Showing posts with label 2012 London Olympics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2012 London Olympics. Show all posts

Friday, July 27, 2012

Opening ceremony London 2012 to wow with memorable show

0726-openingceremonies_full_380[1]

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.

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.

Olympics: London gears up for grand opening spectacle


London is all set to dazzle the world with a grand opening ceremony to launch the greatest show on earth featuring over 10,000 athletes over the next fortnight, a spectacle that has seen the cost escalating to £9.3 billion ($14.5 billion).

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 to an expected global television audience of 1 billion.

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 help 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 the 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 organisers 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 the opening 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.

Agencies 

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Youngest Indian boxer qualifies for London Olympics


Guwahati, Apr 11: Father of Shiva Thapa, who became the youngest Indian boxer qualified for London Olympics, hoped that his son would bring laurels to the country by winning a medal in the Games.

"It is due to the blessings of God and the people of Assam that he has become the youngest Indian boxer to qualify for the Olympics. We hope he will be able to win a medal and make the country proud," Guwahati-based Padam Thapa said.

"We had not thought he (Shiva) would qualify for this year's Olympics. We were hoping his name would figure among the qualifiers for the 2016 Games," the proud father added.

Thapa is a resident of Guwahati's Birubari locality and began his initial training in Sports Authority of India campus in the city here.

Shiva Thapa (56kg) became the youngest Indian boxer to make the cut for the London Olympics.

The 18-year-old Shiva defeated Japan's Satoshi Simizu 31-17 at the Asian qualifiers in Astana, Kazakhstan, to enter the final and book himself a London berth.

19-year-old L Devendro Singh had booked his London Olympics berth in the last year's World Championships, tying with Debendra Singh (1996 Atlanta) as the youngest Indian boxer to make it to the Olympics. But the 1993-born Shiva broke this record.

The Assam teenager, featuring in only his second senior international event, was down 6-7 in the opening round but he turned the tables in the second round, taking a massive 15-6 lead. 

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Samsung Galaxy S III Could Be 2012 London Olympics Phone

Samsung is having a big press event announcement on May 3rd and tech rumors are saying that it could be the official launching of the new Samsung Galaxy S III - while the name is still unofficial, it is expected that the smartphone company will be releasing the next generation of the phone series.

In relation to that, many are also expecting an announcement that Samsung will most likely be the official mobile phone partner of the 2012 London Olympic Games. But all these are still unconfirmed, along with the possible new specifications and features of the upcoming smartphone.

According to tech analysts, it's most likely that the Galaxy S III will be almost identical to the S II with improved internal specs such as a faster processor. Some even say that Samsung could do an "Apple" which released an iPhone 4S which didn't really differ much from the iPhone 4.

Regardless of what the next Samsung Galaxy evolution will be, we're certain that this model will be the top of the line Android phone in the market once released.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Venues for the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games

During the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, events will take place at a variety of venues both across London and outside London.

Some of London's most iconic venues, such as Horse Guards Parade, Wimbledon, Wembley Stadium, Lords, Regent's Park and Hyde Park will have the honour of being turned into host venues for the London 2012 Games.

In addition, London will have some fantastic new sporting venues for the Games: the VeloPark, Aquatics Centre, Basketball Arena, and of course, the Olympic Stadium. Keep an eye on our news section for regular updates on these exciting new venues.

olympic-stadium-cgi-640

Monday, February 27, 2012

2012 London Olympics beckons team India


New Delhi: On a day when their favourite cricketers let them down in the tour Down Under, Indian hockey stars turned it into a Super Sunday for the fans after winning the final of the FIH Olympic qualifier.

Goal machine Sandeep Singh netted five and completed the second hat-trick of the tournament in the process to give India a perfect evening and a ticket to 2012 London Olympics. Tactical accuracy and the lightning pace displayed by Michael Nobbs men undone a sorry France. The scoreline of 8-1 in favour of the hosts said it all.

