Rowan Atkinson wins the Opening Ceremony
LiveLeak.com - Rowan Atkinson 2012 Olympics
This thread is for the positive side of the Olympics and comments on the competition. Got political comments? There's another thread for the downer stuff.
Terrific opening ceremony. Entertaining and superbly managed. Amazing torch lighting. Loved the video of the Queen and James Bond paragliding into the stadium. Hat's off to the Brits. Nice job.
To be Truly ignorant, Man requires an Education - Plato
Rowan Atkinson wins the Opening Ceremony
LiveLeak.com - Rowan Atkinson 2012 Olympics
Meddle not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup.
Abusing Yellow is meant to be a labor of love, not something you sell to the highest bidder.
I agree, the opening ceremony was special. I thought the "social progress" theme was very well done. Probably the weakest moment was the "Gosh" health-care thing. But overall it was masterfully done. And the little touches like Mr. Bean and James Bond were endearing.
I suspect everyone there was holding their breath over all those torches in the wind. When the copper leaves were lit, it was something like "meh", that's OK" but when they began to move... brilliant.
Now I know what is going to happen in the days to come. Fatal overdoses of women's gymnastics and the other major sports, while 85% of the olympics is almost ignored.
Beach Volleyball!!!!!![]()
Meddle not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup.
Abusing Yellow is meant to be a labor of love, not something you sell to the highest bidder.
I married a world-class volleyball player. 6' tall. She was All-American NCAA. Looong legs, and yeah one of those body types. She still fits into her college clothing too.![]()
Meddle not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup.
Abusing Yellow is meant to be a labor of love, not something you sell to the highest bidder.
You're talking 1984, when we used FILM cameras. You know, that light-sensitive funny plastic stuff that requires chemicals to see the picture.![]()
PM Sent.Now get your ass back on topic. I'll do it too.
Hell, I was just teasing. I won't even open the message![]()
Meddle not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup.
Abusing Yellow is meant to be a labor of love, not something you sell to the highest bidder.
Although he didn't make the final, Kieran Behan is already the standout story of these games. Medal winners impress me, but it is often the other stories that are truly inspiring. Few people can have fought longer odds to make an Olympic games. There was some controversy over a rule change that limited the larger teams while allowing more athletes from minor nations. If that means Behan gets a spot over the 6th placed US or Chinese gymnast I'll take that.
Saw this kid interviewed today - when the interviewer asked him to say something about his mum he just burst into tears. After reading this I understand why.
LONDON — Before life threw more adversity at him than one person ought to bear, Kieran Behan told his mother that he would be an Olympic gymnast someday.
He was just a boy, maybe 6 years old, when he fell in love with gymnastics, drawn to the thrill of it while watching the Summer Games, enamored by the possibility that he too could defy gravity and flip through the air as if he could fly.
But that was before a series of injuries, two so severe that doctors told him he would never walk again: a botched leg operation that caused nerve damage and a brain injury that kept him from doing even the simplest things, like sitting or eating.
Yet Behan, a 5-foot-4-inch plucky phoenix, pushed on.
“Doctors told me, stop thinking about your crazy dreams because you’ll never walk again and you must accept that it’s over for you,” Behan said. “But I just kept saying: ‘No, no, no — this is not the rest of my life. This is not how it’s going to play out.’ And look at me now, an Olympian. They said it was impossible, but I did it.” ....
“Kieran has gone through so much,” his mother, Bernie Behan, said through tears. “He deserves this.”
Kieran Behan started gymnastics when he was 8, showing a talent for the tumbling. But soon came the first of many obstacles: when he was 10, he found a lump the size of a golf ball on his left leg.
During surgery to remove what turned out to be a benign tumor, doctors kept a tourniquet on him too tight for too long, causing nerve damage that left Behan with limited feeling in his left foot. It also caused such pain that even a slight brush against his leg would cause him to scream. He could not walk, heading to school at one point to the taunts of other youngsters who already had it out for him.
