Saturday, July 28, 2012
China Started olympic 2012 by wining first gold
Friday, July 27, 2012
Indian contingent greeted with huge cheers
Sushil Kumar of the India Olympic wrestling team carries his country's flag during the Opening Ceremony of the London 2012 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium on July 27, 2012 in London, England |
London Olympics 2012 kicks off in style!
Grand Opening Ceremony begins 2012 Olympics
Olympics 2012 Opening Ceremony time, schedule: London welcomes world tonight with massive event
One of the biggest secrets in London will finally be revealed Friday: what will happen at the opening ceremony for the Summer Olympic Games.
Friday night perhaps a billion people will finally get to see the extravaganza created by Danny Boyle, best known for the Oscar-winning film "Slumdog Millionare."
The day got off to a resounding start as bells around the country, including London's famous Big Ben, pealed for three minutes.
The Olympic torch, which has traveled around the United Kingdom over the past 70 days, then set off on the final leg of its journey toward the stadium, aboard the royal barge Gloriana.
Rowers will propel the barge, which played a central role in Queen Elizabeth II's diamond jubilee celebrations, down the River Thames from Hampton Court to Tower Bridge.
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Former Olympian rower Matthew Pinsent, tasked with carrying the flame on to the barge, said this was "a huge day for London."
Crowds lined the river's banks to cheer the torch along, adding to the more than 13 million who've turned out to watch it pass in the course of its 8,000-mile journey, according to the government.
Forecasters at Britain's Met Office say rain showers over London should clear by evening, allowing those watching the opening ceremony at the stadium to stay dry.
Few specifics have been released about the three-hour show -- but keeping the details quiet has been a challenge taking into account the thousands of performers and technicians involved, plus two dress rehearsals held this week.
A Twitter hashtag, #savethesurprise, was started by Olympic organizers to help keep details private, but some aspects of the show have leaked out nonetheless.
What the organizers have made public is that the show's opening scene is dubbed "Green and Pleasant," after a line from poet William Blake's Jerusalem and will showcase an idyllic view of a British countryside.
The elaborate set will comprise rolling hills, fields and rivers, complete with picnicking families, sport being played on a village green and real farmyard animals.
Not many names of the celebrities that will be part of the ceremony have been released. But star footballer David Beckham has said he has a role in the spectacle.
It will begin at 9 p.m. local time (4 p.m. ET) with the tolling of the largest harmonically tuned bell in Europe, cast by the nearby Whitechapel Foundry.
The torch will reappear during the show's grand finale, when it will be carried into Olympic Stadium and used to set the Olympic cauldron aflame, symbolizing the beginning of the Games.
On Thursday, the torch was taken past iconic London landmarks.
Crowds joined British Prime Minister David Cameron and his wife as the torch reached the doorstep of their Downing Street home. Next, the torch went past the Big Ben clock tower, carried by 81-year-old native Londoner Florence Rowe, who says she fondly remembers the excitement of the 1948 London Olympics.
The last major stop was Buckingham Palace, where Prince William, his wife Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, and Prince Harry greeted the torchbearers.
Fake ticket warning
Some Olympic competition commenced ahead of the official opening ceremony.
All 128 competing archers are taking part Friday in a preliminary round at Lord's Cricket Ground to determine seedings for the individual and team competitions.
UK media reported Friday that hundreds of disappointed people had been turned away from the site Friday morning, however, after the apparent sale of some fake tickets and confusion over whether the event was open to the public.
The London organizing committee, LOCOG, said tickets had neither been advertised nor sold.
"We think we have made it very clear that this is not a free event, like the Road Races or Marathon which have been advertised as free events," a statement said.
"This is a ranking round and there is no spectator access at all. We are dealing with this at the venue, along with some people who have turned up with fake tickets purchased from a fraudulent website."
People are urged to "be extremely cautious and vigilant when attempting to buy tickets and only purchase from an official source," the statement says.
Thursday saw the start of the men's football competition, with global favorites Spain and Brazil playing, though not against each other.
Spain, which won the European Championship this year and the last World Cup, suffered a surprising 1-0 defeat to Japan in one of eight games scheduled Thursday.
Brazil -- which, like Spain, is considered a likely contender to win Olympic gold -- beat Egypt 3-2. Great Britain, playing football in the Olympics for the first time since 1960, scored a 1-1 draw in its match against Senegal after letting in a late goal.
Two notable absences are Argentina and the United States, neither of which qualified.
Opening Ceremony London 2012 Guide
The Summer Olympics is the biggest stage for the greatest athletes on earth.
Up to a billion fans will enjoy athletics, swimming and basketball to gymnastics, volleyball, diving and tennis.
But for some - the main event is the Opening Ceremony.
WHEN:
London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony can be seen at 7:30 pm ET on NBC.
WHERE:
Olympic stadium is the centerpiece of London's Olympic Park, which is hosting all of the athletics and paralympic athletics events.
The Stadium seats up to 80,000 people, and 55,000 of the seats are removable. About 10,000 tons of steel were used to build the venue, compared to the 42,000 used by Beijing for their ‘Bird’s Nest’.
THE SHOW:
This year's show is called the 'Isle of Wonder.' A celebration of British culture, with a touch of Shakespeare, pop music, James Bond — and even some farm animals. Up to a billion people are expected to tune in to the $42 million, three-hour extravaganza.
Over 15,000 volunteers have worked together on the show that will bring you through the rich and textured journey through British history.
The man behind the massive Opening Ceremony effort is Director Danny Boyle.
Boyle says there will be sheep, horses, a cricket game, and Paul McCartney.
Reports are also suggesting a pre-recorded segment filmed inside Buckingham Palace featuring actor Daniel Craig as Bond, and a stuntman dressed as 007 who will parachute into the stadium to start the show.
Each of Great Britain's four nations — England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland — will be represented by a maypole topped with their national flowers, according to the Associated Press. "A pagan folk symbol, the maypole is still commonly erected in British villages during May Day celebrations (as well as elsewhere in Europe) to celebrate the return of warmer weather."
Expect dancing nurses.
Boyle says dancing nurses will be used to celebrate the National Health Service, the country's universal health program.
#SAVETHESURPRISE:
Oscar winning film director, Boyle pulled out all the stops in attempting to keep the Opening Ceremony a secret.
During rehearsals, the hashtag #SAVETHESURPRISE was put on all of the stadium's big screens. Lord Coe, the chairman of the Olympic games,also made a personal appeal to the the crowd sealed about the show.
According to the Telegraph, although there have been aerial photographs of the rehearsal. Most tweets from show volunteers point to a spectacular show.
Jill Lawless tweeted: “I will #savethesurprise, but will just say that Danny Boyle's #London2012 opening ceremony is splendidly British and magnificently bonkers.”
TORCH LIGHTING:
The identity of the person who will light the Olympic cauldron is still a mystery but many believe it will be an Olympic champion. Roger Bannister is the favorite. Bannister broke the 4-minute barrier in the mile in 1954.
The Olympic cauldron will be lit with a flame that was kindled May 10, at the birthplace of the ancient Olympics in Greece.
Since then, 8,000 torchbearers, mostly Britons, carried the flame on a 70-day, 8,000-mile journey throughout the British Isles.
Olympics Schedule 2012: live stream online and TV has tennis, swimming Saturday
The Olympics schedule 2012 edition will kick off the latest summer games from London, England, with multiple events shown on Saturday, July 28th. These will include tennis and swimming events both televised, as well as live streaming online coverage. Among those competing are Team USA's Michael Phelps, Venus Williams and Andy Roddick in these first events of the London Olympics.
The Olympics live stream coverage will be shown via internet feeds courtesy of NBC Olympics website, while television programming will be seen on NBC affiliates, as well as Bravo, NBC Sports Network and Telefutura on cable or satellite providers around the nation.
According to Mercuy News, Michael Phelps looks to continue to add to his impressive total Olympic medal count of 16. He'll be competing in the 400m IM event for the men. There's coverage scheduled for Telemundo from 8:00 a.m. EST through 5:00 p.m. EST, as well as qualifying on local NBC affiliate stations from 1:30 p.m. EST to 2:30 p.m. EST. The swimming finals will be part of the "NBC Primetime" coverage from 8:00 p.m. EST through 12:00 a.m. EST on Saturday night.
Video: 2012 London Olympics preview video for swimming
With the early swimming, Team USA will feature two stars competing against the rest of the world, and each other. Friends Ryan Lochte and Michael Phelps will go head-to-head in the 400 IM event. Phelps needs just three more medals to become the "most-decorated Olympian of all-time." Lochte said of his teammate and opponent:
"Me and him, we've created a great rivalry but also a great friendship after the race. I hope it continues that way."
