Olympics Los Angeles 2028: Summer Games Proved that Thrills and Fun Are Back!

Summer Olympics Proved: Fun and Good Vibes Are Back!

Simone Biles, Stephen Curry
Getty Images

The 2024 Olympics proved that we are so back.

The quadrennial event serves as celebration of sport, chance for the host city to peacock before a global audience; a chance to check in on where broadcasting technology is at.

But it’s also a vibe check of sorts, a moment to pause and reflect on the state of things, defined as broadly as possible. And after a COVID-delayed and then COVID-restrained Tokyo games, during which elite athletes performed to empty rooms and one of the world’s great cities sat cosseted and unable to show itself, Paris in 2024 gleamed with something Olympics fans had been yearning for last cycle: possibility.

Swift and Beyoncé, contributing to NBC broadcast, were excited about the Games engagement with culture.

Much as the NFL has increasingly leaned on music to bolster the Super Bowl even among those who don’t know a tackle from a tight end, the Olympics’ opening and closing ceremonies felt vibrant, chic and contemporary. They were conducted with a showmanship that showed French culture to its best advantage (just as the Games’ staging, with the Eiffel Tower seemingly omnipresent in outdoor competition) and that fueled conversation beyond the Games themselves.

The NBC broadcast sometimes leaned on celebrity culture to their detriment; the integration of Snoop Dogg and Jimmy Fallon into the proceedings could sometimes feel clumsy.

They nailed the streaming experience, providing a sort of choose-your-own-adventure for the Olympics-curious on Peacock. And the memeable moments that arose organically, from French pole-vaulter Anthony Ammirati seeming to disqualify himself after a part of his anatomy brushed the bar to the Australian breaker known as “Raygun” debuting the sport of breakdancing at the Games with more eagerness than skill, seemed to be conveyed in a spirit of good fun. Even J. K. Rowling and Megyn Kelly (the latter of whom, in a parallel universe, was commentating on the games in her capacity as a host of “Today”) couldn’t dampen the bonhomie. Both the controversy over misinformation spread about female boxer Imane Khelif and the one over a Bacchanalian image in the opening ceremony perceived as an insult to “The Last Supper” faded from view. Khelif won the gold; more people, surely, remember Celine Dion’s triumphant appearance to open the Games than the tableau.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter