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c. j. dennis, victorian news, funk, computer game, julia morris, triple j, members, fatty acids definition , ellery, themanly daily, bonville international golf resort and country club, volatile fatty acid , stop smoking, australian bloodstock agent, keynote, independent, hey fatty boom boom , e broadcast, images, fat asian girls , associations, | Amanda Smith: fatty Nevertheless, there's nothing like the pictures that the sophisticated technology used in say, Channel Nine's cricket coverage can give you. Although Brian Matthews, the author of a book called 'Oval Dreams', a series of essays about sport, fatty thinks they still haven't got the commentary style right on television. Brian Matthews: The point is we can see the game and these days we can see it beautifully. But my view is fatty that quite a lot of the commentators don't appear to realise that, in cricket and other sports, but let's stick to cricket. We're constantly being told things that we either have already seen or can see by the commentators. To take the sort of positive example: Richie Benaud, in my view, is so good, obviously partly because of his knowledge, experience and all that, he's a very canny judge of the game and so on. |
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But radio sports commentary, where as Tim says, 'You are the message', must be a more difficult job? Tim Lane: If funk anything, I think the television job is more difficult, because as a TV commentator, your role is a real balancing act. You have to try and supplement the pictures, but the fact is the consumer can see, has seen, funk what has happened. So whatever you say about it, the audience might agree, might disagree. If they agree, you're perhaps stating the obvious; if they funk disagree, they think you're a mug. So it can be a bit no-win on TV. Except in the rare circumstance when the commentator can offer something genuinely enlightening to everybody. Not always easy to do, even for people of vast cricketing experience. And that I think is why you hear so much criticism of television commentators, no matter what the sport. I hear it of football commentators, cricket commentators, and tennis commentators and what have you, because I think their situation is rather no-win. On radio, if you present it in a nice personable, interesting, lively way, the audience is going to like you, particularly if their team's winning! |
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