Round 1 of tennis starts at 6:30 a.m. EST for both the men and women with several times already announced for the Wimbledon courts. In the men's opening round, it will be Andy Roddick taking on Slovakia's Klizan Martin. John Isner will face Rochus Olivier of Belarus at 8:30 a.m. EST on court 2 at Wimbledon. Roger Federer of Switzerland battles Alejandro Falla of Columbia starting at 11 a.m. EST. Novak Djokovic, Federer, and Andy Murray currently lead the Olympics odds on favorite to win the men's side.
Meanwhile, Venus Williams begins round 1 of the Women's Singles tennis playing Italy's Sara Errani, while her sister Serena starts off against Jelena Jankovic of Serbia at 9:00 a.m. EST on the Centre court at Wimbledon. Also in action for the women is Russia's Maria Sharapova, Belarus' Kim Clijsters, and Denmarks Caroline Wozniacki (1:00 p.m. EST).
Televised tennis coverage can be seen on Bravo via Cox Cable channel 41, from 7:00 a.m. EST through 3:00 p.m. EST. It can also be seen live streaming online via the NBCOlympics.com website.
Opening Ceremony 2012: LIVE Updates From The Start Of London Olympics
As far as most people are concerned, the 2012 London Olympics officially begin on Friday with the highly-anticipated Opening Ceremony helmed by Oscar-winner Danny Boyle. That some of the events have already taken place (including a thrilling comeback by the U.S. women's soccer team) won't detract from the "Isles Of Wonder"spectacle unfolding at the Olympic Stadium in London.
With its elaborate -- and somewhat still secret -- production, the 2012 Opening Ceremony will aim to produce moments as memorable as Muhammad Ali's inspiring torch lighting in Atlanta and the breathtaking long-range, pyrotechnic archery of Barcelona.
Stay tuned for live updates, commentary, images and video from the real-time rendition of the spectacle in London all the way through the televised version that airs later on NBC in the United States.
For those waiting for the stateside primetime broadcast, be warned there will be spoilers below.
London 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremonies Live Coverage
6:11 p.m. London/1:11 p.m. ET: Did you know you can't wear oversized hats to the Games? Or bring in too much food? Or big umbrellas?
Michael Katz (@KatzM) breaks down a half-dozen silly things banned from the Olympic venues.
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MORE: Complete coverage of London 2012
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5:40 p.m. London/12:40 p.m. ET: Joe Posnanski leads off the debut of the new site Sports On Earth with an essay on the simplicity of the Olympics. Money quote:
"Ryan Lochte has already been the best in the world at something more than once. Michael Phelps has been the best in the world many, many times. But that part of them doesn't quench. That's part of what makes this race so fascinating. They each want to be the best again, and as a sports fan it doesn't matter the sport, it doesn't matter the event, it doesn't matter the particulars. It only matters that one of them will get to the wall first."
Read the whole essay here and check out Sports On Earth's Olympics coverage here.
4:29 p.m. London/11:29 a.m. ET: As we wait for reports to emerge from the run-up to the Opening Ceremonies, here are a few must-see storylines from the past 24 hours:
Olympic swimmers do "Call Me Maybe": Swimmer Cullen Jones told USA Today's Nicole Auerbach: "Four of the ladies were like, 'We're going to make this video, we're going to make it viral, we're going to put it out there. We want all of you guys in it." Watch the video here.
Your must-see photo of the day: US wrestler Elena Pirozhkova picks up Michelle Obama during theFirst Lady's visit with Team USA athletes:
Going up?!
(Photo hat-tip to wrestler Clarissa Chun, who caught the photo and posted it to Twitter.)
See more cool photos from Michelle Obama's visit with Team USA.
The most memorable Opening Ceremony moment?Christine Brennan has hers: 2002 Salt Lake City. "For the first time in 22 years, the 1980 gold-medal-winning U.S. Olympic men's ice hockey team, led by captain Mike Eruzione, is reunited at the top of the stadium to light the caldron. Check out the rest of her Top 10 here.
Olympic fashion preview:Kevin Durant and Carmelo Anthony are ready for their Opening Ceremonies walk, sporting the distinctive Team USA beret:
(Be sure to like USA Today Sports' Facebook page to get some of the best up-to-the-minute photos from the Opening Ceremonies.)
USA Basketball in Berets
PHOTOS:London on the eve of the Games. Check out a stream of cool photos here:
Olympic mascot Wenlock: Creepy or cute? USA Today Sports' Mike Foss investigates.
