in stoppage time at Parc des Princes.The loss is more heartbreak for Brazil and its iconic star, Marta. The six-time world player of the year has never won a Women’s World Cup or an Olympics. This is expected to be her last major international tournament.It was the third victory for the United States over Brazil in an Olympic final. The Americans also beat the Brazilians in the 2004 in Athens and four years later in Beijing.Brazil has never finished better than runner up at the Olympics.Three years ago in Tokyo, the U.S. settled for the bronze medal. The Americans were knocked out in the quarterfinals at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.Swanson’s 57th-minute goal came in her 100th appearance with the United States.Tom Cruise and former U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe were among those in the crowd.The U.S. also won gold in 1996 at the Atlanta Games in the first women’s soccer tournament at the Olympics.

    The U.S. women’s soccer team won its fifth Olympic gold medal by beating Brazil 1-0 on Mallory Swanson’s early second-half goal in the tournament final Saturday at the Paris Games.

    The Americans, who hadn’t won gold since the 2012 London Olympics, closed out an undefeated run to the title in their first international campaign under new coach Emma Hayes.

    Goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher preserved the win with a one-handed save on Adriana’s header in stoppage time at Parc des Princes.

    The loss is more heartbreak for Brazil and its iconic star, Marta. The six-time world player of the year has never won a Women’s World Cup or an Olympics. This is expected to be her last major international tournament.

    It was the third victory for the United States over Brazil in an Olympic final. The Americans also beat the Brazilians in the 2004 in Athens and four years later in Beijing.

    Brazil has never finished better than runner up at the Olympics.

    Three years ago in Tokyo, the U.S. settled for the bronze medal. The Americans were knocked out in the quarterfinals at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.

    Swanson’s 57th-minute goal came in her 100th appearance with the United States.

    Tom Cruise and former U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe were among those in the crowd.

    The U.S. also won gold in 1996 at the Atlanta Games in the first women’s soccer tournament at the Olympics.

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  • USWNT wins fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer with a 1-0 victory over Brazil in final :: WRALSportsFan.com

    USWNT wins fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer with a 1-0 victory over Brazil in final :: WRALSportsFan.com

    — PARIS (AP) — The U.S. women’s soccer team won its fifth Olympic gold medal by beating Brazil 1-0 on Mallory Swanson’s early second-half goal in the tournament final Saturday at the Paris Games.

    The Americans, who hadn’t won gold since the 2012 London Olympics, closed out an undefeated run to the title in their first international campaign under new coach Emma Hayes.

    Goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher preserved the win with a one-handed save on Adriana’s header in stoppage time at Parc des Princes.

    The loss is more heartbreak for Brazil and its iconic star, Marta. The six-time world player of the year has never won a Women’s World Cup or an Olympics. This is expected to be her last major international tournament.

    It was the third victory for the United States over Brazil in an Olympic final. The Americans also beat the Brazilians in the 2004 in Athens and four years later in Beijing.

    Brazil has never finished better than runner up at the Olympics.

    Three years ago in Tokyo, the U.S. settled for the bronze medal. The Americans were knocked out in the quarterfinals at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.

    Swanson’s 57th-minute goal came in her 100th appearance with the United States.

    Tom Cruise and former U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe were among those in the crowd.

    The U.S. also won gold in 1996 at the Atlanta Games in the first women’s soccer tournament at the Olympics.

    ___

    AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

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