| Sports talk Beijing 2008 Olympics; I just saw the opening ceremony of the Beijing 2008 Olympics which is spectacularly amazing, visually stunning.
Congratulating the Chinese ... |
08-08-08, 12:31 PM
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| | Professor
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Lean: Libertarian Gender:  | Beijing 2008 Olympics I just saw the opening ceremony of the Beijing 2008 Olympics which is spectacularly amazing, visually stunning.
Congratulating the Chinese on doing a great job in presenting China to the world. Great performance. Will update with more vids when they come out.
Use this thread to comment on anything related to Beijing 2008 Olympics.
Here's hoping to more records being broken as the world engages in healthy and fair sportsmanship.
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08-08-08, 12:52 PM
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| | What'll it be?
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Current Mood: | Re: Beijing 2008 Olympics Quote:
Originally Posted by Trinity I just saw the opening ceremony of the Beijing 2008 Olympics which is spectacularly amazing, visually stunning.
Congratulating the Chinese on doing a great job in presenting China to the world. Great performance. Will update with more vids when they come out.
Use this thread to comment on anything related to Beijing 2008 Olympics.
Here's hoping to more records being broken as the world engages in healthy and fair sportsmanship. | What? I thought it didn't start till tonight. |
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08-08-08, 01:01 PM
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Lean: Libertarian Gender:  | Re: Beijing 2008 Olympics China strides onto Olympic stage - Olympics - Yahoo! Sports China strides onto Olympic stage Quote:
BEIJING (AP)—Once-reclusive China commandeered the world stage Friday, celebrating its first-time role as Olympic host with a stunning display of pyrotechnics and pageantry—topped by the unworldly sight of a flying gymnast, traversing the heights of the stadium to light the flame and begin the Summer Games.
Now ascendant as a global power, China welcomed scores of world leaders to an opening ceremony watched by 91,000 people at the eye-catching National Stadium and a potential audience of 4 billion worldwide. It was depicted as the largest, costliest extravaganza in Olympic history, bookended by barrages of some 30,000 fireworks.
It ended in spectacular fashion, when China’s first Olympic superstar, 1984 six-time gymnastics gold medalist Li Ning, was hoisted by wires to the top of the stadium, circled the entire circumference as though he was spacewalking, then used his torch to send a torrent of flame spiraling upward to light the Olympic flame in a huge cauldron overlooking Beijing.
That was preceded by the parade of athletes, climaxing with the entry of the 639-strong Chinese team; It was led by flag-bearer and basketball idol Yao Ming alongside a 9-year-old schoolboy who survived May’s devastating earthquake in Sichuan province
The welcome—by a frenzied, chanting, flag-waving crowd that sought to cool itself with paper fans in the stifling heat—was thunderous. And moments later, the crowd erupted again when President Hu Jintao declared the games formally open.
President Bush and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin were among the glittering roster of notables who watched China make this bold declaration that it had arrived. Bush, rebuked by China after he raised human-rights concerns this week, is the first U.S. president to attend an Olympics on foreign soil.
Already an economic juggernaut, China is given a good chance of overtaking the U.S. atop the gold-medal standings with its legions of athletes trained intensely since childhood. One dramatic showdown will be in women’s gymnastics, where the U.S. and Chinese teams are co-favorites; in the pool, Chinese divers and U.S. swimmers are expected to dominate.
The run-up to the games had epic story lines—China investing $40 billion to build the needed infrastructure, reeling from the catastrophic earthquake in May, struggling right up to Friday to diminish Beijing’s stubborn smog. China’s detentions of political activists, its crackdown on uprisings in Tibet and its economic ties to Sudan—home of the war-torn Darfur region—fueled relentless criticisms from human rights groups and calls for an Olympic boycott.
Second-guessed for awarding the games to Beijing, the International Olympic Committee stood firmly by its decision. It was time, the committee said, to bring the games to the homeland of 1.3 billion people, a fifth of humanity.
“For a long time, China has dreamed of opening its doors and inviting the world’s athletes to Beijing for the Olympic Games,” IOC President Jacques Rogge said in his speech. “Tonight, that dream comes true.”
Rogge mentioned the Sichuan earthquake, saying the world was moved “by the great courage and solidarity of the Chinese people.” And he exhorted the assembled athletes, as role models for the world’s youth, to “reject doping and cheating.”
The story presented in Friday’s pageantry sought to distill 5,000 years of Chinese history—featuring everything from the Great Wall to opera puppets to astronauts, and highlighting achievements in art, music and science. Roughly 15,000 people were in the cast, all under the direction of Zhang Yimou, whose early films often often ran afoul of government censors for their blunt portrayals of China’s problems.
He produced some majestic and ethereal imagery—at one point a huge, translucent globe emerged from the stadium floor, and acrobats floated magically around it to the accompaniment of the games’ theme song, “One World, One Dream.”
The show’s script steered clear of modern politics—there were no references to Chairman Mao and the class struggle, nor to the more recent conflicts and controversies. The ceremony was taped for broadcast 12 hours later in the United States.
