Wednesday, February 26, 2014

DC SocialPulse: Are You The One? "Turn the Paige"

*** Reader Advisory: DC SocialPulse Contains Adult Language and 
spoilers for international readers. Viewer Discretion is Advised. ***

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

Hi again everyone, welcome back to DC SocialPulse and our twitter diary of episode 6 of Are You The One?. Now that the Sochi Winter Olympics are now in the books, most of my attention will focus back to the MTV world, and last night we had an explosive episode to say the least. Last week, we saw tensions rise among John and Simone reach a breaking point, a potential love triangle was brought about with Wes, Kayla and Ryan, and the fun of a waterfall challenge. The group had their chances improved in the path to a million thanks to getting their first perfect match in Dillan & Coleysia, while they also garnered their best perfect match number yet: five at the halfway mark.
   This week in episode 6 entitled "Turn the Paige", the house will try to figure out who the second perfect couple is. Kayla finally gets called out for her Ryan & Wes threesome, while Simone will try to break up with Chris T and Shanley machine. And the latest trip to the Truth Booth undoubtedly send the house and the group into chaos mode, while the week's challenge is a good, old-fashioned drinking contest.
   And following twitter's view, I'll offer perspective on an unwritten rule that I have which explains why I am so well respected among this cast (and Team MTV as well), and how, inadvertently and rather coincidentally, I actually pictured this very episode and two of the key figures in it. Two reminders before we start:
- 1. Please note there is explicit language in certain tweets below, but I am keeping it uncensored in order to retain the heat of the moment. So if you are mature enough, please read with discretion. :-)
& 2. As AYTO is airing hot off the U.S. presses on other MTV international channels and this episode hasn't aired where you live, please don't proceed with reading this post. But I will be compiling all the cast tweets from when it airs here each week into weekly DCSP posts, so you won't miss a thing of how your favorite castmates reacted to this episode when they get to see them for the first time.
So with that, as we begin this week's SP, let's start with the Monday before this episode, including some mini live tweeting of when last week's aired in the UK and a lengthy convo between a couple of the castmates.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

DC SocialPulse: Real World Ex-Plosion: "First Love Fools"

*** Reader Advisory: DC SocialPulse Contains
Adult Language. Viewer Discretion is Advised. ***

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

Welcome again to SocialPulse and our continuing coverage of Real World Ex-Plosion. Been a little while, hasn't it? Couple weeks it has been, but been busy with the Sochi Olympics and being in good company with Costas & Friends. When we left San Francisco a couple weeks back, the exes Ashley C., Brian, Hailey, Lauren and Jenna surprised our strangers in the loft with not just a visit but also the realization that they'd be living with them. We also got to learn more about the relationships that brought these people together in the first place (perhaps bringing in new viewers to the show as well), and saw the tension rise among the now 11 total roommates who occupy that loft.
   Wednesday was Episode 6, which I got to watch, taking a break from recording what would be a gold medal for Ted Ligety & two women's bobsled medals for the Americans. This week, we'll see Thomas get stuck between a rock and a hard place, better known to us as a good old-fashioned Real World love triangle between him, Jamie and his ex-girlfriend Hailey. Jenny's wild behavior in the city upsets her ex Brian (with a waving knife to boot), while yet another life-changer and a huge shockwave hits when one of the new roommates finds out that she is pregnant & may have to leave early. And after twitter's view of this episode, we'll look back at other famous Real World threesomes.
   As we begin, again the usual reminder that there is some adult language in some tweets below, but I am keeping it uncensored in order to retain the heat of the moment. So if you are mature enough, please read with discretion. :-)  So with that, to the city we go. 

Friday, February 21, 2014

DC Games 2014: The Blueprint that Changed The Game

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

We are nearing the closing weekend of the XXII Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, a very eventful Olympics to say the least. Aside from me being an MTV fan, outside of their world I watch a lot of sports television. But I'm actually one of those handful of people who actually doesn't have an ESPN network as the default sports channel in my room as, among the sports channels, I would usually have NBCSN, Golf Channel or the two Comcast SportsNet channels on more than than others. I've grown a very good relationship with the NBC Sports Group, having become a loyal viewer to virtually all the properties it airs - Olympics, NFL, golf, NHL, EPL & the like, this dating all the way back to them airing the NBA.
   But there's one particular experiment along the way in the peacock' sports history that they might look back on with mixed feelings, but was forward-looking for the time it was released in. It was the Olympic Triplecast, a pay-per-view experiment of presenting around-the-clock coverage of the Barcelona Olympics. And although in the short term it wasn't nearly as big a financial success as NBC envisioned, in the long run its ambitious blueprint of offering Olympic action on multiple channels would ultimately change how viewers would consume Olympic coverage in the digital age, and would signal the beginning of a shift towards speciality sports television that is now commonplace today.

In the late '80s & early '90s, cable television had increased sports fans' television viewing habits beyond the traditional weekend afternoon slots on the networks and some weeknights nationally & locally to the 24-7 machine we now take for granted today. ESPN had acquired rights to televise NFL and Major League Baseball to add to its stable, while regional sports networks popped up across the country to show more of the local pro & college teams.
   In 1992, looking to cash in on this new phase of sports television, NBC partnered with New York cable provider Cablevision to broadcast coverage of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics on pay-per-view. Their collaboration, the Olympic Triplecast, offered three channels to televise events live, while still continuing to show them later on tape delay on NBC in primetime, a practice that continues to this day. The channels were branded Red, White and Blue, and a special free three-button remote control was even offered by some cable operators as a marketing tool for viewers to sign up.
   The channels aired for 12 hours a day from 5am ET to 5pm PT, then repeated for the next 12 hours, carrying the natural world feed of Olympic coverage instead of the traditional unilateral coverage used by the U.S. broadcasters. The Blue channel featured swimming and track & field; while White focused on gymnastics, boxing, equestrian, rowing & other minor sports; and Red covered basketball, baseball, volleyball, water polo and team sports.

However, like many other start-up operations, a number of issues came about in this ambitious experiment.
- First, there were the logistics of it and whether or not a viewer's cable system was taking part, even with a national call center being set up to help out. 
- Second, there was a lower uptake in the amount of people subscribing to the event. Internal & external projections had the number ranging from 125,000 to 250,000 subscribers, but slow sales would ultimately lead to damage control. Discounts were offered midway through the Games but to mo avail, then bought time on CNBC with a split screen of all three channels.
- Three, there was advertising, including NBC & Cablevision being given a slap on the wrist for deceptive advertising early on, and a number of NBC affiliates rejecting Triplecast advertising out of fear of promoting competiton for their Olympic broadcast.
- and Fourth, there were fears that the Triplecast was cannibalizing NBC's main coverage, offering the same events the service was offering on a pay-per-view basis that the network was showing free.

In the end, and though the firestorm started before the flame was lit, the Olympic Triplecast was nothing but a failure by the time the cauldron was extinguished. Only 200,000 total subscribers were clocked in, leading Cablevision head Chuck Dolan to concede that this wasn't the home run they had expected. Many media outlets, from the New York Times to Entertainment Weekly, chimed in to declare that the Triplecast was a flop. And the final financial number would eventually prove that point: a joint $100 million loss for NBC and Cablevision.


