And good luck to each athlete, wherever they're from.
The opening ceremonies have become a one up from the previous venues games were held at. While I do like to see what and how the opening ceremonies are opened I and many more I am sure just want to watch the athletes and cheer on our favorite teams or players.I'm sure the ceremonies will b grand. But its about the athletes.
Ha, yes. Sorry about that ... it's easy to forget that something SO big for us here (which is the culmination of seven years of hard work, media coverage and a lot of anxiety and excitement, plus thousands of volunteers) just doesn't really register anywhere else; the BBC today is just saturated with London and speculation about the opening ceremony, which is all the UK cares about at this precise moment so of course, that's all that's in my head too. I expect we'll be the only ones watching the best of the world's athletes as they take centre stage tonight, an evening which is mostly about celebrating them and their achievements.
I want to see another showdown between Milorad Cavic and Michael Phelps in swimming. I still to this day believe that Milorad won the race in 2008. I sat and watched the replay over and over, staring about 12" away from my parents ginormous HD TV and I will swear on a stack of bibles that Milorad touched the wall first.
Poppylicious, the opening ceremony was amazing!!!!You guys done good!!
Just an observation: on Fb (I can't compare to non-Internet as I don't interact with foreigners on a normal daily basis!) lots of my British friends are going doolally over the Olympics, but it's barely mentioned by anyone else (American, Canadian, Czech, Malaysian, etc.) I was wondering if this was because (and this is aimed at America) you're so used to winning that it doesn't excite you any more ... ?!
WooHoo! (Sorry, felt the need to bump this thread because Team GB have done so fabulously today. I'm getting into the spirit of the games, but I'm not sure if that's because it's based in the UK or because I'm on my hols and have lots of spare time ... )Just an observation: on Fb (I can't compare to non-Internet as I don't interact with foreigners on a normal daily basis!) lots of my British friends are going doolally over the Olympics, but it's barely mentioned by anyone else (American, Canadian, Czech, Malaysian, etc.) I was wondering if this was because (and this is aimed at America) you're so used to winning that it doesn't excite you any more ... ?!