Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The Olympic Games ( Summer and Winter) have been televised in the United States since 1960. It has become one of the most popular programs on USA television every four and then two years. The Olympics has been exclusively broadcast on NBC and NBCUniversal 's TV networks in the United States since 1988 for the Summer Olympics and 2002 for the ...

  2. An industrial dispute prevented coverage of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics but the Games returned to ITV screens in 1988, sharing the coverage with Channel 4 - Channel 4 showing the overnight and breakfast coverage with ITV covering the daytime action as well as broadcasting early evening highlights programmes. The 1988 Olympics were the last ...

  3. People also ask

  4. The Opening and Closing Ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics, and 1988 Winter Olympics were hosted on ABC by Jim McKay and Peter Jennings. [15] [16] ABC Sports also covered the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo , Yugoslavia , and the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, USA .

    • 10
    • ABC
    • January 29, 1964 –, February 28, 1988
    • ABC Sports
  5. Jan. 19, 1994 12 AM PT. TIMES STAFF WRITER. CBS will announce today that it has won the U.S. broadcast rights for the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan, industry sources said Tuesday. CBS ...

  6. Sep 14, 1988 · “We do not want NBC to be the story of these Games.” NBC will present 179 1/2 hours of Olympic coverage, with 80 hours of live prime-time coverage (4:30 to 9 p.m., Pacific time) and 30 hours ...

    • LARRY STEWART
  7. Feb 21, 2017 · Bobsled: women's competition in the two-person discipline. Biathlon: men's 12.5km pursuit and a women's 10km pursuit. Cross Country: men's and women's sprint free. Nordic Combined: an individual sprint event that consists of ski jumping from the large hill and a 7.5km cross-country race.

  8. In 1924, the Paris Olympic Games were broadcast on the radio! Radio Paris, born one year beforehand, invented live sports commentary with journalist Edmond Dehorter, and every evening the BBC summarised that day’s events. From the 1930s to the 1960s, radio was the number one media channel for the Games, before making way for television...

  1. People also search for