While the Olympic Triplecast cast the lone dark spot on an Olympiad highlighted by the Dream Team and the first Games under the new NBC Sports regime of executive producer (and protege of ABC Sports head Roone Arledge) Dick Ebersol and primetime host Bob Costas, its ambitious blueprint of offering Olympic coverage on multiple channels would ultimately change the way fans would consume the biggest event on television. While there was no cable coverage of the Atlanta Olympics, and CBS & Turner teaming up to provide some cable coverage of the Winter Games in the '90s (a precursor to their March Madness partnership), later deals NBC would make with the IOC eventually allowed for coverage to expand to its cable channels. 
   After offering coverage in Sydney and Salt Lake on MSNBC and CNBC, the series of acquisitions made by NBC Universal of numerous cable networks, first with General Electric partnering with Vivendi and later by Comcast, would ultimately expand Olympic TV coverage to USA Network, Spanish language network Telemundo, Bravo and other channels in the NBCU family. And it all culminated in London with NBC Sports Network (rebranded from Versus) showing Team USA basketball, women's soccer and other marquee events, plus marquee live events from these Sochi Games including the USA/Russia and USA/Canada hockey games to record audiences.
   And recognizing the increasing amount of consumption of web video in the digital age, plus advancements in technology, in 2008 NBC made a bold step in offering 2,200 hours of live streaming coverage of 25 sports on NBCOlympics.com and offering tons of other Olympics video as well. It expanded in London and in Sochi with all competition & medal events being streamed online, delivering record amounts of live views and total video consumption, online, mobile and tablets, peaking with over 2 million streams of the USA/Canada semifinal on Friday during school/work hours.
   Along with that, in the manner sports which have gone virtually unnoticed by American television in the past such as archery, badminton, table tennis, team handball and the like would finally get their due in being showcased to viewers in America, along with expanded coverage of action in team sports besides of course Team USA games. Of course, the catalyst to the expanded exposure of those aforementioned sports was the surprise hit of curling at the Salt Lake Olympics.

And the Triplecast would prove the viability of showing more sports events on a pay-per-view basis beyond only boxing, wrestling and later mixed martial arts. Out-of-market sports packages such as NFL Sunday Ticket, NBA League Pass, MLB Extra Innings, NHL Center Ice and ESPN's Game Plan & Full Court eventually came about because of the Triplecast.
   And the success of those packages also inspired specialty sports channels such as Golf Channel - which came on the air in 1995; Speed Vision - which became Speed and then became Fox Sports 1 last year; Outdoor Life Network, which evolved into Versus and became NBC Sports Network in 2012; and NBA TV, which went on the air in 2000 as the first of the league-owned specialty channels.
   So, with the closing weekend of Sochi 2014 now here, and with the reality setting in soon that the next time we'll have this all-encompassing 24/7 Olympics fever again in a long 30 months from now in Rio (it'll only be a one-hour time difference from there to NY meaning it will be an entirely live Olympics), many can give a nod to that failed experiment called the Triplecast for giving the world the eventual blueprint of covering the Olympics in the digital age.

Stay here on DCBLOG for more Games 2014 posts during Sochi 2014 as we cover various aspects of the Olympics, the sports and events from Olympic world as the action unfolds from Russia. And these posts will continue to March until the end of the Paralympics. And Twitter @DC408dxtr will offer live tweeting (Pacific time) of TV coverage including primetime and live streaming & cable coverage, time permitting.
   We're also covering MTV's Real World Ex-Plosion and Are You The One? here & on twitter, including a Fan's View of the RW After Shows and SocialPulse diaries of this week's RW episode which will be posted over the weekend. For now, until I join you on twitter and then here on the blog later, thanks for reading and see you then.

- DC

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

DC Games 2014: It's Hockey's Time

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

We are heading towards the end of the XXII Olympic Winter Games, and the action has been heating up, literally - temperatures late last week reaching into the 60's in the warmest city to host an Winter Olympics. Last weekend, some skiers at the cross country & Nordic combined events, including the American team, even competed with short-sleeves on, taking a cue from the recent trend in the NBA. And even one Norweigan skier has been skiing with just shorts on, following in the fashion trend sparked by the famous pants worn by his fellow Noreweigans at curling. There's plenty of action at long & short track speed skating, alpine, figure skating and more taking place as the closing weekend nears.

But just as it was four years ago in Vancouver, the sport that's arguably the biggest team sport at the Olympics, winter or summer, will take precedent as the marquee sport at the Games: ice hockey. In Canada, the sport feels like a religion, and so it is over in Russia. All of the three top teams: the host nation, defending gold medalists Canada and the United States played very well in the preliminary round; while as expected Canada and the U.S. rolled over their opponents ex route to a gold medal match today.
   Here in the United States, hockey is enjoying a surge of increasing interest, both on television and attendance wise. Although not nearly as big as football, not drawing the type of strong TV audiences as other big sporting events (except perhaps in cities north of the Mason-Dixon Line), and being mostly ignored by SportsCenter on its former rights holder ESPN, the NHL is on an uptick with five straight years of TV audience growth and a coveted TV deal with NBC & what would become NBCSN. Last year's Stanley Cup postseason, one of the most exciting ever, was the most-watched in the U.S. on record with the Blackhawks' stunning Game 6 Cup clincher being the most-watched NHL game in the U.S. in many years.
   And there's the Winter Classic, which has become a phenomenon and has become a new New Year's Day tradition. The idea of hockey outdoors was spawned in the '90s by a number of Los Angeles Kings preseason hockey games taking place at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, followed by the 2003 Heritage Classic where Montreal and Edmonton squared off in the cold of Commonwealth Stadium. The joint idea of NBC and the NHL in 2008 to help bring new fans to the sport south of its Canadian heartland, it has grown to becoming the league's biggest regular season showcase, helping bring in new fans in the States at some of America's most-iconic NFL & MLB stadiums. The 2014 edition at The Big House set TV viewing records both in the US and Canada when the Toronto Maple Leafs bested the Detroit Red Wings in a shootout in the snow of Michigan Stadium.


But when you get down to it, there's several differences between the hockey fans are used to in North America and the hockey we see during the Olympics. This mirrors the differences the NBA has with basketball played internationally, and both American and Canadian football.
- First, there's the size of the rink in Olympic play. It is considerably larger than its North American cousins: as much as 15 feet wider than a standard NHL rink, and there's a lot more room to work with. It's often referred to in international circles as "the big sheet." But in Vancouver though, the Olympic tournament used North American sized rinks for the first time in Olympic play, primarily to sell more tickets instead of burdening the cost of expanding Rogers Arena and UBC Arena to international size.
- Second, the international game places emphasis on speed and skill rather than the NHL's more aggressive style. For example, fighting is not allowed in the international game compared to the NHL, carrying an automatic game misconduct penalty. And every team since the heyday of the Soviet dominance of the sport have looked to the Red Army's intricate puck handling and teamwork that saw them dominate the sport from 1956 to 1988, save of course for the two U.S. Olympic gold medals.
- Third: for international play, teams have two additional players for which to be dressed for a game roster than the NHL, at 20 compared to 18. And players don't have to touch the puck when there's an icing call, and they won't be penalized if they put the puck directly over the glass.
- Fourth: and there's the shootout. In the NHL when it became the method of determining regular season games in 2005, coaches can choose three players to shoot in the best-of-3, then rotate among all their players if it goes beyond that. In international play, only one player can shoot, regardless of how many rounds it goes.