3:52 p.m. London/10:52 a.m. ET: Is LeBron James on Team Phelps or Team Lochte? "You going to make me choose? I love them both. They're dolphins in the water." (USA Today Sports' Jeff Zillgitt, via Twitter)
Eve of games
Summer Olympics 2012 opening ceremonies streaming in London
It’s time to check out all the streaming live video streams we can for the kickoff of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. This is the third time that London has hosted the Olympics, with their first being all the way back in 1908 and the next just a few years after the end of World War II in 1948. Here in 2012, it’s time for a party – and without a doubt the entirety of England will be in rare form throughout the events which start off tonight with an above-average strange set of characters that’ll only be come apparent once the ceremony has begun – Voldemordt and Mary Poppins have been tipped.
What you’ll be looking for online on your desktop computer for live video is a collection of feeds from NBC. While there are other streams out there, the Olympics committee appears to be working directly with NBC for this event for all streaming content via YouTube. Of course the BBC will also be streaming all of the events, including the opening ceremonies, all via Facebook. Have a peek at BBCSport on Facebook to see what your options are right this minute!
Have a peek at the following presentation video to get connected:
For those of you looking to connect via Android, you’ll want to check out the NBC Olympics app which will be working asap starting tonight. This same app is available for iOS and made for both the iPhone and the iPad. You can check out our whole collection of iPad apps for the Olympics in iPad Olympics app set to cover from all angles.
Watch London Olympics Ceremony Live in India | Streaming Read More: Watch London Olympics Ceremony Live in India | Streaming
Later today will happen one of the most awaited events of the year, the opening ceremony of the London Olympics 2012. In India you will have to tune into Dooradarshan to watch the Olympics ceremony live from London on TV.
In case you don't have a TV at home and is planning to watch the olympics ceremony by streaming then you can either use the Dooradarshan India website or the TVchannelsfree's Dooradarshan page. The event will be telecast live at half past one AM IST. The olympic games will be broadcasted in India by ESPN.
Watch online Link 1: http://www.ddindia.gov.in/
Watch online Link 2: http://www.tvchannelsfree.com/watch/6429/Doordarshan.html
Read More: Watch London Olympics Ceremony Live in India | Streaming
Watch London Olympics 2012 Live Streaming Online Summer Olympics July 27 From NBC
Watch London Olympics 2012 Live Streaming Online Summer Olympics 2012 Online. Welcome to Watch London Olympics 2012 Live Streaming 2012 Summer Olympics live stream online on your pc/laptop. Do not wait to access this HD link, when the Olympics game is mostly over and you will get live scores and highlights. All the Events are being streaming here; just catch the game from your desktop or laptop Internet. So,London Olympics Live Streaming 2012 live streaming online coverage on NBC, sky sports4, CBS, HD4, Espn, fox sports & Fox Network. Click here to watch live London Olympics 2012 Live Streaming below this link.
The time the world has been waiting for this summer has nearly arrived, as the London Olympics Opening Ceremony 2012 schedule begins at 9 p.m. London time (3 p.m. Central Time) on Friday. U.S. viewers who want to see the event live are out of luck — they’ll have to wait until NBC’s tape-delayed coverage airs Friday evening.
The good news, however, is that NBC is live streaming the rest of the Olympics. Those who want to see events on live stream can visit here to watch live streaming online at www.nbcolympics.com.
“We are live streaming every sporting event, all 32 sports and 302 medals,” said Gary Zenkel, president of NBC Olympics, according to the Wall Street Journal. “It was never our intent to live stream the Opening Ceremony or Closing Ceremony.”
But there’s a trick to watching the live stream online: It’s free, but you will need to sign up before you can watch the feed. To do so, it will require having an account with a TV provider that includes MSNBC and CNBC. You will need a user ID and password to log on.
As for watching the opening ceremony, NBC will kick off coverage at 6:30 p.m. Central Time Friday. IOC executive director Gilbert Felli has said the opening ceremony should last no more than three hours.
Those who want live glimpses of the opening ceremonies before NBC’s tape-delayed coverage will have to turn to Twitter’s page that will pull in tweets from athletes, their families and fans during the opening ceremony. The Twitter page will be live during the opening ceremony, according to the Wall Street Journal, with photos and reactions from inside London’s Olympic Stadium.