“They’d say, ‘Oh, look at the cripple,’ and that was so hard for me because, already, I was doing gymnastics and I was short, and I was doing a girls’ sport,” he said. “So a lot of times, I would sit at the kitchen window and watch all the kids running around the park and playing football, and I’d get pretty emotional. All I wanted to do was be an ordinary kid again.”
Doctors warned him that the damaged nerves might never regenerate. A psychiatrist told him to prepare him for life in a wheelchair. They were wrong.
Although it took 15 months, Behan did become an ordinary kid again. And he went back to gymnastics.
But about eight months after he returned from his leg injury, disaster hit again. In what he calls a freakish accident, he smacked the back of his head on the metal horizontal bar during a routine and tumbled to the ground in a lump.
The accident caused a traumatic brain injury and severe damage to the vestibular canal of his inner ear, which affected his balance so much that even the slightest movement could cause Behan to black out. And black out he did, hundreds of times, maybe thousands of times, his mother said, as Behan struggled to turn his head, feed himself and walk without stumbling and looking as if he were dead drunk.
Frustrated by his slow progress after two months in the hospital, Bernie Behan went home with her son in her arms because doctors would not discharge him. She quit her job as an aerobics instructor to care for him.
“He kept telling the doctors, ‘I can walk — tell them, Mom, that I can walk,’ and my heart was breaking,” she said. “I’d go to the car park and cry my eyes out, then walk back and say: ‘Yes, Kieran, you can do this. We can do this. I believe you, son.’ ”
Nearly two years after his accident and after unrelenting physical therapy, Kieran Behan — the miracle boy, doctors said — regained his hand-eye coordination and got back onto his feet again.
And back to gymnastics he went. He swept the floors of his gym to finance his training and jumped subway turnstiles to get to practice because there was no cash to spare. His parents held bake sales, candy sales and carwashes to raise money for him.
But, again, there were rough patches. He broke his arm. He fractured his wrist. He visited the hospital so often as a teenager, officials there suspected he was being abused. In 2009, he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee, requiring six months of rehabilitation.
Yet he did not quit the sport.
But in 2010, six weeks before his senior debut at the European championships, he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his other knee. After all he had endured, the injury nearly derailed him.
“He made it back from all of those other setbacks, but that one was the hardest for him because the championships were just around the corner, and he was ready,” said Simon Gale, one of his coaches. “He couldn’t handle it. I wouldn’t say he was suicidal, but I’m just glad that his girlfriend was there to watch him at night.”
His mother said she had wondered, “How much more of these injuries can he take?”
Behan, though, did what he innately did best: he picked himself up again. And he returned to gymnastics. He said he could not live without it and never doubted he would be back.
Finally, in 2011, he reaped the benefits of his persistence. He won three World Cup medals, including Ireland’s first World Cup gold medal, in the floor exercise, setting himself up for 2012 — his best year yet.
But Behan, who has a slightly torn rotator cuff and was frightened of further injury, could barely make it through his last practice before heading to the Olympics last week. When he reached the end of it, he laughed. Then, he cried.
“I felt like I was in a fairy tale when I got here,” he said of the London Games. “All I could think about was: ‘Is this a dream? Tell me this really happening.’ ”
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/27/sp...pagewanted=all
Win nervously lose tragically - Reds C C
Go ahead! She's the real deal. Still plays at a high level and coaches too. I'm proud of her. And she's a veteran. She tried out for the Olympics in 1984, but it was a bit of a scam in that the coaches had already picked the team, yet they had to (by rules) offer tryouts.
I take back what I said about TV coverage. I watched some air rifle, which was surprisingly cool, and fencing. They are showing more of the obscure sports, which I really like.
Was working so I missed the opening, I am sure can "find" it somewhere in the net.
“the misery of being exploited by capitalists is nothing compared to the misery of not being exploited at all” -- Joan Robinson
Pete,
Astounding story of perseverance! Truly heroic and Kieran is representing far more than simply Ireland.
"This aggression will not stand, man!" Jeff Lebowski
"The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else when you're uncool." Lester Bangs
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