From USA Today:
“Review: The Tokyo Olympics
opening ceremony was more of a whimper than a bang”
They had to start this thing
somehow. A muted and semirestrained Opening Ceremony began the 2020 Tokyo
Olympic Games Friday morning, for the first time broadcast live in the early
hours in the U.S. by NBC (an abridged replay will air at 7:30 p.m. EDT/4:30
p.m. PDT). Nowhere near as bombastic as ceremonies from London or Beijing, but
still struggling to find the right tone, the Tokyo opener will be less
remembered for its spectacle and more for the pandemic environment in which it
aired. The International Olympic Committee is trying to use the ceremony – and
the Games themselves – as a step into the future, but the opening pageant was a
muddled, controversial affair that couldn't escape the looming present.
It was an odd, sometimes awkward,
and tonally dissonant four-hour presentation that tried to balance the weight
of the ongoing pandemic with the joy and elation that usually accompanies the
world's most prestigious athletic competition. There were fireworks, but no big
audience to cheer for them. There were remembrances for those lost to COVID-19,
even as some masks slipped below noses and mouths. IOC President Thomas Bach
spoke of "hope" and "resilience," while Japanese protesters
vociferously denounced the Games outside the stadium. The theme was one of
triumph over a common foe, except that the world is nowhere near completely
"defeating" the deadly virus. "There is no way around it: We are
in the middle of a pandemic. These games are controversial, especially here,
with many of the Japanese people worried about inviting in the world as the
virus has spread," NBC's ceremony co-host Savannah Guthrie said as the
ceremony got underway at 8 p.m. local time. "But Olympic officials have
pressed on, out of tradition to honor the work and dedication of these athletes
and yes, in aspiration that somehow sports still has the power to connect us
and to heal us." NBC, the IOC, the athletes and everyone involved in the
Games hope that sports has the power to heal us, and that remains to be seen as
the competition begins. But if they were imagining that this ceremony would
spark a global mood of excitement and hope, they chose the wrong way to show
it.
The ceremony opened with a
videoclip-heavy package that documented the years since Tokyo was announced as
the host of the 2020 Games. Elation, excitement, followed by the silence of the
2020 lockdowns and scenes of athletes training at home. In the stadium, we saw
the kind of cultural performances that are often a key part of these ceremonies,
including a segment honoring ancient Japanese carpentry and an interpretative
dance representing the human heart and circulatory system. It was a mixed bag,
but the moments that focused more on the skill of the dancers were far more
successful and entertaining.
The parade of nations – with
delegations bearing their countries' flags – started less than 40 minutes into
the event. It proceeded in its usual (and sometimes boring) format, although
producers offered the fun touch of using vibrant music from video games to score
the parade, which helped overcome that there was no audience to loudly clap and
cheer for the athletes.
On the NBC feed available in the
U.S., the producers continued their usual Olympics strategy of
all-Team-USA-all-the-time coverage. Guthrie and co-host Mike Tirico interviewed
American athletes including Megan Rapinoe, while Qatar and Kazakhstan marched through
the stadium. The network also cut to commercial breaks during the parade,
picture-in-picture style: Athletes from smaller countries walked as Peacock and
Toyota ads appeared on an adjacent screen. After the parade concluded, more
entertainment – including a Kabuki performance and sports
"pictograms" with costumed dancers and unsettling camera angles –
felt more like filler so late in the event. A rendition of John Lennon's
"Imagine" by a Japanese children's choir, and performers from around
the globe (including John Legend representing "the Americas" and
Keith Urban representing "Oceania") were clearly meant as a source of
inspiration. But considering last year's much-maligned celebrity viral video of
the song, it felt more like a parody of the cynical, corporate attempts to
capitalize on the pain of the pandemic rather than genuine emotion about this
world-altering virus. There was no easy way to create an opening ceremony for
an Olympics delayed a year because of a global health crisis. There is no
precedent, no script to follow for trying to excite a world still hobbled by a
death and tragedy to watch sports.
So in one sense, the producers of
the ceremony succeeded just by pulling something together. As tennis star Naomi
Osaka was given the honor of lighting the Olympic cauldron, there was a small
sense of awe. But in another – especially considering the controversy behind
the Games and the toll they are taking on Japan and the world – this lackluster
ceremony is a huge letdown. What's the point of all the risk, all the testing
and quarantining and masks, if this is the best emotion and spectacle we can
muster? Maybe once the athletes get involved, things will improve.
^ I watched the Opening Ceremony
and it was just plain sad to witness. The 2020 (2021) Olympics should have just
been cancelled completely. Japan is not as vaccinated or prepared as the US or other places are. It seems that as usual the IOC is more concerned with the money than health and safety. I will continue to see how many medals Canada and
the US get, but other than that I probably won’t see anything else. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/review-2021-olympics-opening-ceremony-152838637.html
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