Then, there's best on best: in essence, it's when the best players from each country take on each other in international play. It happens only at the Olympics due to the NHL taking its break for players to take part since Nagano, and many other players playing in Europe for the Russian KHL and other leagues. By contrast, the annual World Championships take place in May, but also during the Stanley Cup playoffs and only players from NHL teams eliminated from the postseason may be able to participate; and it's more regarded in Europe than it is in North America.
   What eventually led to NHL players taking part in the Olympics was a 1970's dispute between Hockey Canada and the International Ice Hockey Federation. Hockey Canada put the topic of full amateurism to the governing body over using NHL pros in international competitions which weren't allowed back then. A further point in their complaint was that the Soviet team was amateur in name only when they were actually professionals playing in the Soviet league. It was because of that loophole, among other things, that Canada didn't take part in any international hockey during the early '70s until a deal was brokered in 1976 that allowed the country to return, pros included, in international play, along with a new Canada/World Cup competition.
   The catalyst for that move was the Summit Series where the best players from Canada took on the best of the Soviet Union in an 8-game series, held throughout Canada and later in Moscow. It riveted the two countries with a compelling series that saw the Soviets take a 3-1 series lead (with a tie) and looking to run away with the series win. But a stirring Canadian comeback to tie the series led to a winner-take-all game 8 that attracted the largest Canadian TV audience to that point. A comeback from 5-3 down in the 3rd saw Canada scored two goals to tie it, and then in 34 seconds left Paul Henderson scored the winning goal and became a national hero as they won 6-5 & the series 4-3-1.
   Years of pleading and rumors among fans all culminated in the mid-'90s with the NHL and IIHF brokering a deal to allow NHL players to play in the Olympics. And in 1998, the NHL shut down for three weeks to allow its players to play for their country in a dream tournament in Japan. And though Dominic Hasek and the Czech Republic and not Canada or the U.S. won the first Olympic gold in the NHL era, since then the hockey tournament has taken the feel of something very special where all the best players are available to play, just as it was in the old Canada Cup and World Cup of Hockey competitions.
   In Salt Lake City, the Canadians would finally return to the top of the medal podium with a convincing 5-2 triumph over the U.S., and then eight years later they played again for the gold and Canadian soil. There, nearly 57 million viewers in North America alone, including the largest Canadian TV audience ever, saw a tantalizing game that saw the USA's Zach Parise tie it in the last minute of regulation, setting the stage for Sidney Crosby to etch his name in national lore with a golden goal in overtime past U.S. goalie Ryan Miller and setting off national celebrations throughout the Great White North.

And lastly, if hockey can have one moment it can hang its hat on in the U.S., it has to be with what happened that February weekend in 1980. It was amidst the cloud of uncertainty spawned by the turbulent 70's, the American hostage crisis in Iran, a U.S. boycott of that summer's Moscow Olympics and during the heart of the Cold War that the Olympics were held in Lake Placid. The U.S. team started their campaign with a come-from-behind tie with Sweden, then won the rest of their games, including an impressive thrashing of the Czechs, to set up a date with the Soviets in the medal round, who also went through the round robin phase relatively unchallenged, and it suddenly caught the attention of TV viewers.
   That set up a medal round featuring then, Finland and Sweden, and in those years it was the best record in a four-team round robin that determined the medals instead of the playoff system we use today. And there was that game, on a late Friday afternoon, in a game that was actually shown on tape delay in primetime (the Soviets rejected a request to have the game be moved to 8PM to be shown live), that ultimately set the stage for, what Sports Illustrated would eventually call it, the greatest sporting moment of the 20th Century, and the single moment that has defined hockey here. A game that saw the Soviets strike first blood, then the U.S. tying it at the end of the period would ultimately see it's turning point when legendary Soviet coach Viktor Tikhonov, pulled the greatest goalie ever, Vladislav Tretiak, at the start of the 2nd period, and the U.S. ultimately capitalizing on it. A goal by Mark Johnson tied it up eight minutes into the 3rd period, then at the 10:00, team captain Mike Eurizione, whose name in Italian means eruption, ignited one by scoring the go-ahead goal to put the U.S. ahead 4-3. And they would hang on to pull off the seemingly impossible win, then two days later, the U.S. would find themselves in a deep hole late in their final game against Finland, only to roar back with 3 unanswered goals to win 3-2 and claim Olympic gold.
   It was the call by Al Michaels of "Do You Believe In Miracles? Yes!" at the end of the Soviet game became the highlight of his career and would ultimately lead him to calling 27 years of the NFL's network primetime TV package (first on ABC's Monday Night Football, then with NBC's Sunday Night Football), being the only network play-by-play man to call a Super Bowl, World Series, NBA Finals and Stanley Cup; and his reputation as the industry's premier play-by-play announcer. And it was that victory that forever linked those 20 college players and coach Herb Brooks with Olympic immortality in this country, and in 2002 they reunited as a whole for the first time since visiting the White House afterwards that they all lit the Olympic torch in Salt Lake City.


Now to that game from last weekend. Since I was sleeping at the time of the game, since I usually go to sleep a little bit late on a Friday, I didn't watch the game live but did record it to eventually see later. Unfortunately my timed recording of the game ended during the shootout but fortunately NBC showed the entire shootout at the start of primetime which I recorded and I was able to watch it. The excitement of that game, the intensity of the overtime and shootout, and the tremendous celebrations that came about both in the bars and on social media when TJ Oshie scored the winning goal in the 8th round of the shootout to beat Russia continues to show the great drawing power of the Olympics.
   And because the broadcaster of last weekend's game as well as tomorrow's semifinal, NBCSN is also the national NHL cable broadcaster, one could only imagine the kind of ratings boost the NHL will have once the season resumes next week, featuring all these players fans have been watching throughout this tournament. And now that the U.S. and Canada are assured of three more games through this closing weekend: today's women's gold medal final between the two nations, Friday's semifinal that will shut down most of the nation's productivity and the bronze- & gold-medal games over the weekend, you would suspect the league will get another great boost in interest. It indeed is hockey's time.


Stay here on DCBLOG for more Games 2014 posts during Sochi 2014 as we cover various aspects of the Olympics, the sports and events from Olympic world, taking the SocialPulse of key moments and so much more as the action unfolds from Russia. And Twitter @DC408dxtr will offer live tweeting (Pacific time) of TV coverage including primetime and live streaming & cable coverage, time permitting.
   We're also covering MTV's Real World Ex-Plosion and Are You The One? here & on twitter, including a Fan's View of the RW After Shows and live tweeting of all new episodes later this week. For now, until I join you on twitter and then here on the blog later, thanks for reading and see you then. Go USA!

- DC

DC SocialPulse: Are You The One? Episode 5

*** Reader Advisory: DC SocialPulse Contains Adult Language and 
spoilers for international readers. Viewer Discretion is Advised. ***

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

Taking a break from an event-filled day at the Sochi Olympics now for our latest edition of DC SocialPulse, last night was episode 5 of Are You The One?. And thanks to me heading to the local Radio Shack to buy a signal booster for the TV in the family room next to my room, I was able to watch it last night, while still recording the Olympics and David Wise winning gold (more on that later today).
   When we left Hawaii last week, the boys had to face the music in their exes giving valuable dirt on them to the girls and them spending the night in the house. Plus, one girl encountered trouble grasping onto the fact that a guy isn't interested in her, while two of her fellow girls launch their own romance plans. But when it came to them marching up, the group unfortunately stayed where they were, and got only two perfect matches and continued their misery in the truth booth.
   This week, we see tensions rise in the house among two of the singles reach a boiling point, while another girl's guy interest is renewed creating a potential love triangle with the guy she's holding on to. In a harbinger of what we'll ultimately see on Wednesdays come springtime, the group descends over a waterfall for their challenge. And thanks to a double down in them sending two couples to the Truth Booth, will the singles finally receive better news in their quest for the cash?
   And following twitter's view, I'll offer some thoughts on how this cast has joined my friends in the Real World/Challenge and MTV communities in the way that they have become fan friendly. Two reminders before we start:
- 1. Please note there is explicit language in certain tweets below, but I am keeping it uncensored in order to retain the heat of the moment. So if you are mature enough, please read with discretion. :-)
& 2. As AYTO is airing hot off the U.S. presses on other MTV international channels and this episode hasn't aired where you live, please don't proceed with reading this post. But I will be compiling all the cast tweets from when it airs here each week into weekly DC SocialPulse posts, so you'll be never in the dark of how your favorite cast members reacted to this episode when they get to see them for the first time.
So with that, let's head to Hawaii, and here come the fireworks...

Sunday, February 16, 2014

DC Games 2014: That Theme, and the Composer You Never Heard Of

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

For me as much a huge music fan as the Olympics and having enjoyed the Grammys and Bruno Mars at the Super Bowl (see my music posts on here) earlier this month, it's pretty cool that they've been playing hit tracks at the venues (I.e. Kesha & Pitbull during slope style), and during the opening ceremony (DJ mashups of hit Russian songs during the parade of nations, and "Not Gonna Get Us" by TATU when Russia entered the stadium). And as someone who also has a good enough knowledge of sports television and watching two decades' worth of it spanning the entire spectrum, there's a lot of theme music from all the networks that everyone remembers. From the melody of Augusta ringing up the springtime golf tradition of The Masters to "Heavy Action" signaling 40+ years of Monday Night Football; from "The Hockey Theme" heralding in Hockey Night in Canada, to its NFL theme becoming the signature of Fox Sports, the list of recognizable sports themes is endless.
   For 17 days every two years, and for fifty years now, it becomes the one television theme song that we just seem to can't get out of our heads. Its heritage has spanned two networks, two icons of sports television, two Emmy-winning hosts and a mountain's worth of memories that generations of Americans have experienced since 1964. And when you hear it, it simply says Olympics to those of us here in the U.S. But the story behind the iconic theme music of Olympic television coverage in the U.S. is also the story binding one of the industry's best-known movie composers and a composer that, like a great majority of the athletes competing, most of us haven't even heard about.

Leo Arnaud was a French musician who immigrated to the United States in the '30s, and worked in Hollywood as an arranger for popular musician Fred Waring before joining MGM for a 30-year career as an arranger, composer and orchestrator until the mid-'60s. He worked more than 60 films helping with the musical side of the movies - including on The Wizard of Oz, but his magnum opus is one that didn't make it to the silver screen but eventually to the small screen and the world's greatest sporting event.
   In 1958, Arnaud was asked by conductor Felix Slatkin to create a piece for his album Charge!, and his contribution was "The Charge Suite." Included in it was "Bugler's Dream," based on David Buhl's "Salut aux etendrds," a typical cavalry trumpet's call that was composed during Napoleon's Consulat. Ten years after it was composed and after some wheeling & dealing with the composer & publisher by ABC Sports executive producer Roone Arledge, his network began to use that composition as theme for its coverage of the 1968 Olympic Winter Games in Grenoble, France. And it would be used in all of its coverage of future Games - eight in total - until 1988.

With 49 Academy Award nominations, five Oscars, 21 Grammys and a whole slew of honors too many for us to mention here, John Williams is simply in a league of his own in the film composing field. Over six decades, he has conducted the music to some of the most recognizable film scores ever: Jaws, Star Wars, Indiana Jones, E.T., Home Alone, Jurassic Park, Harry Potter, and a life-long friendship with Steven Spielberg as composer to all but one of his films. And he was principal conductor of the prestigious Boston Pops for 13 years.
   In 1984, Williams was brought on by the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee to commission the theme for the Games of the XXIII Olympiad. Entitled "Olympic Fanfare and Theme," it was heard everywhere from the Opening Ceremony and at venues to television coverage, and started his long relationship with sports' grandest event which has now spanned 30 years.
   A year later, NBC News approached him to compose new theme music for its programming. Nearly 30 years later, "The Mission", containing four themes (three of which still in use, and with occasional tweaks), remains the theme to NBC Nightly News, Meet The Press and The Today Show. In 1988, they approached Williams to compose the theme for coverage that fall of what would be its first installment of what would eventually become the crown jewel of its sports stable: the Olympic Games, and Williams' theme for Seoul was entitled "The Olympic Spirit."
   And in 1992, NBC Sports, which had been taken over by Arledge protege Dick Ebersol, asked him to re-record "Olympic Fanfare and Theme" for their coverage of the Barcelona Olympics, but also to include "Bugler's Dream" in the opening. The rest, of course, is history. And since then, it has become as much a part of the winning formula as Bob Costas in the primetime anchor chair; a stable team of talent, production and executives who've been together since those Games in Spain, and them delivering the great stories & memorable moments they have brought us over the last two decades.
   Williams would later compose the themes for the two later Games held in the U.S. - "Summon the Heroes" for Atlanta 1996 and "Call to the Champions" for Salt Lake 2002; and all four of his themes have been used by NBC during their coverage either primarily or at one time or another. He also had a hand in composing the original theme used for Sunday Night Football, which has also been updated two times since then. And for a network that has not only broadcasting's most iconic 3-note signature but also, and to be honest - for a '90s guy who has memories of his childhood & adolescence watching the NBA on NBC and John Tesh's "Roundball Rock" ringing in his head when he thinks of his favorite sport during that decade, the Olympics music is also part of my iPod playlist as well.

Elsewhere, there are some other back stories surrounding music used on Olympic television coverage.
- The theme that promotes upcoming events during NBC's coverage is actually a reused TV theme. After being used for a short-lived 1990's Fox western series "The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr.," composer Randy Edelman's theme was resurrected in Atlanta, and has been used in every Olympics since, even being used during postseason baseball. Edelman also penned NBC's NFL theme during the last years it held the AFC package, while the Gettysburg soundtrack was also used by the peacock in sports coverage during the '90s.
- The very final segment in NBC's Olympic coverage following the Closing Ceremony is Bob Costas' final thoughts, followed by the closing credits set to the most-memorable moments of the Games. And since 2002 in Salt Lake City, the dramatic epilogue music that has been used is "Titan Spirit", the last track from the soundtrack of the Disney movie "Remember the Titans", and composed by former Yes member Trevor Rabin. This isn't Rabin's only contribution to sports television, he's also the man behind the theme to the NBA on TNT since 2002.
- In Canada, two stories: First, with CBC back as Olympic broadcaster in Sochi, it dusted off its signature nine-note theme it began using in 1988 in Seoul, composed by Majoma Music, and later re-energized in 2004 by Dazmo Music. And when CTV held the rights to Vancouver 2010 and London 2012, it utilized composer Stephan Moccio, headlined by a vocal theme "I Believe" by Nikki Yanofsky that topped the charts in Canada during the Vancouver Games.
- And during its run as Winter Olympics network in the '90s, CBS didn't use John Williams' music. But the Tamara Kline-composed theme they used was arranged by Bob Christianson, who has composed a number of themes for them and ESPN/ABC, including his most well-known work that conjures up many things to hoop fans: CBS' theme to NCAA basketball and its coverage of March Madness, now going on 20 years & counting.

All in all, those are some of the stories behind the music of the Olympics on television. And for the biggest story in this article, this also brings a composer movie fans and some television people, and those at 30 Rock, will no doubt recognize, and a composer who, like most athletes who compete at an Olympics, isn't as well known. So give Mr. Arnaud some credit for creating one of the most iconic themes in all of television, and we can than an icon of the classical music world thanks in that as well.


Stay here on DCBLOG for more Games 2014 posts during Sochi 2014 as we cover various aspects of the Olympics, the sports and events from Olympic world, taking the SocialPulse of key moments and so much more as the action unfolds from Russia. And Twitter @DC408dxtr will offer live tweeting (Pacific time) of TV coverage including tonight's primetime show and live streaming & cable coverage, time permitting.
   We're also covering MTV's Real World Ex-Plosion and Are You The One? here & on twitter, including a Fan's View of the RW After Shows and live tweeting of all new episodes later this week. For now, until I join you on twitter at 8pm PT and then here on the blog later, thanks for reading and see you then. Go USA!

- DC




Real World Memories: The Trailers As I Saw It

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

Through five episodes, it's almost hard to believe we're almost at the halfway point through Real World Ex-Plosion. So many things have happened from Hurricane Ashley and Jay's emotional moment, to the romances of Jamie & Tom and Jenny & Cory, and, of course, the exes moving in, time has flown by very fast since the premiere on early January. And there's plenty more to come. But for a moment, let's take a trip down twitter memory lane and look back at the beginning.

Since I've joined twitter on the night of Real World St. Thomas premiering, social media has allowed me to be more engaged in the one show & TV franchise I'm more passionate about. And it has turned the people who I've watched on these shows into almost exactly many of those who I talk to on Facebook: my good virtual friends. And I've also had my share of moments on here relating to this show: talking to the cast, live tweeting episodes, talking to fans.

But the buzz for every season of The Real World, The Challenge, and every other MTV show for that matter, begins for real when the trailer is released as early as a month before the show or season premieres on the tube. For those we've seen before on a previous MTV show, this has become old hat for them to see themselves on TV once again. But for those who are about to make their MTV debut, it's the very moment that they are about to become TV stars, and about to become known more than just to family and friends. There's nothing like the feeling of seeing yourself on television, about to expose what you have and your emotions with the rest of the world.

While I was in the beginning stages of tweeting during the first few months in the summer of 2012, it was during that time of Real World St. Thomas taking place and my first Challenge, BOTSeasons, where I started taking the MTV/BMP franchise for granted in the social world. And that included a ton of live tweeting of episodes, especially the latter, both when I got to watch the episodes live for the first time with the cast, and the infamous late night live PBP when I watch them again online (yep, filling up everyone's timeline). Since then out of respect for my followers, I've started to limit my tweeting to just the show day and airing, and now to just RT'ing important tweets during the show's PT airing and compiling a timeline for my SocialPulse posts. 

But I always reserve the first live tweet session for a season for when I watch the trailer for the first time. Since I didn't get to live tweet the BOTS trailer as I was in my twitter infancy back then, I was well established in live tweeting by the time the Portland season came calling. And ever since it has become my tradition to live tweet the trailer for a Real World or Challenge when I watch it for the very first time. And in all instances for a guy who loves hoops as much as these shows, I've saved watching the trailer for Real World Portland & Ex-Plosion, and The Challenge: Rivals II until I wrapped up watching an NBA game. For Portland, I waited until after the All-Star Game to watch the trailer; for Rivals II, I saw it after Game 2 of the NBA Finals; and for Ex-Plosion, in between watching a Heat and Warriors doubleheader the day it premiered.

Here now is my commentary on those three trailers, and to mark one year since it dropped, albeit being leaked, on February 16th of last year, we start with Real World Portland.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

DC SocialPulse: Are You The One? Episode 4

*** Reader Advisory: DC SocialPulse Contains
Adult Language. Viewer Discretion is Advised. ***

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

Taking a detour now from the Sochi Olympics, me being busy with the Games, plus a technical glitch I encountered on Tuesday, I actually saw episode 4 of Are You The One? just last night, right after I had watched curling and the Westminster Dog Show (!). When we left Kauai last Tuesday, the cast were given a reality check when only two of the ten couples turned out to be perfect, setting back their shot at $1 million. Plus, we saw the guys go nuts (literally), while we saw another hookup, backstabbing and tears.
   This week, we'll see the show take a page out of the Real World/Challenge playbook and give the singles a twist in their quest for love, similar to what happened last week on RW Ex-Plosion. Plus, one girl encounters trouble grasping the message that her man isn't interested in her, while two other girls launch their own romances. And after twitter's view, I'll offer my thoughts on one of the members of this cast and how he relates to a fellow member of Team MTV in which they both recovered from a horrific accident to overcoming the odds.
Two reminders before we start:
- 1. Please note there is explicit language in certain tweets below, but I am keeping it uncensored in order to retain the heat of the moment. So if you are mature enough, please read with discretion. :-)
- & 2. As AYTO is airing hot off the U.S. presses on other MTV international channels and this episode hasn't aired where you live, please don't proceed with reading this post. But I will be compiling all the cast tweets from when it airs here each week into weekly DC SocialPulse posts, so you'll be never in the dark of how your favorite cast members reacted to this episode when they get to see them for the first time.
So with that, let's head to Hawaii, and here come the fireworks...

DC Games 2014: A Tale from Heartbreak Hotel

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

We are into Day 6 of the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games, and more than a week has past since competition began a day before the Opening Ceremony. Tonight sees the beginning of men's figure skating and the short program including Russia's legendary Yevgeny Plushenko (4-time Olympic medalist & 2006 Olympic champ), defending world champion Patrick Chan of Canada, and this season’s Grand Prix Final winner, Japan's Yuzuru Hanyu. Also, American speed skaters Heather Richardson & Brittany Bowe go for gold in the women's 1000m (for which the former went to the same high school as one of my fellow followers on twitter), as well as the gold medal final in men's slope style in men's freestyle skiing featuring Indiana's Nick GoepperAfter starting yesterday, men's hockey hits into overdrive today with the first games of the tournament for the United States, Canada and the host nation Russians.
   And after Erin Hamlin collected the first-ever American singles & women's medal in luge, activity at the Sanki Sliding Center will be busy today with the first-ever luge mixed team relay, along with the beginning of competiton in skeleton as the women's event begins. But if you're both a fan of the Olympics as much as I am, but is also a fan of MTV's The Challenge and eagerly awaiting the upcoming 25th season of the so-called "fifth major professional sport," you might be interested in this story which harks back to the most heartbreaking moment from the last Challenge, Rivals II, and how it relates to what one member of the U.S. skeleton team, who's also a gold medal contender in Sochi. And that's where we head into that unenviable task of entering the Heartbreak Hotel.

For me, the most-heartbreaking moment of Rivals II last summer came in the 3rd men's jungle elimination between Zach & Trey and Leroy & Ty. In "Breaking on Through," from the naked eye it appeared that Zach & Trey won their elimination, and the former football wide receiver even celebrated by tossing his helmet in the air, almost getting in contact with the rest of the cast watching. But in the most shocking of instances, by a mere technicality, thanks to Trey's helmet cam catching them working out of order in one of the obstacles, the result was reversed and they were the ones who went home after being disqualified, giving the win to Leroy & Ty.
   Then, three months later on Black Friday while many of us were shopping, eating leftovers and watching football, the first stop on the Skeleton World Cup in this Olympic season took place in Calgary, Canada, which hosted the Winter Olympics in 1988. Like most Olympic sports events and taking place during the heart of the fall sports season, this one barely registered on most sports fans' radar. But this story registered a good deal on mine, and contains the link from what happened that summer night in Thailand with what happened that Thanksgiving weekend in Alberta.

The top American competitor in women's skeleton, and one of the best in the world is Noelle Pikus-Pace from just north of Salt Lake City. She was the overall Skeleton World Cup champion in 2004-05, silver medalist at the '05 World Championships, and became a medal favorite for the 2006 Winter Olympics in Torino. But an right leg injury suffered in a freak accident during training in October 2005 in Calgary would ultimately dent her Olympic dreams, as a late season comeback eventually became too late for her to be included on the '06 U.S. team. Then a year later she became pregnant, and took the '07-08 World Cup season off to give birth to her baby. 
   Eventually, Pikus-Pace would eventually get her chance to race at an Olympics in 2010 in Vancouver, but only barely. Two of her sleds were damaged, first in the Calgary accident and then en route to the 2009 World Championships in Lake Placid, so it was left to husband Janson Pace to design a new sled, which helped her place 4th but out of the medals in Whistler. Shortly after the Games, she retired to spend more time with her growing family.
   But after suffering a miscarriage two years later, that retirement didn't last long, as she came out of her hiatus in the summer of 2012 with eyes on Sochi and needed skeleton to cope with that loss. And in her comeback tour, she helped the U.S. win team gold at the 2013 World's in St. Moritz, Switzerland and won a silver in the women's event; and won two World Cup events in Germany and in Sochi on the same Sanki Sliding Center track where she competes today in day 1 of 2 of the Olympic women's skeleton competition.