India attacked from the word go but were deprived of space as the French fullbacks defended stoically. Their frustrations were furthered when French custodian Matthies denied a sure shot goal in the 15th minute. But two minutes thereafter India scored the decisive goal. A cross from Manpreet found a taker in the form of Birendra Lakra in the French goalmouth who fired it in swiftly with a reverse flick. The atmosphere was electric.

Vociferously cheered by the crowd, Indians went searching for another goal. Sandeep stepped in to increase the lead in the 19th minute. It was Sandeep’s 12th goal in the event, a figure he had set as his target. He scored four more and was adjudged Player of the Match.

India’s pace and their crowd’s loud cheer troubled French players but silenced them for once when Simon Martin-Brisac deflected off Sebastian in the 23rd minute. Sreejesh, who came in place of Bharat Chetri, looked stunned. India retaliated in the 26th minute, a typical Sandeep converted a short corner to up the ante for the hosts while France caved in.

After leading by three goals to one at the end of first half, the men in ‘white’ made it 4-1 in the 38th minute through Sandeep. The referee had a field day as the final saw tension flare between the two sides and a number of referrals, most of which benefitted India. India’s penalty conversion rate was near perfect on Sunday as six out of eight goals came through penalty corners. On sparse occasions they were tested, Indian defense held fort tenaciously.

Apart from Lakra, Raghunath and SV Sunil got themselves into the score sheet, which was monopolized by Sandeep. 

Sunday, February 26, 2012

2012 London Olympics beckons team India


New Delhi: On a day when their favourite cricketers let them down in the tour Down Under, Indian hockey stars turned it into a Super Sunday for the fans after winning the final of the FIH Olympic qualifier.

Goal machine Sandeep Singh netted five and completed the second hat-trick of the tournament in the process to give India a perfect evening and a ticket to 2012 London Olympics. Tactical accuracy and the lightning pace displayed by Michael Nobbs men undone a sorry France. The scoreline of 8-1 in favour of the hosts said it all.

India attacked from the word go but were deprived of space as the French fullbacks defended stoically. Their frustrations were furthered when French custodian Matthies denied a sure shot goal in the 15th minute. But two minutes thereafter India scored the decisive goal. A cross from Manpreet found a taker in the form of Birendra Lakra in the French goalmouth who fired it in swiftly with a reverse flick. The atmosphere was electric.

Vociferously cheered by the crowd, Indians went searching for another goal. Sandeep stepped in to increase the lead in the 19th minute. It was Sandeep’s 12th goal in the event, a figure he had set as his target. He scored four more and was adjudged Player of the Match.

India’s pace and their crowd’s loud cheer troubled French players but silenced them for once when Simon Martin-Brisac deflected off Sebastian in the 23rd minute. Sreejesh, who came in place of Bharat Chetri, looked stunned. India retaliated in the 26th minute, a typical Sandeep converted a short corner to up the ante for the hosts while France caved in.

After leading by three goals to one at the end of first half, the men in ‘white’ made it 4-1 in the 38th minute through Sandeep. The referee had a field day as the final saw tension flare between the two sides and a number of referrals, most of which benefitted India. India’s penalty conversion rate was near perfect on Sunday as six out of eight goals came through penalty corners. On sparse occasions they were tested, Indian defense held fort tenaciously.

Apart from Lakra, Raghunath and SV Sunil got themselves into the score sheet, which was monopolized by Sandeep. 

Friday, February 24, 2012

London Olympics to boost UK music scene


As the newly reformed British act Blur is set to take the stage at this summer's London Olympic Games, not much else is known about what to expect at the opening and closing ceremonies -- but whatever it is, experts say that the event will put UK musicians (at least some of them) on the map for the rest of the world.

The Olympic Games, July 27 through August 12, will be watched by an estimated 4 billion viewers worldwide, according to the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

As a result, the UK's music industry can expect a bump in sales, according to a Billboard.biz report. Plus with more than 16 million people involved in the events of the Cultural Olympiad, the event has a total funding of £97.6 million ($155 million) to play with -- of course, how much of that goes to musical artists is yet to be determined.

