Dow Jones Insight - 2008 Olympics Media Pulse: Global Sponsors Focus on the Feel-Good; Games Not So 'Clean' With Environmental a
July 29 2008 - 4:05PM
PR Newswire (US)
NEW YORK, July 29 /PRNewswire/ -- Results from the Dow Jones
Insight - Olympics Media Pulse show that heading into the Opening
Ceremonies, top global sponsors Coca-Cola, McDonald's and Visa are
leading total media coverage with ad campaigns focused on goodwill
for the Olympic Games. All three, which cumulatively garnered 59
percent of traditional media mentions and 67 percent of social
media mentions during the period of July 15-28, have introduced ads
centered on themes of global unity, working together and achieving
dreams. Athlete Doping Along With Pollution Makes Things Murky for
Beijing As the start of the Beijing Olympic Games draws closer,
coverage of athlete doping is starting to catch up with the
hot-button issue of pollution concerns, according to analysis of
traditional and social media sources tracked by Dow Jones Insight.
While coverage of Beijing's polluted air and water was more
frequent (2,094 mentions) than doping (1,186 mentions) during the
10 days from July 14-23, doping coverage has been increasing in the
wake of the World Anti-Doping Agency's vows that the Beijing Games
would be "the cleanest Games in history." -- Mentions of doping
increased to a high of 177 on July 24 with coverage of U.S. swimmer
Jessica Hardy testing positive for the banned stimulant
clenbuterol. Hardy may pursue appeals with the American Arbitration
Association and the Court of Arbitration for Sport in order to hold
onto her spot on the U.S. team. -- Doping coverage was also driven
by news that Greek sprinter Katerina Thanou was included on
Greece's official roster for Beijing. Thanou served a two-year ban
after missing a mandatory doping test prior to the 2004 Athens
Games. Thanou had won a silver medal in the 100 meters in Sydney in
2000. -- The issue of doping will likely remain in the headlines as
Jamaica Olympic Association (JOA) Chief Mike Fennell has confirmed
that a member of Jamaica's athletics team for the Beijing Games
tested positive for a banned substance, but he has refused to
identify the athlete. Unlike Athens in 2004, Beijing is Under Media
Microscope for Environmental Issues Beijing is not the first
Olympic host city subjected to scrutiny of its air quality and
pollution. In the months before the start of the 2004 Athens
Olympics, that city's notorious air pollution was the subject of
some media coverage. But it was small compared to the attention
focused on Beijing's problems thus far. Coverage of Beijing's
environmental issues has been more than 10 times that of Athens' in
the seven months prior to each event, according to analysis by Dow
Jones Insight of more than 2,000 mainstream media sources published
during both time periods. From January 1 through July 31, 2004,
there were 353 documents mentioning environmental issues related to
the Athens Games in the analyzed newspapers, magazines and
newswires. In comparison, during the first seven months of 2008,
there were 4,216 documents mentioning environmental issues related
to Beijing as the host city. The striking difference in coverage
may be a reflection of current growing worldwide concern over the
state of the environment and the effects of global warming, whereas
before the 2004 Games the primary focus of attention was on
domestic and international terrorism in Greece. Sprinters Powell
and Gay Edge Out Phelps to Lead Press Coverage For the first time
since Dow Jones Insight began analyzing media coverage heading into
the Beijing Olympic Games, Michael Phelps is not the most
talked-about athlete, at least in traditional media sources (print
and online). During the period of July 15-28, Jamaican sprinter
Asafa Powell garnered the most coverage, with 17 percent of the
total 3,807 mentions of athletes being tracked. Following closely
behind among the top 10 athletes was U.S. sprinter Tyson Gay, with
13 percent. Powell and Gay, along with Jamaica's Usain Bolt, are
expected to fight it out for the gold medal in the glamour event of
the track and field competition -- the 100 meters. In third was
Australian swimmer Grant Hackett with 444 mentions for 12%,
followed by Phelps with 432 mentions for 11%. U.S. gymnast Paul
Hamm was next with 365 mentions for 10%. Hamm was back in the news
this week when he announced he was withdrawing from the team
because of concerns that his wrist injury would not be fully healed
by the start of the Games. Chinese hurdler Liu Xiang and U.S.
swimmer Dara Torres each had 9% of the total mentions. Australian
hurdler Jana Rawlinson had 254 mentions, or 7%, mainly covering her
failure to make the 2008 Australian team. Rounding out the top 10
were U.S. track athletes Jeremy Wariner, with 7%, and Allyson
Felix, with 6%. However, when it comes to social media, Phelps is
still the fan favorite, dominating coverage in message boards and
blogs with 28 percent of the mentions tracked, which was nearly
double the mentions for Dara Torres, who had the second-highest
total. Top Ten Athletes (Traditional Press) 1. Asafa Powell 2.
Tyson Gay 3. Grant Hackett 4. Michael Phelps 5. Paul Hamm 6. Liu
Xiang 7. Dara Torres 8. Jana Rawlinson 9. Jeremy Wariner 10.
Allyson Felix Top Ten Athletes (Social Media) 1. Michael Phelps 2.
Dara Torres 3. Tyson Gay 4. Paul Hamm 5. Asafa Powell 6. Liu Xiang
7. Shawn Johnson 8. Allyson Felix 9. Paula Radcliffe 10. Jeremy
Wariner The Dow Jones Insight - Olympics Media Pulse provides a
high-level view of a competitive media landscape and demonstrates
how athletes, sponsors and issues are covered in the media and how
that coverage changes over time. Dow Jones Insight combines proven
research methodologies, trusted content and advanced text-mining
and visualization tools to deliver strategic qualitative and
quantitative media measurement metrics. Organizations use the
analysis to nurture their reputation, demonstrate the effectiveness
of their communications strategies and achieve business objectives.
The platform processes nearly a million articles, Web pages, blogs
and message board posts per day. The charts are available at
http://www.dowjonesinsight.com/olympics and can be reproduced in
print and online media. For further information about the Dow Jones
Insight solutions or The Dow Jones Insight - 2008 Olympics Media
Pulse, please contact Shannon Sullivan at +1 609 627 2312 or .
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