Thomas Curley, president and chief executive officer of the
Associated Press (AP), talked about AP's plan for the coverage of
the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games in an interview with China
Daily reporter on the sideline of the First Press Briefing on
the 2008 Games in Beijing.
Does AP have a plan for the coverage of the Beijing 2008
Olympic Games?
Yes. Actually, as a result of these meetings (in Beijing), we
will go back and pull together full coverage plan. We are also
planning to double the size of our staff in Beijing in advance of
the Games but to continue after the Games.
We hope to send 250 people to cover the Games as there are only
about 22 people working in Beijing at present.
What will be your focus when covering the
Games?
About 40 percent of the coverage of the Olympic Games will be
not just sports. It will be about culture, tourism, restaurants,
how people live and what they think about the Games. So we will
hopefully be able to cover a lot of the cultural side of life in
China, get to know China better, and get to know the Chinese people
better and what their hops are. And of course it is a fascinating
moment because China is growing so fast. So there will be a lot of
stories.
Will AP invest more in the covering of Beijing
Games?
Olympic Games is very expensive, but this is the biggest story
and the whole world comes to the story. I think there will be even
more interest in it than usual in Beijing because not only is it
China, but the Chinese have done such a good job in preparing for
these Games.
We have been covering China since 1900, for more than a hundred
years. We have a long association and we have some very good
stories already. One of our correspondents actually spent seven
months living with Mao Zedong in the caves in the 1940s. So these
are unusual historical perspectives that we have.
These are going to be the biggest Games and that requires more
people. Also, to be frank, when the Games are in Asia, you have
interesting time zone issues with the US and the Europe. So you
need a few extra people to be awake in the middle of night and
early in the morning.
What do you think of the preparatory work of
BOCOG?
Clearly, Beijing is ahead in every way of any Olympic Games that
we have been associated with. Their preparations are further ahead
than what we have ever seen. These meetings have proven to be very
good. They gave us a very good sense of confidence about what they
are and the next round of detail will be coming on a scheduled
basis. We know that they have a lot of information they share now
and they put it together and communicate in a very easy way. So in
every way, we come away feeling relieved and even more hopeful
about the Beijing Games.
How do you think of the media policies of
BOCOG?
The leadership of BOCOG has stated very clearly that they would
fulfill the contract signed when the Games was awarded and that
contract provides four aspects for the ability of correspondents to
travel. For us, we have to travel to cover the torch relay as it
goes around China and so they have been very clear to confirm that.
We are very excited about that. That's really what we want.
We want to be able to cover more than the sports. We want to
cover how people are living, to go out and talk to the Chinese and
see what they think about the Games and to understand China more.
So, we understand that these will involve many different
authorities; that they will take some conversation to get them
through various authorities. So we look forward to the details that
BOCOG has been very faithful about and made very clear in the
statement. And we are thankful for that.
Do you have any suggestions to BOCOG concerning the
media policies?
No, not for BOCOG. I have told the president of BOCOG that our
people would be available. Our technical people and our sports
people will be available over the next several months if there are
questions and if people want to make changes and plans. So that we
can work together and we can keep the conversation going because
when you are building stadiums and changing things, there will be
changes.
We are the largest delegation for print and photos and we make a
lot of technical demands, logistical demands for rooms, for
photographer positions of the Games. So we want to be able to be
helpful.
(China Daily September 29, 2006)