For those in the UK or traveling for the event, planned programs include the River of Music, taking place July 21-22 on six stages along the River Thames. So far the lineup features a few international artists, including pop band Scissor Sisters, trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis, and Grammy Award-winning Beninoise singer Angelique Kidjo, with more to be announced.

Also in the works is a free music event as part of Music Nation, on March 3-4 in 45 UK locations with more than 65,000 tickets available.

For those enjoying the event from the couch, Billboard.biz reports that the exposure could be "great news" for British singer-songwriter and Elbow frontman Guy Garvey. The band has written the BBC's theme music, a six-minute track to be played across the channel's coverage throughout the Games, stated Billboard.biz.

Also British producer Mark Ronson recorded the theme for Coca-Cola's international television ads, featuring a variety of British artists, including pop singer Jesse J.

Source: Yahoo

Olympic Stamps on Sale Now and Diamond Jubilee Stamps Coming Soon


If you’re looking to boost your stamp collection, 2012 is the year to do it!

Royal Mail is issuing some interesting new collections featuring London events and figures this year, starting with the Olympic “definitive”, or everyday stamps, which go on sale today.


Olympic and Paralympic Stamps
The new stamps feature the Olympic and Paralympic logos, as well as an image of the Queen’s head, and are set to brighten up millions of letters.


After the Games, Royal Mail will issue a set of Gold Medal stamps to honour all Team GB victories.




Diamond Jubilee Stamps
Royal Mail will celebrate the Diamond Jubilee with three new stamp sets:

  • House of Windsor stamps featuring the five monarchs from the start of the 20th century, issued 2 Feb
  • A miniature sheet with six portraits of the Queen taken from banknotes, coins and stamps issued during her reign, including a 1st class diamond blue definitive, which replaces the standard 1st class gold definitive during the Jubilee Year, issued 6 Feb
  • A set of eight stamps featuring images of the Queen during the six decades of her reign, issued 31 May

More London Stamp News

That’s not all! Look out for special Charles Dickens stamps in June to mark the 200th anniversary of the author’s birth, and an upcoming collection on British Fashion Designers (hope there’ll be a few Londoners there too).


While you await these new collections, keep your inner philatelist occupied at the British Postal Museum & Archive, where you can see stamps from all over the world.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Olympic Games gearing up with London Cultural Olympiad 2012


EVERYONE KNOWS that the Olympic Games are scheduled to start from 27 July and end on 12 August 2012. Let’s not talk about the Games for now, which are going to be of topmost quality, no doubt. Hence, let us focus on things that would be considered to be very important for the people of England. Here, London Cultural Olympiad 2012 would take the centre stage. It would be showcasing the traditions, cultures and arts in various forms during the event.

It is one of the largest cultural celebration as far as the modern Olympic and Paralympics are concerned, as stated in the official website of the London Olympic Games, 2012, london2012.com. Hence, the event is surely going to be a huge one, where people from all over the world would be able to witness their culture. It could be a big trailer for what is to come during the mega event, London Olympics, 2012.



 Hence, the Olympiad would be giving a chance for each and everyone to become a part of this mega festival. The festival has been taking place since the year 2008. Around 16 million people from the UK have taken part in it, where 8,300 workshops also have been conducted so as to make the festival a grand one, as stated in the official website of the Games. It has become a great hit among the masses and is expected to find more success in the upcoming days.

For those people who would love to be a part of this festival, they still have some major events that they can watch. These events can be found in different categories, such as arts, culture, music, dance, opera, literary event etc. So, one could choose according to his liking. Some events that are lined up in the coming days or months, as 100 portraits by Lucian Freud would be on display from 9 February 2012 to 27 May 2012. London's British Museum would also showcase the world and works of William Shakespeare 19 July 2012 to 25 November 2012.

Another mega event would be the Big Dance 2012 across various venues in London, which would entertain everyone. Radio 1's Hackney Weekend 2012 would go on from 23 June 2012 to 24 June 2012, which might be one of the biggest free music festivals in London, as per the information on a website, visitlondon.com. Not all of these events could be watched free of charge, but there are also some events which are free.