A record 204 delegations paraded their athletes through the stadium— superstars such as tennis great Roger Federer and basketball’s Kobe Bryant, as well as plucky underdogs from Iraq, Afghanistan and other embattled lands. The nations were marching not in the traditional alphabetical order but in a sequence based on the number of strokes it takes to write their names in Chinese. The exceptions were Greece, birthplace of the Olympics, which was given its traditional place at the start, and the Chinese team, which lined up last.
Athletes from Japan, an old foe and current economic rival of China, were greeted coolly by the crowd even though they waved tiny Chinese flags. But cheers erupted for the next delegation, Taiwan, which China considers a breakaway province that should reunite with the mainland.
The U.S. team—second-largest after China’s with nearly 600 members—was welcomed loudly, with many in crowd recognizing the basketball stars who brought up the rear. Bush rose from his VIP seat to wave at the athletes, nattily dressed in white trousers, blue blazers, red-white-and-blue-striped ties and white caps.
“It was a breathtaking experience walking into the stadium,” said Oganna Nnamani, a volleyball player from Bloomington, Ill. “I am thankful to be part of this moment.”
“This is the biggest stage,” said LeBron James, who hopes to lead the U.S. basketball team to a gold medal.
The American flag-bearer was 1500-meter runner Lopez Lomong, one of the Lost Boys of Sudan, who spent a decade of his youth in a refugee camp in Kenya. He’s a member of the Team Darfur coalition, representing athletes opposed to China’s support for Sudan. On Friday he avoided any criticism and said the Chinese “have been great putting all these things together.”
| Slideshow : Olympics - Photos - Yahoo! Sports |
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08-08-08, 01:10 PM
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Lean: Libertarian Gender:  | Re: Beijing 2008 Olympics Quote:
Originally Posted by talloulou What? I thought it didn't start till tonight. | I live in Singapore which is some 12-14 hrs ahead of US. Beijing has the same time/timezone as Singapore. I saw the live telecast of the opening ceremony of Beijing Olympics 2008 on TV in Singapore (live telecast, same time as it was happening in Beijing). The opening ceremony ended just b4 I posted this thread, at around 12am midnight. I am into 1:07am Saturday morning 9 Aug 08 now...
Ofc I had to wait a while for the news to actually report on the Beijing 2008 Olympics (I was a little too fast and early for the vids, pics, news and reports to come out)
Here is the world clock so u won't be confused by intl times... : The World Clock - Time Zones
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08-08-08, 02:53 PM
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| | Sage
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Originally Posted by talloulou What? I thought it didn't start till tonight. | That's only because in search of a prime time audience NBC did not broadcast the event live. |
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08-08-08, 02:55 PM
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| | Sage
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Current Mood: | Re: Beijing 2008 Olympics It will be interesting a reaction by people when they see the order in which the national teams arrive in hehehe. |
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08-08-08, 05:33 PM
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Current Mood: | Re: Beijing 2008 Olympics Quote:
Originally Posted by jfuh It will be interesting a reaction by people when they see the order in which the national teams arrive in hehehe. | I took a second look, but the CBC expalined to me that they were going by the Chinese alphabet that doesn't really exist, LOL. Anyway, the opening ceremony was spectacular and will be hard to ever out-do.
The CBC pre-Olympic coverage of this week has been phenomenal. Great stories, minus the sensationalism that American news loves to portray. If you're close to the border, I'd say you should tune it. And, oh, the opening ceremonies were broadcasted live, the way it should be.
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Last edited by Middleground : 08-08-08 at 05:35 PM.
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08-08-08, 06:51 PM
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Current Mood: | Re: Beijing 2008 Olympics Quote:
Originally Posted by Middleground I took a second look, but the CBC expalined to me that they were going by the Chinese alphabet that doesn't really exist, LOL. Anyway, the opening ceremony was spectacular and will be hard to ever out-do.
The CBC pre-Olympic coverage of this week has been phenomenal. Great stories, minus the sensationalism that American news loves to portray. If you're close to the border, I'd say you should tune it. And, oh, the opening ceremonies were broadcasted live, the way it should be. | Good for the CBC, sorry you had to wake up WAY early in the morning.
Chinese alphabet though... quite a bit of a mistranslation.  what it went off of was the number of pen strokes needed for writing the first character of the Chinese phonetic or direct translation of each nation.
I'm rather a bit astonished that rarely anyone here in the US really gives a damn about the Olympics  You don't need to care about who's playing the host nation, what about support for your own national team??? |
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08-08-08, 07:08 PM
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Current Mood: | Re: Beijing 2008 Olympics Quote:
Originally Posted by jfuh I'm rather a bit astonished that rarely anyone here in the US really gives a damn about the Olympics  You don't need to care about who's playing the host nation, what about support for your own national team??? | Well maybe if pole dancing was an event and Britney, Lindsey and Paris made the team, there sure as hell would be interest.
BTW, I didn't watch live, but caught the reply... they've been broadcasting it all day. |
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08-08-08, 08:47 PM
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| | 17x NBA Champs
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Current Mood: | Re: Beijing 2008 Olympics Quote:
Originally Posted by jfuh It will be interesting a reaction by people when they see the order in which the national teams arrive in hehehe. | A topic that was had no small measure of controversy here in Taiwan, which is already saddled with an unpopular name by the IOC due to Chinese pressure. |
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