The ceremony will have a cast and crew of 10,000. It will be held at the 80,000-capacity stadium in east London and be watched by a global television audience expected at 1 billion.
Already, speculation abounds as to what mega-celebrities will appear at the opening ceremonies.
What’s known is that British director Danny Boyle, known for such classic films such as “Trainspotting” and “Slumdog Millionaire,” will join fellow acclaimed director Stephen Daldry to oversee the opening ceremonies.
The ceremonies have been named “Isle of Wonder,” inspired by William Shakespeare’s play “The Tempest.” The world’s largest harmonically tuned bell will sound to start the festivities. Among the rumors are that former Beatle Paul McCartney will be on hand to close at the ceremonies, while others suggest that Muhammad Ali will be at the opening ceremony.
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London Olympics opening ceremony to escape the rain, say forecasters
London Olympics opening ceremony hours away
London Olympics 2012: Danny Boyle excited for the volunteers as the Opening Ceremony approaches
Opening ceremony London 2012 to wow with memorable show
The world city that needs no introduction but could do with an Olympic-sized pick-me-up in the midst of economic recession launches the 2012 Summer Games with a spectacular opening ceremony Friday that faces a unique challenge: to be as memorable as Beijing's planet-wowing, money-no-object extravaganza of 2008.
The British capital will set itself apart, as it has so often down the centuries, by being different. Beijing's curtain raiser featured 2,008 pounding drummers and a cauldron-lighter who seemed to float in the air of the Bird's Nest stadium. London will have 70 sheep, 12 horses, 10 chickens and nine geese — recruited by Oscar-winning director Danny Boyle along with a cast and crew of 10,000 to present a quirky, humorous and vibrant vision of quintessential Britain, its history and future.
London is not the same as it was when the games were awarded seven years ago. Its serenity and confidence were shaken by riots last year and by terror bombings on the transport network that killed 56 people the day after the International Olympic Committee picked London over Paris in 2005. In London, the Olympic Games have come to a sprawling, historic metropolis that lives and breathes sports, with a population more global and diverse than perhaps any other, but which still feels it needs the Olympic spotlight to secure its future as one of the world's great cities.
In depicting Britain, warts and all, Boyle has drawn from William Shakespeare, British pop culture, literature and music, and other sources of inspiration that will speak not just to Anglophiles but to people across the globe. One segment involves actor Daniel Craig's James Bond, and former Beatle Paul McCartney will lead a sing-along.
Boyle's "Isles of Wonder" show will celebrate the green and pleasant land of meadows, farms, cottages, village cricket matches and bird song, but also dwell on Britain's darker industrial past. That's not a surprise from a movie director who depicted Scottish heroin addicts in "Trainspotting" and Indian poor in "Slumdog Millionaire."
As well as thousands of athletes and performers, some 60,000 spectators will pack the Olympic Stadium. Political leaders from around the world, U.S. first lady Michelle Obama and her daughters, and a sprinkling of European and celebrity royalty will also attend.
According to the Sunday Times, one section will feature characters from children's fiction classics including "Alice in Wonderland" and "Peter Pan" — and a showdown between Lord Voldemort, the villain of J.K. Rowling's "Harry Potter" books, and a horde of flying magical nannies based on Mary Poppins.
"I would have thought the difficulty is how you cram in all that is great about our country," British Prime Minister David Cameron said Thursday. "Whether it is sport, art, literature, history, contribution to world events, there are so many things to celebrate about our country that packing all that in to these hours must be a pretty tough task. But I am confident they have done a good job."
Many of juiciest and most significant details from the three-hour show, including the identity of the person or people who will light the Olympic cauldron — if, indeed, there is one — remain secret. That is, in itself, remarkable for the first social media Olympics, where the urge to tweet anything and everything is putting more scrutiny than ever on organizers and the 10,902 athletes from 204 countries.
Most will return home after 16 days of competition as they arrived: the pride of family and friends but still unknown to the wider public, unsung practitioners of sports — think archery, synchronized swimming, wrestling and the like — that get little attention for 206 weeks before blossoming in the two-week Olympic festival.
Medalists will be guaranteed recognition and perhaps fame and fortune for the luckier ones, especially the more than 300 who win gold. A hundredth of a second here, a centimeter there, in the pool or in the shooting gallery could make an athlete a household name. Their gold medals will be largest of any summer games and, at 400 grams (14 ounces), the heaviest, too.