So, London is gearing up for the games with such kind of activities. Tourists travelling across the length and the breadth of the globe would be expecting the Games to be of even higher standards.

Olympic Games to hit tourism industry


PEOPLE INVOLVED with the tourism industry would suffer heavy losses due to the London Olympic Games, 2012, which are scheduled to start on 27 July and end on 12 August 2012. One trade association also feels that during the time, income would be dropping down to 3.5 billion pounds, as reported by ANI. This would probably happen as the organisers of the games have increased the hotel rates.

If this indeed happens, it would seriously be a great setback for the hoteliers as they have been looking up to the games, which was supposed to provide them with lots of revenues. They had even been trying to provide the best of facilities for the tourists. But, what is the use if there is no tourist inflow into their hotels.

It was also expected that the revenue earned form the Tourism industry would cover up for the losses that were suffered by the LOCOG, during or before the games. All their hopes also have been dashed.  It was so foolish of the LOCOG to book more than what was required. The Independent reports that 600,000 nights had been booked by them for the mega spectacle for various media, sponsors, delegates, etc. But, they have now returned 120,000 of those bookings. With just a few months away, it could have been better if they had given this information before hand, so as to give the hotelier’s time to recover their losses and hire these rooms to other tourists.

It may be a case, where ‘one man’s loss is another’s gain’, as tourists may head to other cities so as to get an affordable accommodation. The Independent also states that the hotel rates have gone up three times and around one million beds would be empty during the games.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

2012 Olympics broadcast

Ericsson will bring the 2012 London Olympic Games to a global audience of almost 5 billion after supplying the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) with solutions for the delivery of coverage of the event, and other future sporting occasions, to broadcasters around the world.

This premium global sports content will be distributed to EBU members and other rights holders globally over both satellite and fibre networks in MPEG-2 Standard Definition (SD) or MPEG-4 AVC 4:2:2 High Definition (HD) using nearly 1,000 Ericsson RX8200 professional receivers.

This extends the relationship between the EBU and the Ericsson team, which has previously provided the EBU with solutions for major sporting occasions including the 2008 Games in Beijing, Tour De France, Wimbledon and European football.

“The EBU has over 60 years’ experience in delivering premium live content in a seamless, reliable and cost-effective way. We are delighted to extend our relationship with Ericsson for the 2012 Games – the biggest sporting event in the world – to allow us to provide our broadcast customers with the high-quality and flexible service they demand,” said Paolo Pusterla, Head of Procurement & Network Partnerships, EBU.

The EBU operates a global satellite and fibre network out of Geneva, Switzerland, covering all of Europe, the Americas and the Asia-Pacific region. The requirements of the broadcasters that it serves for differing equipment configurations and the many and varied ways in which receivers are used are driving the need for a flexible receiver platform. The Ericsson RX8200 Advanced Modular Receiver has been designed to precisely meet these requirements.

“The 2012 Games in London is one of those critical events for which reliability and quality are of absolute paramount importance to the viewer, and therefore to broadcasters as well,” said Staffan Pehrson, Vice-President and Head of Solution Area TV, Ericsson. “The Ericsson team has worked with the EBU for over 14 years on the world’s highest profile sports coverage, supplying the industry’s most advanced solutions for live event broadcasting.”

2012 Olympic organisers urged to support sustainable merchandise push

The organisers of the London Olympics have been urged to work with the licensed manufacturers of official merchandise to make sure they have clear and transparent ethical production policies.

As of September 2011 about 3,500 individual product lines out of an expected 10,000 were already on sale, ranging from metal pin badges and keyrings to sportswear, bags, towels and train sets – many featuring the Wenlock and Mandeville mascots and official logos.

A report called Sustainably Sourced? analyses the work done by the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (Locog) to implement sustainable merchandising policies, in line with the commitment to host the "greenest" Olympic Games ever.

