NBC Sports Chairman Mark Lazarus Continues Arrogant, Tone Deaf Response to Olympics Criticism
John Ourand interviewed NBC Sports chairman Mark Lazarus about the network’s Olympic Coverage. The response to the criticism was about as arrogant and tone deaf as the rest of the responses NBC has given. Here are some of the highlights.
“I think what we’ve proven is that the American viewing public likes the way we tell the story and wants to gather in front of the television with their friends and family — even if they have the ability to watch it live either on television or digitally,” Lazarus said. “I inherently trust that decision is the right one and that people want to see these events.”
No one is disputing a tape-delayed, edited primetime package at night is not sensible or, in some respects, a superior viewing experience. CTV and other networks do that. The issue is not showing the important events live during the day beforehand and blocking people from watching events on television until eight hours after they happen. If Lazarus is correct and what the American viewing public likes is to gather around the television at night, they will do so anyway. There is no reason not to show the events live during the day.
“As programmers, we are charged to manage the business. And this is a business,” he said. “It’s not everyone’s inalienable right to get whatever they want. We are charged with making smart decisions for our company, for our shareholders and to present the product the way we believe is best.”
Whatever happened to “the customer is always right?” A smart decision for your company would have been to not overbid massively for the Olympics when your entire revenue stream is based on advertising, thus forcing you to sully the prestige of the product by warping it into a vehicle for selling advertising to make up the cost. The Olympics would make far more sense on cable, where there is not the same maddening pressure to land primetime ads and some of the cost can be made up by the subscription fees.
“We don’t believe that a raw feed, which would be a host feed, without narration and broadcasting, would be a good user experience in a big stadium with lots of camera cuts,” he said. “We think we created the best experience. Frankly, I think all of the noise about Queen Elizabeth and Paul McCartney on social media and in the digital world helped build excitement for our prime-time show.”
It is possible to televise a live event in 2012. Virtually every country in the world managed to show this live with narration and broadcasting. NBC had a rundown of events. The ceremony had a dress rehearsal. This could have been accomplished. What NBC could not have done live was cherry pick segments they thought were “tailored to their national audience” and insert bland Ryan Seacrest interviews.
Here is what Lazarus had to say about live streaming…
“It’s a technological feat that’s never been tackled,” he said. “I’m very proud of our team who have been working their butts off to continue to try and improve the experience every minute of every day.”
Live streaming multiple sports events at once is a technological feat that has bever been tackled? What planet are you on? MLB has been streaming multiple games at once for the better part of a decade. ESPN3 runs a ton college football games at once on a Saturday, not to mention European soccer or whatever else is going on simultaneously. Even if this was an unprecedented technological feat, you haven’t tackled it. I’m staring at a frozen feed in 240p as I type this on a 40Mbps Internet connection.
What does John Skipper send him this week? Edible arrangement? Expensive bottle of champagne?
[Photo via Getty]
Previously: NBC Olympic Coverage Critic Guy Adams Had Twitter Account Suspended [UPDATE]
Previously: NBC Execs Think You Should Stop Whining About Tape Delay, and Live Stream Issues Are Your Fault
Previously: NBC Claims Opening Ceremony Was Too “Complex” to Stream Live

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38 Responses to “NBC Sports Chairman Mark Lazarus Continues Arrogant, Tone Deaf Response to Olympics Criticism”
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July 31st, 2012 at 5:01 PM
Good article, Duffy. 4th place network with 4th rate coverage. It makes sense.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:04 PM
But don’t the ratings prove that they’re doing it right? If there’s one thing I know, it’s that ratings = meaning.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:04 PM
Also, just go stream the BBC feeds. Much better.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:06 PM
Pretty good overall Duffy, but thought this line was ridiculous.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:08 PM
I haven’t had one issue with the NBC streaming feed.
Probably time to stop using AOL.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:08 PM
i’d buy their arguments more about preserving the viewing of the events for the ‘merican public if they didn’t have the headlines and results on their sites before they actually air the events.
they just to admit they messed up, they’ll do better in 2 years for the winter olympics.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:12 PM
Let’s imagine NBC broadcasting the British Open:
Well, we’ll have all the highlights for you tonight. The tournament ended a couple hours ago, but since we didn’t carry it live, we’re not going to tell you who won just yet. Maybe it was Tiger! Yeah, maybe Tiger! Tune in tonight, and don’t visit any sports websites or tune your TV to any other network between now and then!
July 31st, 2012 at 5:13 PM
Well, they’ve been doing the same thing for the past few Olympics, so I doubt it.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:15 PM
Also, let’s hold on to this headline for the next time the TBL server problems pop up.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:15 PM
CMCSA $32.55 + $0.34
Don’t think it’s hurting Comcast too much.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:15 PM
If only they were on YouTube though, then they’d have it all figured out
Nice post, think it sums up the argument nicely…the worst was not showing stuff on the weekends when more people were already watching live coverage
July 31st, 2012 at 5:16 PM
Link?
July 31st, 2012 at 5:18 PM
31.6 million average Primetime viewers last night. But let’s keep up the narrative about not being able to watch live.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:23 PM
What I want to know is why the other 3 networks refuse to go head to head with tape delay olympics? Wheres my Master Chef fox?
July 31st, 2012 at 5:23 PM
ratings are killing, why would he care?
July 31st, 2012 at 5:26 PM
Complaining about daytime television, get a job (or at least get off your high horse and leave the house once in a while).
