In its determination to host the best Olympic Games since Chiang Kai-shek was a boy, the Beijing organising committee has clearly not quite grasped the subtleties of Baron de Coubertin’s Olympic maxim: it’s not winning that counts but the taking part.
First we discover the footprint-shaped fireworks in the sky during the Games opening ceremony last Friday night were a fake, the result of some techno-wizardry cooked up in a lab somewhere in downtown Beijing.
Then today, we find out the sweet little girl dressed in red who sang the national anthem on Friday did not sing it at all but was doing a Manilli Vanilli impersonation and lip-synching the whole thing. What we heard, in fact, was a recording of another child, seven-year-old Yang Peiyi, who was dropped from the opening ceremony at the last minute because she was deemed to be not “flawless in image”.
Members of the politburo felt Peiyi’s face was a bit chubby and her teeth slightly crooked, so she was substituted at the last minute. Never mind that she sang like an angel.
That was a serious PR blunder. Giving cosmetic surgery to its opening ceremony has made the Games’ organizers a laughing stock. Now the wow factor has gone. For that stunning creation which had the world drooling is revealed to be a fake — full of collagen lips, breast implants and a botox forehead.
In their desperate quest for perfection, the Beijing authorities have instead left themselves open to ridicule.
There are other signs that de Coubertin’s much-quoted ideal does not have a Chinese equivalent. Or perhaps the message has been lost in translation.
We discover that the Chinese judges at the double trap final yesterday caved in to crowd pressure and awarded points to the Chinese shooter, Hu Binyuan, when he clearly missed his clay targets on three occasions — or so claimed Australian shooter Russell Mark, who was competing in the same event. Thanks to the judges’ generosity, Binyuan took home a bronze medal, when he should have finished fourth or fifth.
There are echoes here of the infamous middleweight final at the Seoul Olympics in 1988 between Park Si-hun, a local hero, and Roy Jones Jr, the brilliant young American who went on to become one of the sport’s greats. In the final, Jones gave a boxing masterclass, recording 86 hits — against Park’s 32 — yet it was the Korean’s hand that was raised after the final bell in a decision that has been described as the worst in the history of amateur boxing.
Before that, at the Moscow Games in 1980, there were allegations that giant doors at the end of the main stadium were opened when Russian throwers were about to hurl their javelins. The ensuing gusts of wind were said to carry the javelins several metres further. The Russians, led by Dainis Kula, won gold, silver and narrowly missed out on bronze in the men’s event.
So the message is clear: once politburos and politicians get involved in Olympic Games, look out. Things are never going to turn out well.
To add to those glitches, there is the issue of those empty seats at the swimming which have supposedly been reserved for corporates. But the corporates are up in the dining room gnawing on their Peking duck and showing scant interest in all that flailing going on down in the pool. As a result, the parents of international swimmers are locked outside and reduced to watching the action on television, or begging for tickets.
Tight security is one thing; complete overkill is another. And, on that theme, did we really need to see members of the People’s Liberation Army goose-stepping their way through a section of the opening ceremony?
So here’s a message to the Chinese authorities — on a website which is bound to feature on their international blacklist, along with the BBC, CNN and the Free Tibet homepage — chill out, get a life and don’t be such tragic wannabes.
As Confucius might have said: Better to compete honestly and finish fourth, than cheat and win. Then you look like complete prat.
I seem to recall that during the 2000 Sydney Olympics, the Australian soldier who escorted winners to the podium was replaced because he was fat with a protruding belly. Maybe the Chinese are just good learners.
The Games are rapidly developing into a farce.
On the same day that we mindlessly celebrate Stephanie Rice’s 2nd gold medal (and all the cliches about her glamor and good looks) the ABC reports that more than 30 people have been killed in Xinjiang Province (in protests and the predictable Chinese response) over the past week alone.
Naturally, no coverage of this tragedy is to be seen on the commercial news stations, presumably for fear of upsetting the Chinese authorities.
The collective view seems to be that it is better to keep quiet, let us bask in the reflected glory of our blinkered nationalism and turn a collective blind eye to the Beijing butchers.
Wake me up when the whole thing is over.
On the firework front, what’s important is that the fireworks did go off, only
part of it wasn’t captured live on TV. So what’s the big deal?
NBC also has augmented its Olympic coverage in the past to set the right
mood. That fire in the studio fireplace during the 2002 Salt Lake Games?
It was just a video. What’s wrong with the Chinese organisers chosing
not to risk the lives of the helicopter crew when live filming is deemed
to be too dangerous?
About the little girl singing, this is only a SHOW, not a COMPETITION.
So what’s the big fuss? Lip-synching has been used all the time,
including in Hollywood and Bollywood movies, as long as the overall
effect is good. Besides, the Chinese organisers themselves revealed it
to give the singer (Yang) a well deserved recognition. Had they not
done it, you wouldn’t have had a chance to be here wasting your time writing
celebrity gossips. What else can you pick on? That the precision of
the dancers and drummers are done by robots? Give me a break. Who
cares if the People’s Liberation Army took part in the performance. We
wanted a good show and we got it.
As for human right, which country is 100% clean? Not Australia and
certainly not U.S.
Get over it Charlie. It’s a fantastic show! The only way to beat the
Chinese is to put more effort into our own show next time round.
Barking anti-China comments only helps to make Australians look
pathetic. Belittling other nations will not make Australia win more
medals. What a loser!
Charles Happell should follow his own advice as written towards the end of his article…chill out, get a life and don’t be such a tragic wannabe. The opening ceremony of the Olympic Games is an entertainment…an entertainment for the people seated in the stand…but more importantly, for the billions who are watching on TV throughout the world. I am no less thrilled by what I saw now that I know some of it was done via computer imagery…or that the voice of one girl was being mimed by another…I was enthralled…I was entertained…I was delighted to see the spectacle of the opening ceremony. And as for decisions that went the wrong way…Charles very nicely points out that Beijing is not unique in that regard. maybe it’s about time for the large body of knockers to reflect on the fact that the Chinese Government has done an amazing job of staging the biggest sporting event in the world…they might not have done it in accordance with the wishes of some in the Western World…but they have done it…and done it well. get over yourself Charles.
Agree with the idea of chill out, get a life and don’t be such tragic wannabes, which should equally be applied to a significant chunk of our population. I’m sick of hearing whinging about drug cheats and per-capita calculations of medal counts. A bit rich to suggest that somehow Australians are in China “just to compete”.