It is published by the Commission for Sustainable London 2012, which was set up to monitor the sustainability of the London 2012 programme.

london olympic 2012

With retail sales expected to be in the region of £1bn, merchandise is a significant part of Locog's revenue generation. It expects to have 50-60 licensees – all major companies awarded the rights to produce a range of products carrying the London 2012, Team GB or Paralympics GB brands.

The commission is recommending that Locog works with these licensees to showcase improvements to sustainability, particularly given consumer concerns over T-shirts and sportswear produced in overseas sweatshops.

There are also concerns that, at a difficult time for the British manufacturing industry, the lion's share of the merchandise is being produced overseas. The bulk is being produced in China and Turkey with less than 10% bearing the hallmark "Made in the UK". Locog has justified this by pointing out that the majority of the licensees are British.

The report commends Locog's sustainable merchandising efforts as "to date, the best the Olympics and Paralympics have ever seen. Locog is setting new standards for the event and retail industries to follow."

But it goes on: "Traditionally, many of the industries involved in making merchandise have not sought to significantly address sustainability in their products and supply chain.

"Therefore, we recommend that a series of case studies be developed using examples from London 2012 merchandise to help move these industries forward. These should demonstrate successes in areas such as ethical supply and environmental standards."

It singles out clothing giant Adidas for having a transparent policy on sourcing, but stops short of naming and shaming companies it believes have fallen short of this high standard.

In a statement the commission said: "We have not had access to a comprehensive audit of environmental and ethical performance for each product, so it is not appropriate for us to comment on individual sponsors, retailers or licensees in this instance.

"Only Adidas has disclosed the location of all factories in its direct supply chain. This sets an example to the industry and the commission believes more partners and licensees should follow Adidas's lead and disclose their factory locations."

Elsewhere in the report, the commission also urges Locog to "better communicate" its sustainability standards to shoppers. "While Locog's efforts to make its merchandise more sustainable have been excellent, consumers may not realise this when they purchase products," it said.

"For example, when a customer buys a product, it should be possible to tell them more about the sustainability story of that product."

Shaun McCarthy, chair of the commission, said: "We recognise there are some sustainability issues which Locog can't solve on its own. However, we believe that by fully engaging with Locog's sustainable and ethical sourcing codes, London 2012 licensees can adopt more sustainable behaviour on a permanent basis."

A spokesperson for Locog said: "We welcome the commission's review of our merchandising and we are delighted our efforts to date are described as the best the Olympics and Paralympics have ever seen. We will now look closely at the commission's recommendations over the coming months."

Friday, September 30, 2011

India could be banned from participating in 2012 Olympics hockey

The FIH has issued a veiled threat to block India’s participation in the 2012 London Olympics in case the government does not grant Hockey India the status of National Sports Federation and if all lawsuits, including the one filed by IHF against it, are not terminated.

Federation Internationale de Hockey (FIH), the world governing body of the game, shot a letter to Sports Secretary Sindhusree Khullar, asking the government to comply with the requirement of the IOC charter and FIH statutes.

The FIH, in the letter, reminded the government the points which were agreed upon when its president Leandro Negre met sports minister Ajay Maken.

Just before Negre’s arrival, FIH had stripped India of the hosting rights of Champions Trophy and moved the elite event to New Zealand because of the game’s governance issues.

Indian hockey team captain Rajpal Singh with sports minister Ajay Maken after winning the Champions Trophy. AFP

The FIH letter, signed by Negre, mentions seven issues, including the payment India owe to FIH with regard to hosting of the 2010 World Cup. The FIH has asked the government to “advise Hockey India and the Indian Hockey Federation (IHF) not to proceed with the implementation of the broad arrangement reached on July 25″ with regard to governance of the game in the country.

The FIH has also asked the “government to recognise Hockey India under its guidelines as the National Sports Federation with complete and exclusive authority to govern men’s and women’s hockey in India, in respect of both national competitions and Indian participation in international competitions.

The letter also says that the Indian government will not fund or support any hockey event, which is not sanctioned by FIH and/or Hockey India.

