Meat Pie said:I personally am not interested in the notion of the Olympics themselves but I'm not against them if others like it... but that's only in a time when standards in living are ever improving and the economy is stable.
At a time when it's unstable it's a stupid investment which has no long lasting benefit and is utterly pointless in terms of cultural spending. Sports are as popular as ever and well funded by the private sector. There is not deficit in sport but there is in the arts, so if you want to do something worthwhile with cultural spending, the Olympics is the least worthwhile investment.
So in short, I find the idea of the games themselves in our current situation to be distasteful, but I'm also against the way that they have been implemented. It's a rather salt in the wound situation for me.
This is no different to any other international sporting event, and anyone could make a similar argument about an event which is of no interest to them. Wimbledon is probably the most appropriate comparison as it sweeps away all before for 2 weeks every year. Tennis is 1 sport, the olympics features dozens and is therefore of interest to far more people. As such there is clearly huge interest in the olympics which justifies the coverage, and anyone not interested is more than welcome to watch any of the other channels not providing live coverage.Meat Pie said:I think it's damn selfish that BBC programming is going to be replaced with back to back yawn worthy coverage of sports. Sure, it's great that those who want to access it can but it's inconsiderate that they are neglecting those who really couldn't give a damn if a man gets a ball through a hoop or in a goal or get past a finish line first. I think a separate channel should temporarily have been set up for the event.
Meat Pie said:I think British Sports People should have a better standard of morals and boycott the event but of course they won't as they're are so suckered into the false importance of winning a silly game that they will forget what really matters.
Meat Pie said:we've paid for the games
I'm curious: if you don't want regeneration, what exactly do you want? If we didn't have the games, but they still wanted to focus on 'fixing' (for want of a better term) the Stratford area, without regeneration, how exactly would you do it?Meat Pie said:JamesF - The regeneration projects are largely a farce which will push the current residents of the effected communities out into other areas when wealthier people come along and buy out local property competitors in newly regenerated (and therefore desirable) areas.
A collection of sporting events is not unique. The Olympics is, as it's so much more than that. I think Ian's definition of 'unique' was pretty spot on, but if you disagree, what's yours?Meat Pie said:Your criteria of unique is utterly absurd. It's unique because it's called the Olympics? Really?
It's mere a collection of existing sports. Existing sports which already have their own championships/contests. That. is. not. unique.
There's at least a couple of us . And that's a question better asked once the games have actually begun .IanB said:I also forget to mention, that there was plenty of opportunity for Volunteers to work at the games, and while they may have been having to carry out some work, they wouldofhave most likely been able to catch part of the games, I think there is a member of here who is Volunteering, so maybe they could shed some light on how much they get to see.
JamesF said:That just simply isn't true. Unlike the billions wasted in Beijing and the absence of legacy in Athens, legacy has been our focus. Whilst there are massive costs involved in hosting the event itself, the majority of the budget has gone on regeneration of arguably the most deprived area in the country and infrastructural upgrades. The park includes thousands of new homes, a school, attractions to ensure investment in this area continues. The plans are underway to sell off venues and convert buildings elsewhere in the park for industrial use. Many previous Olympic games have had long lasting benefits, others have had long lasting damages. At this stage, everything points towards London benefiting from these games.
Also, most recent Olympic games have eventually made a profit. There's no reason to believe we won't follow suit.
If a British newspaper report is correct (and, oh, how we hope it is), Mary Poppins and Lord Voldemort will clash in a tense battle scene during Friday's Opening Ceremony of the London Olympics.
The Sunday Times reports (subscription only) that a sequence featuring some of the best-loved literary characters in British history will climax when a 40-foot Voldemort, the notorious villain from the Harry Potter books, rises out of a bed in the center of Olympic Stadium and scares away representations of Alice from "Alice in Wonderland," Captain Hook and Cruella De Vil. (Oliver Twist will presumably be waiting in a line at a concession stand.)
Instead of being done in by Harry Potter, Voldemort will meet his match in a British nanny with an umbrella and a penchant for melody. According to the paper:
About 30 actors each depicting Mary Poppins, the magical English nanny played by Julie Andrews in the 1964 Disney film, will descend from the roof of the stadium on wires and "float" to the ground with their opened umbrellas. The nightmare will be banished and happiness restored. "It's a jaw-dropping sequence," said one source.
That source is spot on, because my jaw is dropped. The idea is so preposterous -- both because of its inherent cheesiness and in thorny rights issues about using characters from various media conglomerates -- that it almost has to be true. No one could make up anything this insane.
You can close your eyes and picture how this will play out. Voldemort flashes the dark mark -- a hybrid Pepsi and Burger King logo -- over Olympic Stadium while Mary Poppins floats to the ground with a commemorative Olympic umbrella and reaches into her infinite-bottomed bag to pull out a man who cannot be killed by anyone except the dark lord. And after Keith Richards saves the day, director Danny Boyle's Opening Ceremony moves on to the part where kids dressed as "Downton Abbey" characters extol the virtues of British inventions like the adhesive postage stamp and mass-produced screws.
Meat Pie said:JamesF - The regeneration projects are largely a farce which will push the current residents of the effected communities out into other areas when wealthier people come along and buy out local property competitors in newly regenerated (and therefore desirable) areas. Within a generation or two, that area of London will be a middle class wonderland, where as the original inhabitants will still be in the same social/economic situation as before, but now in another area of London.
