Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris: Wrap-up.
Read MoreReviews
Viva la QISE! Day 16 and Closing Ceremonies /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 16 and Closing Ceremonies.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 15 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 15.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 14 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 14.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 13 /
Viva la QISE! Day 12 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 12.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 10 (and 11) /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 10 (and 11).
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 9 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 9.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 8 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 8.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 7 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 7.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 6 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 6.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 5 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 5.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 4 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 4.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 3 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 3.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 2 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 2.
Read MoreViva la QISE! Day 1 /
Our coverage of the Quadrennial International Sporting Event in Paris—Day 1.
Read MoreQuadrennial International Sporting Event - Viva la QISE! Day -1 /
We’re back with our coverage of what we call the Quadrennial International Sporting Event, to avoid the ire of the QISE Committee. Paris last hosted the Games exactly a century ago in 1924. They also hosted a very early Games in 1900, making this a three-peat.
As usual, this blog will NOT concentrate on the actual competition as it will the pomp and circumstance, as well as how NBC/Peacock/Kabletown covers it all. We’ll hit the daily highlights, and cover the quirks and scandals.
Read MoreQISE Review - Beijing 2: Electric Boogaloo - Day 16 /
Back to the final night of competition--finishing up the Mixed Team Parallels before we return to Pair's Skating. Tara and Johnny (and Terry) got some onscreen time to show off their fashions, but were fairly quiet during the actual performances. Terry pulls a metaphor, though, after the Chinese team skated to "Bridge Over Troubled Waters"--"will there be a bridge in that program to carry them to the top step?" It did, as China wins the gold over the cheating Russkies. It's the end of the skating competition, but we're still got the Skating Gala to go, plus the skating analyst trio will return for the Closing Ceremony.
Then we finish up the Four Men Bobsled, before we go to the final Late Night show. We plow through the Cross-Country Skiing Women's 30km Freestyle, before we make to the Skating Gala--a "made for TV" concept to fill the time between the final events and the closing ceremony. It's hugely popular, partly because there is no scoring and no rules. Skaters are "invited" to participate (but if you medaled, you're probably going). Tanith White and Ashley Wagner, both QISEians, did commentary. It can also serve as your audition reel for the Ice Capades. We even get gimmicks like light-up costumes. Why can't QISE add an "X-Game-y" version of figure skating where it's all about the most extreme tricks?
Torico steps in for an interview with China analyst Jing Tsu, who I don't think we've seen for 2 weeks, to discuss the Eileen Gu story.
The final afternoon show is always awkward, especially when QISE is actually over (the Closing Ceremonies happened early this morning Eastern time, but will show on NBC tonight). Outdoor events are usually front-loaded in the games in case bad weather causes delays (which did happen, but not enough to give NBC anything new to show in this afternoon's slot). There's already a "QISE Gold" show airing tonight as a review of the big moments--so what do you do? Reruns, reruns, reruns! Cross-Country Skiing Women's 30km Freestyle, the Alpine Skiing Team Event, and the Skating Gala.
We did get an interview, with Torico speaking to QISEOC President Thomas Bach. He's asked what can be done to "rehabilitate" the QISE movement, what's the deal about Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai, Chinese human rights abuses, the COVID restrictions, the Valieva debacle--and got back a lot of platitudes, as expected. Of course, he pointed fingers at the national QISE committees to resolve doping issues. Afternoon wraps up with the long credits crawl (13 minutes). It did get me thinking--based on the success of leaving much of the broadcasting team in the US, will NBC/Universal/Comcast/Kabletown/Sheinhardt Wig Co. ever consider spending the money to send them all to future QISE, even assuming it's safe physically and politically?
On side story that just came out--US skating pair Alexa Knierim and Brandon Frazier are being sued for music infringement by the band Heavy Young Heathens after using their version of "House of the Rising Sun" without permission. The band has already sued others for using their music in commercials. Seems like an easy catch--who was sleeping at US Skating?
Prime Time begins with Torico in the studio, in the "QISE Gold" special--packaged highlight reels from the last two weeks, including a supercut of the remote families "zooming in" to awkwardly congratulate the winning athletes (brought to you by Xfinity). We do get the return of Jing Tsu and Andy Browne, NBC's China experts. They complained about the literal closed loop in Beijing that made it seem like they weren't really there. The Chinese people saw a sanitized version of the games, of course. The Russkies and the Chinese are teaming up to take over the world. Thanks for bringing everybody down, guys! Kornacki gives us a final breakdown of the medal count (the US came in fifth, BTW).