At that very opening race of the 2013-14 World Cup season in Canada, Pikus-Pace started with a personal best start time of :05.55, posted the fastest heat of the night with a :57.25, and clocked a total time of 1:55.88 to claim a 0.16-second win over her top threat in the race for gold in Russia, Great Britain's Elizabeth Yarnold. Or, she thought. Afterwards, Yarnold's coaching staff filed a protest to FIBT, the international governing body for skeleton and bobsled, contending that the nickel-sized tape the American used on the handle of her sled would give her a competitive advantage, even though her sled had passed inspection a few days earlier and didn't make any changes until the race on Friday. The FIBT board agreed with the British team's claims, and without any warning, Pikus-Pace was disqualified and the British slider was given the win.

After the disqualification, Noelle posted the following on her Facebook page:
"My heart is broken. I just won gold in the first World Cup and have been disqualified due to a protest from the British team. My sled was cleared by the international federation for competition but without a warning they disqualified me for having 3 pieces of tape on my handle to help me push my sled, which many athletes do. So so sad and disappointed that thousands of hours of training came down to a protest and decision for 3 pieces of non performance enhancing tape. I would have obviously removed it if they had told me in my sled inspection that it was wrong in any way. Thank you all for your love and support!"

U.S. Skeleton head coach Tuffy Latour put her frustration this way: "Noelle is devastated. She didn't violate the spirit of the rule. But I'll tell you what; this has released the lioness in her. She is going to be on a tear, and I have no doubt she'll be back on the medal stand in Park City, Utah." And U.S. assistant coach and former Olympian Zach Lund would add, "It's a travesty. There's no competitive advantage, and we are really disappointed."
   Inspired by the events in Calgary, Pikus-Pace would go on that tear, as she would eventually place on the podium in all seven succeeding World Cup stops leading to the Sochi Olympics, including winning her next two starts, first close to home over there in Park City and then in Lake Placid, plus wins overseas in St. Moritz and the last pre-Olympic event in Germany.
   Plus in all this, a condition of her comeback was they she could only compete if her family came along for the ride. And Janson and kids Lacee & Traycen will be cheering their mom on today. Yes, it's a family affair in Sochi for her.

In a way, what happened to Noelle Pikus-Pace in Calgary echoed what happened with Trey and Zach on Rivals II. But in Noelle's case, this DQ wasn't as catastrophic as what happened to Team Green when they were sent home from Thailand, as it was just the opening World Cup event when the buzz isn't as big and the event wasn't as important to most sports fans as an Olympics. But the storyline is the same: you do your best and you think you won something, only to have the victory taken away when a mere technicality costs you the win.
   It's always tough to see people go through events like this in the competitive world. But it's been great to see someone recover so quickly from an unfortunate event to eventually being motivated by it to do so well. And for Noelle Pikus-Pace, four years have come & gone, and today & tomorrow she gets another chance to not only step onto the Olympic podium, but to the top of it as well. The kids would like nothing else than for her mom to share gold with them.


Keep it here on DCBLOG for more Games 2014 posts during Sochi 2014 as we cover various aspects of the Olympics, the sports and events from Olympic world, taking the SocialPulse of key moments and so much more as the action unfolds from Russia. And Twitter @DC408dxtr will offer live tweeting (Pacific time) of TV coverage including tonight's primetime show and live streaming & cable coverage, time permitting.
   We're also covering MTV's Real World Ex-Plosion and Are You The One? here & on twitter, including a Fan's View of the RW After Shows and, later tonight, the SocialPulse of Tuesday's explosive episode of ATYO & the inspiring comeback story of one of the castmates. For now, until I join you on twitter at 8pm PT and then here on the blog later, thanks for reading and see you then. Go USA!

- DC

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

DC Games 2014: Rising from the Ashes

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

Figure skating has always been a top draw for Olympic viewers for so many years here in the United States, with its marquee event, the ladies' long program, typically receiving the highest ratings of any Winter Games. With the sport once again taking precedent on our screens, both in primetime, and this year receiving an advanced showing for the first time live in daytime from an overseas Games on NBCSN and on Live Extra - and has been attracting record audiences to both platforms, casual viewers, as well as the sport's loyal fans, are once again being glued to a sport with the elegance and artistry that's only matched by its summer counterpart of gymnastics and found no where else outside of the Olympic arena.

Twenty years ago was when the sport reached all-time peaks in interest and delivered the two most-watched single nights in Olympic history to the ladies' figure skating competition. And what caused it was the Tonya Harding/Nancy Kerrigan affair, one that brought a Hollywood soap opera into this sport when assailants of Harding clubbed Kerrigan at warm-ups of that year's U.S. Figure Skating Championships, which was also the Olympic selection event. It drew even the most casual of people to this sport, and the media circus that surrounded the Tonya/Nancy scandal was unparalleled, peaking at when both made their way to Lillehammer. In the end, Kerrigan took a silver medal behind Ukraine's Oksuna Bieul, while Harding finished outside of the medals.
   But this wasn't the first time figure skating made headlines in the United States for reasons other than for the skating on the ice. In 2002, everyone remembers "Skate Gate" - the controversy surrounding the judging scandal following the pairs free skate, the subsequent rewarding of dual gold medals to the Russian & Canadian teams and the eventual retransformation of the sport's judging system. And the case of the story we are about to tell on here, this third one represented the single lowest point in the history of the U.S. figure skating program.

Starting with Dick Button winning back-to-back Olympic gold in the men's event in 1948 and 1952, the U.S. enjoyed a period of dominance of figure skating. The Jenkins brothers, Davis and Hayes Allen, would combine to win 7 world titles between them, and led a sweep of the men's Olympic podium in 1956. On the women's side, Carol Heiss would win 5 straight world titles, and in 1960 in Squaw Valley, she would become one of only 7 Americans to earn the title of ladies Olympic gold medalist.

Then on February 15, 1961 at the beginning of the road to Innsbruck, the United States sent a strong team to that year's World Championships in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Just off of competing at that year's U.S. Figure Skating Championships, the team boarded a plane from what is now JFK International Airport in New York en route to behind the iron curtain. But with no warning signs, the plane suddenly encountered sudden engine failure on its final descent to Brussels, Belgium on a layover to Prague. The plane would then nosedive into a farm field and burst into flames less than two miles from the airport, just after 10:00 a.m. local time in Brussels. It was the first fatal accident involving a Boeing 707, just short of two-and-a-half months after it begun being used commercially in regular passenger service.
   All 72 people on board were killed (with one additional person, a farmer, being killed on the ground by debris upon the plane's impact), and that included all 34 members of the United States figure skating contingent: 18 skaters and 16 family members, coaches & officials. Among the list of those who perished included 9-time U.S. champion (and later coach) Maribel Vinson-Owen, reigning U.S. ladies' champion Laurie Owen, pairs champion Maribel Owen & Dudley Richards, men's champion Bradley Lord, and dance champions Diane Sherbloom & Larry Pierce. Also on board were men's silver medalist Gregory Kelley, ladies' silver medalist Stephanie Westerfield and ladies' bronze medalist Rhode Lee Michelson, along with Vinson-Owen's two daughters.

