Originally posted by salymap
View Post
Anyone forTennis.......Wimbledon 2013
Collapse
X
-
amateur51
Originally posted by mangerton View PostI think by computers, saly, but the effect is much the same. They are rather good though, aren't they? I saw a tennis subtitle last week which said "places bended". It took me a minute or two to work that one out.
Comment
-
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostOh I wonder if it's Voice Recognition Software - that can come up with some choice blunders if it's not 'trained' properly to an individual's voice.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostExplain to me how the OP was ironic, Mr Pee ... no conferring, no recourse to legal aid
But, as Mr Pee said, back to the tennis. Any up-and-coming young star of the male persuasion worth noticing, aesthetically speaking ?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostI've no idea - you'd have to ask Mary & Sir Velo. I don't know enough about Sir Velo's attitudes to feminism & sexism to be able to tell that his one-word post was intended ironically. If it had been Scottycelt I would have been absolutely certain
Where does scotty fit in to the discussion?
Comment
-
-
OK, back on topic. (That's enough smileys: - Ed)
This year is the first time that my work arrangements have enabled me to watch Wimbledon on television in about 20 years. To say it is not as good as I remember it is an understatement along the lines of HS2 is a controversial project.
Firstly: the BBC seems to have made it a requirement that only voyeurs can be employed as cameramen. I can only assume that is the case given the intrusive, close ups of either the prettiest girl, or the person with the strangest facial make up, with which we are inflicted after every point (this can be downright unpleasant when watched on HD on a large screen). Whatever happened to wide angle camera shots of the crowd at a reasonable distance? Moreover, the break between points used to be taken up with replays and analysis of the point just played. This seems to have been ditched in favour of voyeuristic celeb watching with which we are all apparently obsessed.
Secondly, the commentators are not as good. McEnroe is an exception but he talks too much and, unforgivably, interrupts others (especially the women, despite his claims that his four daughters make him a guru on the subject of feminine psychology). The others feel they need to pep up their commentary with references to celebs and other sporting events (Lions, Ashes, F1) at every opportunity. Stick to the tennis guys!
Worse, even, is the post match interview. The one with Laura Robson hit a new low for banality yesterday. Instead of asking her how she managed to claw her way back into the match, the pitiable interviewer obviously thought that the only way to interact with a teenager was to ask her whether she had had any more tweets from pop stars. To her credit, Robson's response showed embarrassment and bemusement at the question.
Finally, and beyond belief is the travesty of the one hour highlight programme. Except that in the one hour you get about 25 minutes of actual tennis. The rest of the time is made up of fatuous analysis and features on the most fanciable player in the tournament, or bar games between Pat Cash and Tracy Austin as the BBC's riposte to the "Battle of the Sexes" between Murray and S Williams. Obviously, the BBC has decided that we can't be watching the programme for the tennis alone so must be provided with our fix of triviality.
Jeez, I give up!
Comment
-
-
amateur51
Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostOObviously, the BBC has decided that we can't be watching the programme for the tennis alone so must be provided with our fix of triviality.
Jeez, I give up!
Comment
-
Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostThis year is the first time that my work arrangements have enabled me to watch Wimbledon on television in about 20 years. To say it is not as good as I remember it is an understatement along the lines of HS2 is a controversial project.
Oh, and whilst in every way regrettable, I think the pop star question was a reference to an earlier conversation about Robson's Twitter habits. I thought she dealt with it admirably.
Comment
Comment