Amputee runner Oscar Pistorius and women boxers will get headlines for being Olympic pioneers. But for other established stars who fail in quests to retain or win more Olympic titles, London will mark the end or the beginning of the end of their careers.
U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps insists these will be his last games. The 14-time gold medalist will go out with a bang, aiming to claim the unofficial title of greatest Olympian ever from Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina. She got 18 medals. Phelps has 16, and seven opportunities in London to overtake her. His rivalry with U.S. teammate Ryan Lochte promises one of the most compelling dramas of London. They will swim against each other twice: in medleys over 200 meters and, on the first full day of competition Saturday, over 400 meters in the Aquatics Center with its ceiling that slopes like the underbelly of a whale.
Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt, the other standout star from Beijing, wants to become a sports legend on a par with Jesse Owens, Pele or Muhammad Ali by retaining his Olympic titles in the 100, 200 and sprint relay. But the World's Fastest Man faces stiffer competition this time from countryman Yohan Blake and American rivals Tyson Gay and Justin Gatlin.
In Beijing, the geopolitical significance of China's rise as a global superpower was as much the story as the sports. London, the first city to host the event a third time after previous games in 1908 and 1948, could in contrast be a purer Olympics, more about the athletes than the context. Could be more fun, too, without the backdrop of international concern over China's human rights record.
Big questions are how London's transport system will cope with millions of spectators and whether grumbling Britons will get behind their Olympics as they did for this year's celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee. The monarch will officially open the games at Friday's ceremony that will start at 9 p.m. with the sound of a 27-ton bell forged at the 442-year-old Whitechapel Bell Foundry, which made London's Big Ben and Philadelphia's Liberty Bell.
Lavishing more than 9 billion pounds ($14 billion), triple the estimated cost when London secured the games in 2005, in the midst of severe economic storms in Britain and Europe has provoked pointed and persistent questions about whether the expense can be justified and whether the games will have a lasting positive impact for the host city and for Britain.
The most obvious legacy for London is Olympic Park, with the 80,000-capacity stadium that will host theopening ceremony and other new venues. It is built on formerly derelict, polluted industrial land in the east of the city that bore the brunt of bombing in World War II and, for centuries, concentrated London's stinkiest industries and its poor.
Other benefits from the July 27-Aug. 12 games, particularly the power of the Olympics to inspire kids to take up sports and to aim high, might not be obvious for years.
Opening Ceremony London 2012: World ready for Olympics opening Ceremony
The stage is set and the athletes are primed as the seven-year countdown to the London 2012 Olympics reaches its finale with Friday's much-anticipated opening ceremony.
The three-hour spectacle, expected to be watched by a global television audience of up to one billion, will mark the beginning of 17 days of athletic endeavour which will create heroes, shatter dreams and fire national pride.
But London is preparing for its own intense examination as questions over the city's creaking transport system and the ever-present security threat hang over the event, ready to overshadow on-track achievements.
Prime Minister David Cameron insisted on Thursday that Britain would deliver a memorable Games after US presidential hopeful Mitt Romney backtracked on barbed comments he made about the preparations.
The Republican hopeful, in London to attend Friday's opening, said the build-up had been "disconcerting", pointing to the failure of a private security contractor to provide the number of guards it had promised.
Cameron responded by saying he was sure Britons would get behind the Games despite an economic downturn -- and took an apparent swipe at Romney's past as head of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.
"We are holding an Olympic Games in one of the busiest, most active, bustling cities anywhere in the world," Cameron said.
"Of course it's easier if you hold an Olympic Games in the middle of nowhere."
Sneak previews of the £27 million ($42 million, 35 million euros) opening ceremony -- filmed at Wednesday's final rehearsal -- suggest it will be a grand but quirky production, reflecting the philosophy of director Danny Boyle.
The Slumdog Millionaire Oscar-winner has promised to create a "picture of us as a nation" and revealed the eccentric show will feature live sheep and dancing surgeons from the National Health Service.
Thousands of VIPs including some 120 national leaders are in town for the event, with guests ranging from Angelina Jolie and US First Lady Michelle Obama to the king of Swaziland.
Germany's Angela Merkel and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda are among the leaders set to attend while Michelle Obama will head the US delegation.
Prince William and his wife Catherine along with a flock of European royals including Prince Albert of Monaco will watch Britain's 86-year-old monarch Queen Elizabeth II officially open the Games.
Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev will lead Russia's delegation although President Vladimir Putin has indicated he may fly in later to watch the judo, in which he is a black belt.
British football legend David Beckham said he will perform some role at the ceremony despite not being selected for Team GB, fueling gossip he may be given the honour of lighting the Olympic cauldron.
From the world of showbusiness, Hollywood mega-couple Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt will attend after hosting a star-studded charity dinner for boxing icon Muhammad Ali on Wednesday, which counted racing driver Lewis Hamilton and actress Rosario Dawson among its guests.
Audience members at Wednesday's rehearsal promised the show would be a spine-tingling extravaganza.
The crowd at the 80,000-seater Olympic Stadium in Stratford, a previously run-down area of east London, were filled with enthusiasm as they flooded out.
"That was absolutely amazing. I wanted to whoop," said Hilary Midgley from Darwen in northwest England. "It was beyond my wildest expectations."
But with the spotlight of the world on Britain, authorities are acutely aware of the terror threat.
An additional 4,700 troops have been deployed in recent days to make up the shortfall in guards supplied by giant contractor G4S.
Anti-aircraft missiles have been placed on rooftops and a warship is anchored in the River Thames as part of the country's biggest ever peacetime security operation.
A force of more than 40,000 military and civilian personnel, backed by a huge intelligence operation, has turned the British capital into a fortress to protect venues, athletes and millions of visitors.
Cameron on Thursday stressed that security "matters more than anything else".
"I think we've made as many preparations as we can. I think we have very good contingency plans in place," Cameron said at a press conference with chief Games organiser Sebastian Coe in front of the Olympic Stadium.
Ten times Olympic medallist Carl Lewis captured the building sense of anticipation on Thursday.
"The Olympics is the only event where the world stops," he said.
"If you're the smallest country with the fewest people in the world or the biggest country with the most people in the world, everyone's allowed and everyone is invited, so it's a great thing because you get to see the world and the world sees you," he added.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Lakshmi Mittal and his son to carry the Olympics torch
Lakshmi Mittal is the main sponsor of the giant AreclorMittal Orbit near the Olympics Stadium and his trust has also been supporting Indian athletes.
Lakshmi Mittal said, "The torch relay is an excellent embodiment of all that the Olympic Games have come to symbolise - a celebration of the human spirit.
It needs to be added that created by noted artist Anish Kapoor, the ArcelorMittal Orbit is the tallest structure in the UK and Mittal's company has contributed 20 million pounds towards the creation of the structure.
Opening ceremony of London Olympics is going to be a big affair
ONE DAY to go for the world's biggest sports event - the XXX Olympics event better known as London Olympics to start. London won the right to stage the event in Singapore in 2005 against bids from New York, Madrid, Paris and Moscow. London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) and the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) are jointly organising the summer Olympics 2012. This event is co-chaired by the Minister for Sport and Olympics and the Mayor of London.
During the 17 days of competitions in London Olympics, 26 Olympic sports will be played at 34 venues. Wenlock and Mandeville is the mascot of the Olympic Games 2012, which are scheduled from July 27 to August 12. The opening ceremony of the mega sports extravaganza will kick off at 9 p.m. on Friday July 27 at the Olympics Stadium in London. Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh will officially open the event.
During the opening ceremony the 204 competing nations will parade with their national flag and according to custom, Greece, who hosted the first modern Olympic games in 1896, will lead the parade and the host nation Great Britain will come in last. Other competing countries take part in the parade in alphabetical order. In the Opening Ceremony Olympic flame will ignites the Cauldron.
The name of the Olympic Opening Ceremony show will be called 'Isles of Wonder'. Film Slumdog Millionaire 'Oscar-winning' director Danny Boyle, who is also the Artistic Director of the London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony, and his team will provide an opportunity for the world to view the artistic expression and the culture of London and the UK.
According to the London Olympics official website, the ceremony will kick off with the sound of the largest harmonically tuned bell in Europe, produced by the Whitechapel Foundry, and the Stadium will be transformed into the British countryside for opening scene ‘Green and Pleasant’, which includes real farmyard animals.
During the event the stadium will be packed with 80,000 spectators, 16,000 athletes, 10,000 performers. In the opening ceremony 70 sheep, 12 horses, ten chickens, three cows, two goats and even dogs and geese will also be the part of it. The Republican Presidential nominee of United States, Mitt Romney, will also attend the event. Along with Mitt Romney hundreds of VVIPs will also attend the event from across the world.