Apart from asking the government to clear all the dues by writing to the concerned bank, the FIH wanted all lawsuits and other claims about who has the right to govern hockey in India, to be resolved and terminated.

“If the above is achieved, then there will be full compliance with the requirement of the IOC Charter and the FIH statutes and there will be no more concerns about the participation of Indian hockey team in FIH-sanctioned competitions such as London 2012 Olympic Games,” the letter read.

PTI

Thursday, August 18, 2011

LONDON 2012: Freeland stars again as GB slump to defeat against Croatia

GREAT Britain staged a brave but unsuccessful fightback as they went down to Croatia at the London 2012 basketball test event.

KEY ROLE: Joel Freeland was the star man for Chris Finch's GB team - top scoring with 22 points (British Basketball)

KEY ROLE: Joel Freeland was the star man for Chris Finch's GB team - top scoring with 22 points (British Basketball)

British coach Chris Finch was delighted as they made a storming start to race into a double digit lead but they were soon pegged back by a team placed 37 places above them in the rankings.

Croatia then established control but the hosts' fighting spirit was evident as they rallied from an 18 point deficit to lose by just five points - 75-70 - at the buzzer.

Joel Freeland continued to look good for Finch's side, leading the scoring with 22 points, while Mike Lenzly and Andrew Lawrence added eight and ten points respectively.

Great Britain converted 82 percent from the free throw line but the difference between the teams was from the three point range, where they missed rested sharp shooter Nate Reinking, hitting just four from 23 attempts.

“I think we came out hot in the first quarter, second and third weren’t too good but we definitely showed we can compete in the fourth," said Freeland, who also impressed in their defeat against France on Tuesday.

“We brought it back in the final period, and it’s not easy to do that against world class teams.

"It was definitely better than yesterday. We’re learning all the time, we’ve only been together for two weeks and we have another two weeks to get better. We’re learning, and that’s what we’re here to do.”

Elsewhere, China’s woes had continued as they suffered a 87-53 hammering against Serbia, Great Britain's next opponents on Wednesday.

Milos Teodosic led the Serbs with 19 points, three rebounds and four assists in a team-high 21 minutes, while NBA big man Jianlian Yi finished with 20 points and seven boards to lead all scorers for the Chinese.

France and Australia served up a much better game, with the former winning a thrilling 71-67 contest, inspired by San Antonio star Tony Parker's 27 point haul.

© Sportsbeat 2011

Thursday, July 28, 2011

2012 Olympics Launches New Event: Competitive Tweeting

The website for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games just got a bit more rowdy. It now features an interactive contest designed to discover which country has the biggest online fan base.

The contest ranks the top 20 countries based on the number of tweets, YouTube videos and Flickr photos submitted. Fans already have submitted more than 20,000 tweets with Great Britain in the lead, followed by Brazil, the U.S., Canada and the Netherlands.

To be considered, tweets need to include the hashtag #1YearToGo, along with the three-letter code for your country. The aim of the contest: to promote the fact that we’re a year away from the opening ceremony of 2012 London Games on July 27, 2012.

As with past sporting events, social media will play a huge role in how fans participate in next summer’s 17-day festivity, whether they’re watching from home or at one of the 32 Olympic venues. We’ll have to wait to see if the level of tweets reaches the magnitude seen during this month’s FIFA Women’s World Cup final game, for example, when Twitter users set a new record of 7,196 tweets per second.

Last month, the Olympic Committee officially encouraged the 10,500 competing athletes from 200 countries to “take part in social media and to post, blog and tweet their experiences,” so long as their efforts are not for commercial purposes.

Tweets aside, the official Olympic website — London2012.com — has cranked up ways for fans to get involved well before the opening ceremony. In March, the website unveiled a feature in which users can create an Olympic mascot and share it on Facebook and Twitter.

