We have all come to learn than things incessantly reported on
television, and its cable bastard, frequently become accepted fact, even
if absurd. Recent examples of this include the idea that
unusual, record setting snow storms in places that never used to get
snow are evidence that
disproves
the existence of global warming, that
the United
States has the greatest health care in the world and that
"nobody"
really likes President Obama anymore, and he is likely to be a one term
president.
Knowing full well that the assertions, by the
blow dried hair cutie pies, or faux goober former Congressmen, who show
up on my tv screen, not to talk about their only expertise---the
romantic ups and downs of movie stars and other Important
Celebrities---but to pontificate on the issues of our day, will pay not
the slightest attention, a few suggestions about how to report on the
winter Olympics are offered here:
1. When a skier, figure
skater or other participant in an individual sport, "we" do not win any
medals. We love our country for what it stands for (or has stood for)
in the world. That a very good skater was born in or lives in the
United States does not make their well deserved medal ours.
2.
Indeed, many of us watch at least one team sport---ice hockey which use
professional players who otherwise skate for National Hockey League
team---rooting less for a specific team, than that the players on our
local N.H.L. teams do well and, most importantly, do not get hurt.
3.
Your faithful correspondent was born in a city generally referred
to in full as "Boston, Massachusetts" not "Boston, U.S." Canada, too,
is a large country. Vancouver, B.C., (and, not, thus, Vancouver,
Canada) is further away from Toronto and Montreal, as it is from Los
Angeles and Chicago. Nobody speaks French in B.C., except for the
requirements of the federal (Canadian) government which requires an
excessive use of French in government and commercial business so that
people from Quebec and New Brunswick can travel out west and at least be
able to mail a letter back home.
4. On roughly the same
point, the name of our country is "the United States" or more fully "the
United States of America." Despite the lovely song about how beautiful
we are, our country's name is not "America." If "Americans" have won
the most medals, do they include those won by Canadians or Mexicans or
others who are from the western hemisphere? And, really, who cares?
5.
Except for a few hockey games, by the way, many of us will never
watch the Olympics. If NBC is required to have all of its news programs
serve as commercials for their Olympic coverage, we will have to see
how Diane Sawyer is doing in the anchor chair or see what's up with
Katie Couric these days.