The loss of the entire U.S. team was considered so catastrophic for the international figure skating community that, that a mark of respect for their fallen comrades, the 1961 World Figure Skating Championships in Prague were cancelled as a result. And President Kennedy issued a statement of condolence from the White House, expressing sorrow for everyone involved, but none more so for one of the skaters killed in the crash as Richards was a personal friend of the Kennedys, and had spent summers with the President, Ted Kennedy and their family in Massachusetts.
   In the aftermath of this devastating accident, the crash would be a huge blow to U.S. figure skating after being a strong force in the sport in the '50s, as many top coaches as well as athletes were among the casualties and leading eventually to foreign coaches being transported to America. While Scott Allen won bronze in Innsbruck in 1964, it would only be four years later in Grenoble where the U.S. would regain prominence in figure skating when Peggy Fleming won the country's only gold of the Games in the ladies' event, while Tim Wood picked up silver in the men's.

Instead of simply mourning the loss of a whole generation of skaters, shortly after the crash the United States Figure Skating Association and president F. Ritter Shumway, who had been in office barely two months the time of that crash, helped establish the USFSA Memorial Fund in honor of the victims. More than 50 years later, the fund is still in existence, and has been used to help support the training of promising young figure skaters across the country. 
   Starting with Innsbruck and continuing all the way to this year in Sochi, every generation of U.S. figure skaters have benefited from the Memorial Fund, spanning from Fleming and Dorothy Hamill, to Scott Hamilton and Michelle Kwan, and right up to Evan Lysachek and the dance duo of Meryl Davis & Charlie White. In all, the U.S. has won 28 Olympic medals (including bronze in the inaugural Team event back on Sunday) and countless World titles & medals in the 53 years since the accident.
   And in 2011 - the 50th anniversary of the accident, a film about the event, RISE, was commissioned by U.S. Figure Skating to tell that story to a new generation of figure skating fans and celebrate the history of American figure skating since the tragedy, eventually being shown in theaters twice that and later airing on NBCSN.

So, while figure skating fans and all of us watch figure skating at these Olympics, including tonight's pairs free skate, it's easy to remember some of the things that we remember: the gold medal performances, the moves of the skaters, the emotion and the stories. But thanks to this article, it's also worth remembering where the sport in this country has come from, including the long road back the United States figure skating program has been through from the lowest point in its history to the highest of highs. Simply take time to remember where you came from.


Keep it here on DCBLOG for more Games 2014 posts during Sochi 2014 as we cover various aspects of the Olympics, the sports and events from Olympic world, taking the SocialPulse of key moments and so much more as the action unfolds from Russia. And Twitter @DC408dxtr will offer live tweeting (Pacific time) of television coverage including tonight's primetime show and live streaming & cable coverage, time permitting.
   We are also covering MTV's Real World Ex-Plosion and Are You The One? here including a SocialPulse of last night's episode to be posted here later tonight, and a Fan's View of the RW After Shows. If you love those shows, follow me for live tweeting and show alerts. For now, until I join you on twitter at 8pm PT and then here on the blog tomorrow, thanks for reading and see you then.

- DC

DC Fan's View: Real World Ex-Plosion After Shows #1 & #2

By DC Cueva,
with Quantikia Mesonia & Jamie Soler
> @DC408dxtr, @Coutureluvtik, @s0ler559

We are five episodes through Real World Ex-Plosion, and what else can you say about this season? It's been fantastic and exciting. I have been enjoying it, as I usually do for any Real World, and there's still plenty more to come, now that the biggest twist we have ever seen on this reality TV pioneer has turned the house in San Francisco upside down. And while we dabble in this rare week off in between episodes (and me being very busy with having a dose of Olympic fever), I can safely say that this season is on its way to joining those that stand out to me as an all time favorite, and also concur with buddy Andrew Kirk that this should be the season that saves The Real World and it should be a matter of when MTV lets BMP know when to start thinking about how to celebrate the show's 30th season.

As for what's been happening so far, a month through and we've seen two pairs of roommates getting paired up: Jamie & Thomas, and Jenny & Cory; one is now a couple, the other has had a rocky relationship. There's Hurricane Ashley, who we saw a couple times before she was evicted by the roommates who had enough of her behavior. We also saw one of the most emotional moments we've ever seen on this show with laid-back fella Jay breaking down after his mom's sudden passing, and receiving a ton of twitter support. And of course, we have just witnessed the biggest bombshell to drop on The Real World since the Dustin scandal that rocked Las Vegas, maybe ever. And that, of course, would be of the roommates' ex-girlfriends & boyfriend flying into the City (except for one who just moved from down the street) and moving into the house to live with the roommates, which we saw on the last episode.
   In all, we've had the highest rated RW episodes in three years and a lot of twitter interaction (especially the recent episode), which we have documented in our SocialPulse diaries. And after some initial skeptical reaction to the twist that became public on my birthday back in November, it seems everyone's negative first impressions have disappeared to the point that they are actually enjoying this Real World season (even with tweaks to the long RW formula). And judging from the super tease and sneak peeks we saw at the end of last week's episode & after show, there is sure to be plenty more fireworks still to come. And I have been enjoying this season in very much the same way I enjoyed watching the Portland season, perhaps maybe better.
   So in this week off, to tide you over until the next Real World Wednesday rolls around in 7 days from tonight, it's time to let you, the fans, get involved on here.

Having enjoyed a great deal of blogging for Rivals II last year, I have been stepping things up for RW Ex-Plosion. Besides providing the same wall-to-wall coverage that we had last summer & fall, DCBLOG has been involving the fans more in the conversation this season. Alongside the regular dialogue I have with cast and fans on twitter @DC408dxtrour weekly SocialPulse articles have also been highlighting tweets from some of my loyal fan followers & yours truly, alongside those from cast and fellow alumni. But most importantly, I'll be expanding my blog interviews with fans from just covering the Reunion at the end of the season to adding to that the After Shows that will take place at certain times during the season after selected episodes, including after last week's show.
   Typically, reunions and after shows have sort of a spillover effect in having the same type of drama that we see in the house, especially with the cast getting together for the first time since wrapping filming. And aside from the Rivals II reunion which was broadcast live, the reunions and after shows are taped in advance, sometimes with things getting left on the cutting room floor after a longer, taped session that takes place anywhere from a few months to two weeks prior to when we see it on TV.
   And this is where DC BLOG will help fill in the gap, in giving fans the opportunity to talk about all the events of this season, the after shows and provide us with all the gossip from there in the studio, including what we didn't get to see in the final product. These are the only interviews that I conduct on here, and it's about the reunion & the after shows. I leave the cast interviews to webcast hosts Brian Cohen, Andrew, Reality Radio, Shady Sykes and others, though I do sometimes ask some questions on their webcasts for which I make every effort to be in every cast chat whenever my schedule allows.

The "Reunion Revealed" posts for Real World Portland and Rivals II, for which three of my loyal followers, Kevin, Kaitlyn and Drew all went to, is among my favorite articles, received great feedback from all three, and both posts are among DCBLOG's top 10 in page views. As they're all based in New York and could only attend the end of season reunion, and with these After Shows being taped near BMP's Los Angeles headquarters, I had to look to fresh, new people from SoCal to provide us with their insight and, perhaps, even vent a little. Judging from all the footage we've seen so far through five episodes (and what we'll eventually see the rest of this season), everything is covered. Nothing is off limits here; I'd love to hear from people about what they think.
   After scouring the social-verse, I found two fans: Quantikia Jay Soler. They were in the audience for the first two After Shows, which were taped the day after the first episode aired, back on January 9th. Those two After Shows aired after that emotion-packed episode 3 and the most-recent one, episode 5; and it covered the roommates kicking Ashley out of the house, the passing of Jay's mom, the budding relationships in the house and, of course, the exes moving in.
   Here now are their thoughts on the After Show, their experience, & some of the big storylines so far...