Friday, July 15, 2011

The Cultural Olympiad and London 2012 Festival

The eyes of the world will turn to London in the summer of 2012, for the Olympic and Paralympic games – the greatest shows on Earth. And we want to seize this opportunity, to dazzle and impress with the best of British arts, too. London is the world capital of culture – this is our chance to put on the show of a lifetime. Next summer we will be in the middle of the London 2012 Festival when, from June 21 to September 9, leading artists from this country, and around the world, will take part in a UK-wide summer celebration.

This festival is the culmination of the Cultural Olympiad which was part of our promise to the International Olympic Committee when we won the Games in 2005. The Cultural Olympiad was the idea of Pierre de Coubertin, the inventor of the modern games. He had a vision of a global Olympic movement, combining sport, culture and education. And of course Britain is internationally-renowned for arts and culture.

The bid team knew that by aligning sports with the arts, Britons from all walks of life would gain from London 2012. You may not live in London, sport may or may not be your thing, but this is a way you still get a chance to enjoy the celebrations.

The Cultural Olympiad is a four-year project to encourage people (especially the young) to become involved in arts and culture. It also aims to enable community-led projects to take place that wouldn’t have happened without the spur of the Games. Take, for example, the Lakes Alive spectacular on Windermere, which brought £3m into the local community last year alone. Next year this will be one of the first events to kick off the London 2012 Festival – a free light and fire spectacular.
Another great example is The Itch of the Golden Nit!, an animated film by The Tate Movie Project. More than 9,000 children conceived and drew the animation in 55 locations.

They worked with Aardman Animations, maker of Wallace & Gromit, and used the latest animation technology. Tate asked children to vote online for which celebrities they wanted to play the cameo roles. They voted for the cream of British comedy, including David Walliams, Miranda Hart, Catherine Tate and Rik Mayall. The film has already been seen on the BBC and will be shown on London 2012 Live Sites in Trafalgar Square and in cities across the UK.

Another central part of the Cultural Olympiad has been London 2012 Open Weekend, supported by BP. This year’s event is set to be the biggest and best yet. There have been 2.4 million participants in Open Weekend since 2008, and in 2011 people have the choice of participating in more than 1,200 events taking place across the UK, including a celebration of Jamaican culture in Birmingham, a floating cinema navigating the Olympic Park waterways, and a culture takeover of Aberdeen by the National Theatre of Scotland, Aberdeen Art Gallery and Aberdeen Performing Arts.

The London 2012 Festival starts on June 21 with a Peace One Day concert produced by Jeremy Gilley and Jude Law at an old army barracks in Derry. This could not be more appropriate. It represents the Olympian ideal begun in Greece almost 3,000 years ago, of an international ceasefire for the duration of the Games – a tradition upheld by the United Nations to this day.

I’m really looking forward to some of the activities lined up – the River of Music is a series of concerts along the banks of the Thames, each focusing on music and performing arts from different parts of the world; the World Shakespeare Festival; Hockney at the Royal Academy; Carnival in Luton; and an exhibition of the newly-announced London 2012 Olympic & Paralympic Posters in Tate Britain – the list goes on. With the absence of next year’s Glastonbury Festival because of the Olympics, BBC Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend will take place instead. The project will see up to 80 acts no doubt put smiles on many faces and quickly establish itself as an annual event. Leona Lewis, Mike Leigh, Damon Albarn, Toni Morrison and Plan B have already signed up to be part of the festival. There will be more news in October.

What is exciting is the way artists and art organisations are collaborating. At the Royal Opera House we’re doing a new production of Berlioz’s Olympian work Les Troyens (The Trojans); we've partnered with BP to present the Olympic Museum, a free exhibition telling the story of the Olympic Games; and the Royal Ballet is working with the National Gallery to create Titian 2012 – seven choreographers joining forces with leading contemporary artists to produce three new dance works in response to three great paintings by Titian. Everyone is going the extra mile to present the best of what we do when the eyes of the world are on London in 2012.
One of the elements I have been particularly proud of is Unlimited, the biggest ever commission for deaf and disabled artists, placing them in the mainstream where they belong.

