I don't understand why people want the commentators to blabber non-stop. What needed to be said? Can you not just enjoy the moment without someone telling you to?
I don't understand why people want the commentators to blabber non-stop. What needed to be said? Can you not just enjoy the moment without someone telling you to?
The best 1 min 27 sec of my evening.
Would have been really nice to see full results of the race, which NBC failed to provide.
I will say Kara did a solid call on the race and much improved from some of her prior calls. The fact that she was a 10K runner made her a good fit for this race, she knew what she was talking about. The silence and crying/trouble speaking was not ideal but did add some emotion to the moment. I noticed the same thing from commentators in gymnastics. They can't help but get caught up in the moment.
Was that the NBC feed? She didn’t call the one I watched on Peacock. Those guys were great!
I've been on this site for literally 20 years. All this sh-t is tiresome. But I'm not going to let these stupid takes go by when I see them.
And, yes, of course it's possible to disagree with a woman without being a misogynist, but have you spent anytime on this site at all? I'm thinking not. It's obvious where the motivation comes from. Kara in particular has gotten a ridiculous amount of cr-p thrown here way over the years (not just about announcing). In a similar vein, what do you think the motivations are of the incels who constantly post random crime stories when the perpetrator is black? Think about it...
Sometimes, less is more.
The pictures alone can tell a powerful story. Just take it in and watch the celebration unfold. Don't need someone yappin' over everything the whole time.
theswooner wrote:
Just a complete failure in capturing one of the greatest achievements in American distance running history.
I loved hearing how emotional she was after the race, but she absolutely cannot do that in that moment. There were extended periods of dead silence because Kara was too busy crying and Lee Diffey failed to improvise. She needed to capture the sheer joy of the moment and then maybe cry later on her commentary.
This is important, these broadcasts live on forever.
WTF? I was watching Peacock live. I had no idea she was even on.
I can’t watch anything with her announcing. Fire her, please!
watching the watchers wrote:
give it a rest
Kara is the best thing to happen to NBC coverage and I'd stop watching NBC if they stopped having her
Gotta disagree with you, watchers. She just goes on, and on, and on. Give it a rest and let us enjoy the race.
silence is ok wrote:
I don't understand why people want the commentators to blabber non-stop. What needed to be said? Can you not just enjoy the moment without someone telling you to?
Gold star comment.
I enjoyed the race as much as the next person but I’ll never understand someone being moved to tears when someone they have no connection to win a medal. It’s not gonna change my life.
Maybe Kara’s friends with grant but it’s not professional
No soul wrote:
I enjoyed the race as much as the next person but I’ll never understand someone being moved to tears when someone they have no connection to win a medal. It’s not gonna change my life.
Maybe Kara’s friends with grant but it’s not professional
I will say that there is a double standard here. If a male had started crying audibly on air I am not sure he would keep his job. But we just sort of overlook it in a woman. I am not trying to judge it, but just making an observation. If Nikki wins a medal, can we expect Kara to say “They…sob sob sob..they…sob sob sob…they…sob..she…I am sorry, they…sob sob sob”
Kara sucks wrote:
I can’t watch anything with her announcing. Fire her, please!
If only.
theswooner wrote:
Just a complete failure in capturing one of the greatest achievements in American distance running history.
I loved hearing how emotional she was after the race, but she absolutely cannot do that in that moment. There were extended periods of dead silence because Kara was too busy crying and Lee Diffey failed to improvise. She needed to capture the sheer joy of the moment and then maybe cry later on her commentary.
This is important, these broadcasts live on forever.
i loved hearing how emotional she was after the race - as one should be. i remember my local sports announcer weeping on air when my hometown hockey team won their very first stanley cup. most sports are no different. emotions humanise.
but she absolutely cannot do that in the moment - who the f**k are you to make that call? are you signing her paycheck? is kara showing emotion morally reprehensible? did you even think about the tone of this comment?
...extended periods of dead silence because Kara was too busy crying and Lee Diffey failed to improvise. - ive witnessed championship team sports when the local broadcasters just shut up and let the moment sink in. Lee not improvising may have been a personal choice or the radio in their ear told them to be quiet. not your call to make.
she needed to capture the sheer joy of the moment - i think tears of joy does a remarkably good job when words fail.
this is important, these broadcasts live forever - i laugh every time i read this. i hope others do as well.
Had she been quiet for 2 seconds longer, she would have broken the American record.
Adam will be in sub-27 shape by this time next year if it gets him 87 seconds of silence.
Who Cares? She's already a Chatter Box. Mono Tone to Boot! (Rolling Eyes) Kuddos to Fisher!
If you leave Champ, nobody will care, ok? Geez! 🙄
abcdefgh wrote:
Being silent in big moments and letting the crowd noise wash over everyone was one of the signature techniques of Vin Scully, one of the most beloved announcers in any sport.
This is spot on. Laurie Hernandez (Rio Olympic gymnastics team and current commentator) said on social media that NBC asks them to be quiet during big moments so the audience can watch without interference.