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

DC Games 2014: Curling is Back!

By DC Cueva
@DC408dxtr

Today is Day 4 of competition at the Sochi Olympic Winter Games. And with a weekend golden sweep of snowboarding's slope style by the U.S., alpine competition underway and the Games now getting into full gear with the big names and events still to come - including Shaun White on the half pipe tonight, yesterday was day 1 of the sport that, thanks to the last time the Games were held in the U.S., has become our February cult addiction every four years.

In Salt Lake City in 2002, the Winter Olympics were held amidst the backdrop of a country recovering from what happened five months earlier. We saw the scandal involving the judging at pairs figure skating, the emergence of Apolo Ohno, Sarah Hughes' stunning free skate to a surprise gold, the Americans being buoyed by immense national pride to an unprecedented 34 medals, and other events that became this generation's most-significant Winter Games. But the surprise of Salt Lake came by way of sweeping and rock stars of a different kind. That year saw the coming out party on the worldwide stage of the sport of curling.
   For a sport that was relatively unknown outside of Canada and Europe prior to February 2002 - and though it made its return as a Olympic sports four years earlier, Salt Lake would be the first time that many got to watch this mesmerizing sport that lacks the speed of speed skating & hockey, the danger of the downhill, the fun of freestyle skiing & snowboarding, or even the grace of figure skating. But somehow, fans around the world and in America suddenly became fascinated by teams sweeping curling rocks down a rink into a house of circles, players shouting "hurry hard!" at heart's content, and something that was totally different than the Winter Olympic sports they have been accustomed to.
   Alongside wall-to-wall hockey coverage and the Nordic events, NBC programmed a lot of curling on MSNBC & CNBC during the Salt Lake Games, and in addition to entertaining the Canadian & European nationals in town used to watching the sport on TV, it suddenly caught the attention of those watching who hadn't seen a sport as enthralling as curling. And in that year's gold medal finals, last rock draws to the house separated gold & silver and provided great television: for the men, Canadian skip Kevin Martin's draw to the button slipped a few inches far and Norway took home gold; while for the women, Scottish skip Rhona Martin's last rock hit on a Swiss stone gave Great Britain their first Winter gold since Torvill & Dean.
   In the end, curling became the breakout hit of the Games, following along the lines of other Olympic sports that saw a spike of interest among an audience used to the team sports and a few individual sports. The succeeding Games in Torino and Vancouver have seen an increase of hours and viewership as a result of Salt Lake, including being given the spot of following CNBC's business day coverage. This also set a precedent for fans' interests in ordinary games outside of the usual sports diet to be given TV exposure, including the eventual rise one year later of televised poker. And worldwide, the sport has now showed up in warmer locales like Greece and Spain. It's even caught the attention of the San Francisco 49ers, who have been showing support for curling since Vancouver.

The history of curling dates back to Scotland, where it was likely introduced by immigrants in the 16th-17th century, and rules were written in Perth, SCO, where the Curling Museum resides, and eventually being codified in 1838 when the first curling club was founded. By the time the first major tournament was held in Edinburgh in 1847, it exported across the pond to Canada. And recognizing the sport's ties to its spiritual homeland, every day of competition at every major curling bonspeil (tournaments are also called that) is preceded by Scottish bagpipes performing before the first rocks are delivered. It was a medal sport at the very first Winter Olympics in 1924 in Chamonix, France before being dropped from the program afterwards. The first world championships began in 1959 for the men, the women 20 years later and have been held every year, with Canada hosting one or the other every alternating year. In the Olympics, it was only a demonstration sport five times between 1932 and 1992 before finally regaining full-medal status in Nagano, eventually becoming one of the highlights of the Games by the time Vancouver welcomed the world in 2010. There, Martin would win his gold in front of the home crowd.

To put the sport into perspective for you, it's relatively simple, and it also has the same exact element as shuffleboard, only this one is taking place on ice. The objective: sliding stones on a sheet of ice towards the tee, and score as many points as you can by having as many stones closer to the button in the house than that of your opponents' rocks. And in the end, the team with the most points wins, although like match play golf, it doesn't have to go the required 10 ends and matches can end early if the teams feel one side is up by an insurmountable margin late in the game. But like baseball, if there is a tie after ten ends, extra ends are played until one side wins.
   There are four players per side: the skip - or captain, the vice-skip - third, a second, and a lead; and all four players deliver their stones in counter-clockwise order with the skip taking his or her stones last in an end, for which are 10 of them in each game. Each of those players throw two rocks per end for a team total of 8, and possibility exists for a team to score 8 points in one end, which is almost as rare as a unassisted triple play in baseball or a royal flush in poker - doesn't happen often.
   They must release their stone before it crosses the nearest hog line, then two teammates help to control the stone's trajectory by sweeping the ice with their brooms, taking it into the house where the skip is standing aiming to put his or her intended shot in, and hope it curls enough to get it done. Often times, especially early in an end, the leads and seconds may place their stones in the "free guard" zone to block the opponents from accessing the house, and they're exempt since they're not allowed to remove the other team's stones within the zone.

For golfers, we know there's a tee shot, approach, putt, sand save and scramble among other things. For curlers, there's a lot of shots for them to choose from.
- The simplest shot is the draw: a throw that lands the rock in the house.
- A guard is where a rock is placed in front of the house to block opponents from accessing it.
- A raise shot is where a rock enters the house and bumps another stone closer to the tee line.
- A takeout is a shot that removes another rock from play. And for the offense, it's their intention to take out that of their opponents.
- A raise takeout is a shot that's delivered with enough force to take their opposition's rock out and go into the house itself.
- A direct hit is where the incoming rock hits the opponents' stone and knock it out of the house.

And now about those rocks? They weigh as much as 44 lbs., or 20 kg, and can cost up to $1,500. Those rocks are made of granite from island of Alisa Craig off the Scottish coast of Ayrshire, and recently the island was put up for sale. I would suspect the lucky party who puts up the money necessary to own the island will likely become the biggest fan of curling in the world.

All in all, the sport of curling is mesmerizing, unique and one-of-a-kind. The Olympics always offers something for everyone, and on a Winter Olympics program that features a kind of edge of speed and danger not necessarily found in its summer counterparts, along with the grace & elegance of figure skating of course, curling is something totally different. Curling might not have all of the attributes that's found in the other Winter Olympic sports, but yet it's fun and it's a game that anyone can try out, much like a family night at the bowling alley. Can't wait to see how the 2014 edition of Olympic curling will play out.


Keep it here on DCBLOG for plenty of Games 2014 posts during Sochi 2014 as we cover various aspects of the Olympics, the sports and events from Olympic world, taking the SocialPulse of key moments and so much more as the action unfolds from Russia. And Twitter @DC408dxtr will offer live tweeting (Pacific time) of television coverage including tonight's primetime show and live streaming & cable coverage, time permitting.
   Also, @DC408dxtr will live tweet (PT) tonight's episode of Are You The One? after the primetime show as a huge twist rocks the house in Hawaii just a week after the twist on Real World Ex-PlosionFollow us here for coverage of those shows including a SocialPulse diary of tonight's AYTO coming up tomorrow, interview alerts, and later this week, a Fan's View of the RW After Shows that took place following EP's 3 & 5.
   In all, a very busy night coming up for me here, so be sure to join me on twitter for our live tweet fest starting at 7:30pm PT. For now, until I join you on twitter and then here on the blog tomorrow, stay warm and enjoy the Olympics and Are You The One?. See you then.

- DC