But let's just say for the sake of argument that these regeneration projects do benefit the current inhabitants, we shouldn't have to wait for some jumped-up sports contest to start regenerating these areas. Imagine if they pumped the money they put into the rest of the Olympics into socially progressive projects in inner city areas. If like me you believe this stuff should be happening anyway, it's a completely ineffective defense of the Olympic games.
As for the profit, I think you are wrong. Victor Matheson, a respected sports economist, likened events the Olympics to like a "wedding" where "If you are father of the bride, you're not making any money".
He has studied the economic impact of huge sporting events like the Olympic Games and the Super Bowl, and the research repeatedly shows that the high-profit hopes attached to hosting these events rarely
James said:I'm on neither side of the argument, although have to pick up on this.
You pose a good point. Although equally billions and billions will go to waste with the Olympics. Many of the venues built solely for the event will be knocked down after the event. All that money gone to waste, the years of hard work done by architectures and builders... My main gripe is the amount of tax money that has been spent. As usual it is being thrown here and there with no cause for consideration.
As for the regeneration. It works in theory, but fails in practice. I can only think of one example (a rather crap example I will admit). Newport during the 2010 Ryder Cup. It was hoped to have given the city a major economic boost. We had whole areas renovated, streets redone, new houses built, new shops... only two years on Newport is back to being the dump it was before 2010.
Most places will fall back into how they were. In London's case, I agree with Meat Pie that it will more than likely become a 'middle class wonderland'.
I'm all for regeneration projects, they do improve some places, although overall within the climate we live in they just aren't working right now unless there's something unique and long term for it to withhold the quality of the regeneration itself.
Before anyone shoots me down. I'm not on either side of this argument. I mainly avoid getting involved with these topics. My general views on the Olympics are that I couldn't care less about it. But like everything else I do not like I will ignore it. I'll be watching the opening ceremony, as I'm rather interested in what it will look like. Other than that, it's nothing exciting for me, life will continue as usual.
Meat Pie said:IanB - Don't you ever tell me to stop expressing my opinion, you have no right or jurisdiction. This topic was not created exclusively for the cheerleaderery fawning of the pro Olympic crowd. This is a discussion forum and if you don't like discussion, you ought to get out, or create a one-sided "yaaaay I heart the olympics" topic.
The revenue from ticket sales from what I can gather is approaching £600M. Hardly a small amount. The total Corporate and Ticket Revenue will total £2bn. The Lottery funding is approximately£2bn, and the London Authority is contributing approximately£1bn.Meat Pie said:It is utter tosh that ticket prices reduce the price to the tax payer. The price of the tickets doesn't even make the tiniest of dents. All it is, is the corporate greed of Olympics™ trying to claw every penny they can.
I find this high offensive, I work very hard to earn enough money to support myself, and my family. I am lucky enough to have got tickets as a result of this hard work and I am going to enjoy watching the event I got tickets for. Again, some tickets were very expensive, but plenty have been made affordable, and Paralypmic tickets are even more affordable starting at £10 for Adults. This is not a system to keep "riff raff" out, or to just allow the Rich to buy all the tickets.Meat Pie said:I realise you feel like you have to defend the ticketing system, being a direct beneficiary of the economically discriminatory system which has supplied you tickets and kept the riff raff out but there really is no justification.
So how would this Ticket Lottery of worked, Only Tax Payers can enter, and those who paid the most tax get a bigger chance of winning, because it would not be equal if someone who contributed more tax, had the same chance of getting a ticket, than someone who paid less tax. A free for all ticket lottery would not of worked.Meat Pie said:It is completely irrelevant that they received sponsor and lottery money, the tax payer and citizens of this country paid the biggest bucks at a time when we can't afford it and the least we deserve is an equal opportunity to benefit from the spoils.
I thought you wanted to make the Olympics accessible to everyone, well surely this is the perfect way of doing that. People who can not afford a ticket, get to be part of it, and help make the event as good as it possibly can be.Meat Pie said:As for volunteer work? So what... They took on free labour to their own benefit and this is meant to be in anyway admirable?
In Summary, There is only one Olympics, it only happens every 4 years, and it does not compare to any other sporting event that takes place.Meat Pie said:And no I've made a very conclusive case as to explain why it's not unique. What's unique about playing already existing sports but this time in close proximity to each other? Nothing. Nothing at all, and you've not made an effective counter case. It is you who is desperate and scraping the barrel of arguments here.
Just so we are clear, I never told anyone to stop expressing their feeling or to stop contributing. I only think that we should move on, but if people want to continue debating, and discussing the same thing, they can carry on, but when nothing new is being raised, and its the same points being raised, it gets a little boring, frustrating and takes away other issues that people are trying to raise or new items that people wish to discuss.Meat Pie said:Just so we have this clear, don't you ever tell me to suppress my feelings on issues ever again. I lay awake at night worrying about the way our country is headed for issues such as these and I am as passionate about my views as any fan of the games. I would never tell anyone to stop contributing so please never do it to me.
Edited to remove random insults.
Lordy.Meat Pie said:You got your views challenged and you don't like it. It hasn't been poisoned, it's been disputed, if you can't handle the possibility that not everyone is a lover of the games, then you really are in the wrong place. This is a DISCUSSION forum.
Edited to removed the insults from the quote of the previous post