In a time of universal cutbacks we’ve been very appreciative of the support coming from a wide base of sources: National Lottery funding which was earmarked for the Olympics through the Olympic Lottery Distributor and Legacy Trust UK; Arts Council support; the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games; the Greater London Authority; Olympic commercial sponsors and other arts organisations. Many are contributing and much of the funding goes directly into the projects. Two years ago, the budget was planned to be bigger, but we have taken cuts like everyone else.

What I can say is that we are offering value for this money. We are creating seven million opportunities across the country to be part of the London 2012 Festival for free, and I think we’ll have created even more by the time it arrives. We want to make sure that this will be the biggest show in our lifetime. It has to be good, it has to be accessible, it has to be worth it.

When the Olympic flame was lit for London 2012, it didn’t just ignite our sporting hopes. It gave us the very best chance to show that this country is a world-beater in art and cultural pursuits. The Cultural Olympiad and London 2012 Festival could turn out to be one of the great legacies of the London Games – a legacy which will last well after the torch has passed to Rio. Tony Hall is chairman of the Cultural Olympiad and chief executive of the Royal Opera House.

Roads to be closed for London 2012 Olympics cycle race test

London 2012 chairman Seb Coe with Michael Day, chief executive of Historic Royal Palaces, outside Hampton Court Palace where the Olympic time-trial events will start and finish Organisers are confident next month’s test event for the London 2012 road race will prove a hit with the public in what is set to be one of the toughest logistical exercises of the Games.

The London-Surrey Cycle Classic will take place over a 140-kilometre (87-mile) course, with some 148 riders from 26 different teams. The August 14 race starts and finishes at the Mall, winding out south-west across Putney Bridge, through Richmond Park and Hampton Court, then on into Surrey and back towards a hilly circuit around picturesque Box Hill and up to central London.

It is one of the few non-ticketed events for the Olympics, with thousands expected to line the route - although access to Zig Zag Road at Box Hill, which is a protected Site of Special Scientific Interest, will be limited - in anticipation of what could be a first gold for Britain through Tour de France racer Mark Cavendish on July 28 next year.

However, there will be a huge logistical operation to back up the competition.

Just like for 2012, the London-Surrey Classic will see many roads closed and parking restrictions in place for certain periods before and after the race, along with 87km of barriers and diversions of local bus services, although the District Line underground line will be fully operational.

Both London Organising Committee (LOGOC) and Transport for London are confident the event can run smoothly.

TfL managing director of surface transport Leon Daniels said: “This is a really exciting event and will attract a lot of spectators, which will be good news for business in the area because it will get an influx of people.

“We have worked very carefully to make sure all the local arrangements are put in place, giving people clear details of what the plans are well in advance, how best to see it, how best to avoid it and to advise people who are not interested in this race that this is not the day to be trying to drive across south-west London and into Surrey.”

Daniels added: “It is a huge logistical job. We have written directly and personally to the residents who are within 400m of the route in London and 100m in Surrey.

“There is a campaign with the media and on the internet which sets out the general area, and that is a zone where we are advising people that some journeys may be difficult by road, because of people going to and from the event, so travellers should plan ahead.

“We are working hard to make sure people are fully aware using all the channels we can, increasing in intensity as we get closer to race week itself.”

The London Olympics have certainly captured the imagination of the British public.

LOCOG cycling manager Simon Lillistone believes the road races offer a unique opportunity for spectators.

He said: “We are really hoping as well as giving the athletes a very credible race and testing a lot of the elements we are looking to test in our preparations, that we also use this as a tool to really start engaging people around road cycling.

“It is one of the few free events in London 2012, and we have the opportunity for thousands of people to engage with this on their doorstep, in the park along the route.

“It is a fantastic opportunity to see an Olympic event first-hand and hopefully link in with what London 2012 is here to do, really inspire young people.

“We are going to have some fantastic British athletes on the track, there is fantastic success with Mark Cavendish on the road at the Tour de France, and it will be a rare opportunity for the public to see these athletes up close and personal.”

 
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