Yep, I'm watchin'. I always watch the Olympics. I caught a little of the badminton last night (Can vs. USA) and little more this morning (INA vs. Ger). Badminton, table tennis and tennis are probably my three favorite sports, so I'll always be looking out to watch them. Unfortunately, Badminton mainly shows in the middle of the night, so watching it could be a problem. I'm curious to see how Howard Bach (USA) does this time. I like to watch swimming, too. Michael Phelps, I'm sure, is one we're all eager to watch, and, how about that Dara Torres? She's incredible! The last Olympics she swam, I believe, was in 2000. Before then, she had already retired, but she said she got the swimming bug and decided to try to make her 4th olympic team at the age of 33, which most people dismissed as wishful thinking. I believe she medaled, then. She retired again, and hadn't swam competitively for 7 years, but then, she said, she "got the swimming bug," again." Fourty-one years of age and making the olympic team? "Not likely", said most, but not only did she make the team, but broke some records in the process. I'm really hoping to catch her races. I'm sure they'll capture tons of media attention. Track and field is always interesting. Nearly every event is fun to watch, or, if not the whole event, at least the last part of it is. (5000m run, marathon...) I caught some women's clean & jerk, this morning, and it was pretty fun to watch, too. I'm sure many of us are anticipating the "Redeem Team's" perfermormance in basketball. They're sounding pretty cocky ("King James" guarantees gold), so that is really adding to the drama and excitement. It's probably generally accepted that our professional NBA ballers (Kobe, Lebron, etc..) are peerless in the sport, but the thing is, they don't normally play together, whereas some of the other teams have been playing together for years and really know how to work as a team, so that actually gives them an advantage. During the opening cermonies, the commentator said that in China, the most popular athletic jersey bought is not that of Yao Ming, but of Kobe Bryant, which was kind of surprising to me. Diving, gymnastics, weight lifting, cycling (including the new BMX!), and the others I mentioned will all be keeping me glued to the TV, over the next couple of weeks.
Oh, and regarding the opening ceremonies--how the heck did they do that? All those people holding the rising and falling boxes--they must have designed the entire program on a computer to devise the rise-and-fall timing for each individual box. It was incredible to see them make life like waves and other patterns just with those boxes being lifted up and down by people. Those drummers were incredible, too. First off, the shear number of them (2008) was a legendary sight. But the way the pounding of each individual drum caused their own drum to illuminate and the way they coordinated their drumming to form letters, numbers and characters was unbelievable. What really got me, though, was when those letters/numbers actually started to scroll from the side towards the middle, like a friggin' LED display. When I saw that, I first thought, "oooohhhh, it's just computerized," but then when they zoomed in and I saw each drummer pounding at the right time, I was, like, "holy crap, that's not a computer, the drummers are doing that!" Un-freakin-believable. The choreographing of some of those routines are monumental tasks, right up there with the building of the ancient pyrymids.