Again with the Nathan Chen performance! We get it, he's good. Tara and Johnny stop by to talk with Torico, reviewing the Valieva debacle. Then Shaun White does a victory lap.
A half hour late, the closing ceremony begins, which means it's Tara, Johnny, and Terry to the studio. Oh, Johnny--leggings, a poofy shirt, and a halo? Even for you, that's a lot. More dancing kids with snowflakes, pomp and circumstance, augmented reality--lather, rinse, repeat. The flags and athletes arrive as a group, with the team doing interviews with some of them, which seems like it ruins their QISE moment. There's an awkward moment when the athletes are told to take their seats, and they basically ignore it, snapping pics and dancing about.
Back to artistry and Chinese symbolism, then the formal handoff from China to Italy (the 2026 games will be held in Milan and Cortino d'Ampezzo, sharing QISE for the first time--Cortina hosted it alone in 1956). This leads to an Italian presentation--a teaser/travelogue involving video and interpretive dance. I wonder if China will rent out the massive LED floor for future QISE ceremonies?
Some platitudes from Thomas Bach, the games are closed, and the flame is extinguished. Oh, and a lot of fireworks.
See you in Paris in 887 days.
QISE Review - Beijing 2: Electric Boogaloo - Day 15 /
Note--I had some commitments today, so I'm scanning through this quickly on the DVR.
Back to prime time last night, and the Men's Ski Halfpipe. High winds really screwed up some of the runs. Another athlete package from Torico, this time US halfpiper David Wise, part of a religious family who lives mostly off the grid.
An hour later, we're back to Pair's Skating. Another package, this time on the American couple of Ashley Cain-Gribble and Timothy LeDuc--the latter is the first publicly out non-binary athlete at the games. More from Johnny, about a Chinese couple: "This team skates in a sweet whisper, but their technical elements are like fireworks." Tara, on a Not-Russian team: "Perfectionists being perfect". I didn't get to see the final performance, as the show ran late. This makes no sense for an event that was ON TAPE from 12 hours earlier. That's just laziness, NBC!
Late night--Taylor sends us to Four Man Bobsled. The only team most people care about is the Jamaican sled. They even got their own video package! It's the first time in 24 years for a four-man team--they didn't do very well, but at least they got through it safe. Off to speed skating (a rerun?), with American Jordan Stolz. NBC keeps showing his video package, with his parents making him a track on a local pond. They make a big deal about someone from Wisconsin making it here--Mindy notes that the US QISE Speed Skating Center is in Milwaukee, so it's not that long a stretch. More Bobsled to wrap up the evening.
Onto the afternoon--Mass Start Long Track Speed Skating for the Women and Men (separately). In the first lap, you have to keep your position and not pass each other, then there's "sprints" during the 16 laps, where you can earn points--except they don't matter in the finals. It seems needlessly complicated. Claudia Pechstein of Germany is competing at nearly 50 YEARS OLD in her 8th QISE. An Italian skater, Francesca Lollobrigida, is the great-niece of actress Gina. The Men's winner, Bart Swings (what a great name) is the first gold for Belgium in 74 years. As they all skate in line (to draft others), I am reminded of a barbershop quartet for some reason. Meanwhile, the Cross-Country Skiing Men's 50km Freestyle--the Marathon of the Winter Games--had to be reduced to 28km due to bad weather (cold and wind). Jimmy Roberts stops by for his final story, all about the snow and ice required in QISE winter events, and the big stories of the last two weeks.
Prime Time kicks off as always with Torico, waxing rhapsodic, and throwing us to the Two Women Bobsled finals. Then it's the Pairs' Free Skate with Tara and Johnny, the former plugging her Peacock documentary "Meddling", covering a 2002 QISE skate judging scandal. Torico cuts over to live coverage of the he Mixed Team Parallels--a side by side slalom down the hill with Shiffrin on the US team. The event had to be delayed until Sunday morning in China due to weather issues. The commentators note that, because of current conditions, one side of the course is running faster. How is that fair?
More to come, including the Closing Ceremonies.
QISE Review - Beijing 2: Electric Boogaloo - Day 14 /
Back to last night, and back to Women's Skating - Free Skate. Tara refers to a skater as a "great actress...but not an Oscar winner".
But we're here for the drama of the final group. No one from the US is on the ice--they're on the bus back to the QISE village by this point. Tara and Johnny reiterate their disgust with the Valieva saga, with her noting that "the adults around her have failed her". She then goes to the magic board to show how a skater stays in the mix without the most complex jumps due to "grade of execution".
The first not-Russian, Trusova, is all about grinding out jumps (5 quads), basically ignoring the artistic portion. I'm sure my mom is complaining about the "noise" of her background music. Sakamoto, a Japanese skater in the mix, has a much better balance, with Johnny referring to her jumps as "skipping stones". The second non-Russian, Shcherbavoka, had a clean performance, but "only" did two quads.
...and then it was Valieva (Valiyeva? I keep seeing different spellings.) A slip on a Triple Axel. Another slip. And then a fall on her final quad. She left the ice sobbing. The scores came in--Valieva came in fourth. When Terry notes that leaving Valieva off the podium means that medals will be awarded, Johnny replies: "Thank God". There's a lot of crying all around. Shcherbavoka, the gold medalist, appears to be in shock. Trusova, the silver winner, screaming in Russian about hating the sport and never going on the ice again. Sakamoto, winning the bronze, opening weeping in a coach's arms.
The "Court of Arbitration for Sport" made the Valieva decision partly to avoid "mental harm" in not allowing her to skate--how'd that work out?
Torico extricates us from all this, moving over to Women's Ski Halfpipe, with Gu getting her second gold for China. Torico wraps things up, noting that QISEOC President Thomas Bach had just criticized the Not-Russians for their treatment of Valieva post-skate. He then stated that the QISEOC needs to stand up and fix this once and for all--suggesting either excluding the Russkies from future games, or directly take over anti-doping programs--or risk the QISE movement altogether. Shots fired by NBC!
Two side stories before we move on--
Broadcast cameras caught the Russian coach savagely berating Valieva after her skate, saying "Why did you let it go? Why did you stop fighting? Explain it to me--why? You let it go after the axel. Why?" All this as Valieva sobbed away.
As the US skating team members wait for the final results of the Valieva investigation, which will determine if they get a gold or silver, QISEOC has announced they will gift a set of QISE torches to them. Kind of a consolation prize while they wait for the UPS guy to deliver their medals down the line.
Maria Taylor takes us into Late Night, sending us to Nordic Team Combined (pretty sure this is a rerun--I've lost track). We then cut away to Terry, Tara, and Johnny, going over the events of the evening but not really adding anything. Then it's off to Curling, where the US battled Canada (they would eventually lose). Taylor noted that the US team has a big fan--Mr. T! Late night wraps up with Men's SkiCross. It's such a fast event that we go all the way from quarterfinals to the gold medal race.
Before we go on, I wanted to note that I've been scanning through the Today Show each day. They quickly went from QISE-crazy (with the bizarre outside backyard-y set) to quick daily reviews as US's hopes dimmed.
Lowe welcomes us to the last weekday afternoon of coverage. By this point, it's already the last weekend in Beijing, so we're going to get a lot of reruns, starting with the Women's Ski Halfpipe. Lowe does squeeze in an interview with Julia Marino, who got the US's first medal in these games, in Snowboard Slopestyle. Then it's Biathlon, the Women's 12.5 km Mass Start. Torico narrates a video package on American Jordan Stolz, a short track speed skater--I'm guessing we will see a lot of these over the next few days. NBC has been holding onto them in case of weather issues causing delays to fill time. Then the Men's version of the Biathlon 12.5 km Mass Start and a rerun of Men's SkiCross.
Prime Time kicks off with Torico in the studio, tossing it to Two Women's Bobsled. I noted that both of the American medal winners in the Monobob are acting as "pilots" for different two-women sleds. I guess that means the pilot role is more complicated, with the others in the sled basically dead weight after the initial push. Then we move to Pair's Skating--Short Program. Johnny's on again, calling the US pair "a souffle worth waiting for".
More to come.