That said, the unwashed masses could be better served to have their distraction in real time on the weekends.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:27 PM
This was a decent post. Will Leitch of all people had a reasonably interesting post taking basically the opposite position. I watched some of the gymnastics and swimming on Sunday night before Breaking Bad and that’s it so I guess I just don’t really care that much. But for some reason I do like reading about the outrage and then backlash to the outrage.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:31 PM
My guess is the issue with this is a large majority of people would DVR the daytime showing and watch it when they got home and ignore the primetime airing. Because commercials suck.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:31 PM
BLOG: Baseball is boring. Kill daily baseball feature.
Readers: Wait, what are you…that’s not very…we like baseball…
BLOG: Baseball Post – look how hot so-and-so’s wife is… link to backlog of posts objectifying women
Readers: SEO
BLOG: Penn State Has a Cultural Problem and That’s What Led to Demise
Readers: Say what?
BLOG: USA Swimming May Have Penn State Problem (no mention of culture)
Readers: Double-Standard?
BLOG: It’s All About Ratings! And Pageviews!
Readers: That’s shallow
NBC: We’re doing it how we think is best for viewers, advertisers, and money…you think this shit is free?
BLOG: NBC Corporate Overlords are Arrogant.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:32 PM
I mean, of all the things to really give a shit about, this is at the bottom. Get over it.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:33 PM
If Phelps had won the gold today, everyone would watch tonight. Phelps choked, and now everyone wants to see the train wreck tonight. NBC absolutely loves that we know what happened before we actually see it happen.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:34 PM
His only responsibility is to his shareholders. If there was a tangible demonstration of how he devaluaing his company, then I’d be interested. Everything else walks.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:35 PM
*Claps*
July 31st, 2012 at 5:39 PM
I dunno, logging on to a sports blog to repeatedly complain about the content has a pretty strong case
July 31st, 2012 at 5:42 PM
Don’t let Mike the Cleaner find out you’re doing this, he may kill you just out of principle.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:43 PM
Just skimmed the post, but what is NBC really supposed to do? They need to show the premier events in primetime. To do otherwise would be terrible for business. I believe they have investors and ad purchasers to answer to, so they can’t do something so clearly bad for business. So is the argument that they should show the events live during the day and then taped at night? Well that argument fails because then no one who watches during the day will stick around for night coverage, so again you alienate viewers.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:45 PM
+1
July 31st, 2012 at 5:50 PM
Very well said by Mr. Leitch. I agree with his take wholeheartedly.
July 31st, 2012 at 5:58 PM
keep chopping that wood Duff man.
July 31st, 2012 at 6:26 PM
focus on the shitting live stream. why is this so hard to understand. the Olympics have ALWAYS been taped delay, especially when it was in Europe. fuck the live stream, though. that has been the shittiest.
July 31st, 2012 at 6:31 PM
Hsa there been anything quantitative that shows the live stream is NBC fault? It could be. But it seems with something global the scale of the Olympics, i am not sure if the online infrastructure is there to support that many feeds, yet.
Even if they up their platform, by the next Olympics, there will be that many more potential users. I saw something that when Netflix streaming started, infrastructure was stressed. I gotta imagine this is much more.
Perhaps somebody that understands bandwith etc at this level could comment. You have all these people, at work, trying to hoss a feed.
July 31st, 2012 at 6:54 PM
#facepalm
July 31st, 2012 at 7:02 PM
As someone who worked in customer service at a big box store, fuck the “customer is always right” garbage
July 31st, 2012 at 7:21 PM
As someone who worked in customer service at a big box store, fuck the “customer is always right” garbage
(Most) Anyone who has ever worked in the customer service industry knows that statement, while coming from a noble place, is completely full of shit in this day and age.
July 31st, 2012 at 7:26 PM
1. Don’t think the ancient Olympics was on tape delay
2. This always business I believe you are familiar with this new fangled internet?
3. If they want to repackage shows as nonsense idiot fodder in the evenings why do it at the expense of people who can/want to watch live?
4. Imagine the opening rounds of the final four on tape delay, it’s retarded
5. vipstant.net built an awesome online streaming experience and they are illegal and much, much poorer than dumb fuck old people NBC.
6. Prestige is hurt by trying to ineptly manufacture the need to tune in during prime time, availability of results or live drama is literally being sacrificed for prime time ad revenue.
They are being cunts, one part financially inept cunts, one part condescending cunts, one part Luddite cunts.
/1/3 1/3 1/3 but all being cunts all the time
July 31st, 2012 at 7:33 PM
6. Prestige is hurt by trying to ineptly manufacture the need to tune in during prime time, availability of results or live drama is literally being sacrificed for prime time ad revenue.
This guy gets what Duffy is saying.
They are being cunts, one part financially inept cunts, one part condescending cunts, one part Luddite cunts.
Yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeep.
July 31st, 2012 at 7:48 PM
NBC is raking in viewers and cash (yes, they will probably lose money on the Olympics but not because of their decision to tape delay). They’re laughing at posts like these because they get the ratings numbers each morning that completely validates their strategy. Why would they change anything?
The only legitimate complaint is that they dont show the events live and then repackage for the evening. I doubt that would impact ratings, but it would scare off advertisers who had to hear NBCs sales pitch four months before the games began. So I see both sides of that one.
Love that the exec said “People aren’t entitled to what they want all the time.” Good for him dropping truth bombs on an entitled Internet mob.
July 31st, 2012 at 9:25 PM
Then perhaps the jackasses who run NBC could get their own shows and affiliates from giving out the results to people who want to avoid them? it’s one thing to click on TBL, ESPN, Fox Sports and get results, but they shouldn’t have them announced on NBC programming unless we are suppossed to go live in a cave all day.