First-hand view of reporting the Olympics
It is 2:30 a.m. I have no idea what day it is. The men鈥檚 200-meter dash finished a few hours ago. One measures time by events here, not by days or hours.
I am walking back from the Bird鈥檚 Nest in a light drizzle, thinking that, for journalists, the Olympics are nearly as much about these moments 鈥 in the wee hours of the night, story freshly finished 鈥 as they are about the actual events. The Olympics seem mine now, personal. Other than a Russian TV crew doing a daily wrap-up in front of the glowing red spaceship of the Bird鈥檚 Nest, I am alone.
Or so I thought.
Without warning, four Chinese volunteers appear from nowhere in some sort of 眉ber golf cart, as if a normal cart woke up one day and became a Cadillac Escalade. They are offering me a ride back to the Main Press Center.
Read the rest of my tale :