Tag Archives: vancouver

Andrey Ternovskiy of Chatroulette

TECH BUZZ : Meet the 17-year-old creator of everybody's favorite new random-video chat generator, Chatroulette . Between watching all of the young athletes in Vancouver this week and now this, I'm starting to feel extremely unaccomplished. The Best Links: Chatroulette’s Creator, 17, Introduces Himself Mysterious Creator of ChatRoulette Revealed: A 17 Year-Old Kid, Naturally Andrey Ternovskiy – Chatroulette Creator 17-Year Old Wiz Behind ChatRoulette Reveals Identity The 24 Best Chat Roulette Screenshots [NSFW] Catroulette [VIDEO] Read

And the Gold Medal for Most Racially Insensitive Figure Skating Routine Goes to…

Tonight, the Olympics’ only black figure skater will perform Out of Africa with his white partner. And then there are the censored Russian ice dancers whose “Aboriginal dance” used to include brown skin suits, fake eucalyptus, and warpaint. Should we take offense, or take it with a grain of salt? Olympic diversity is, after all, stunning: Diversity of bodies, culture, and language, intermingling in a happy zone of sportsmanship and brotherhood. But with 82 nations parading through Vancouver this year—each angling for its moment of glory—multiculturalism may err on the side of trite. (See: Opening Ceremony, Parade of Nations. Natives beating drums! Bermudans in Bermuda shorts ! ) In no sport is this minstrelsy of nations more apparent than in kitschy, gimmicky, stage-crafted world of figure skating. Two examples from this year’s ethnic masquerade on ice, and whether you should be offended: Exhibit A: Mixed-Race German Pair Chooses an Awkward Song Tonight , the Olympic’s only black figure skater will fling a petite blonde woman in time with music from the movie Out of Africa . Here’s a preview of Aliona Savchenko and Robin Szolkowy ‘s Out of Africa routine, which led them to a first place finish at the 2009 ISU Grand Prix: Savchenko and Szolkowy are currently ranked second in the pairs figure skating competition. To be fair, “black” may not be how Robin Szolkowy sees himself—he is the half-African son of a Tanzanian doctor and German nurse, born and raised in Germany. (Which once colonized Tanzania! But mostly it was the Brits.) But then you add the fact that their coach, Ingo Steuer, used to work for the Stasi , which is culturally loaded in a totally different way, and at least one racially persnickety American (me) feels like she’s having one of those not-totally-racist-but-not-comfortable-either ” No, Grandpa Harry, nobody says ‘negro’ anymore ” conversations. Conclusion: Don’t be offended, but do avoid making eye contact with Grandpa Harry during this routine. Exhibit B: Russian Ice Dancing Champs Perform ‘Aboriginal Song’ World ice dancing champions Oksama Domnina and Maksim Shabalin first horrified international audiences when they donned brown skin suits, war paint, and eucalyptus leaves to perform an “Aboriginal Song” for an Original Dance in January: Indigenous Australians protested that the routine as ” very offensive ,” ” cultural theft ,” embarrassingly juvenile , and that the didgeridoo was all wrong . After some bureaucratic haggling, Domnina and Shabalin agreed to split the difference: They’ll ditch the costumes, but will use the original music and choreography for their Olympic performance next Monday . The pair say they meant no harm, they just didn’t want to do “another Slavic dance.” In an athletic field where women routinely don flamenco negligees to sashay like a gypsy to Carmen, where illusion netting is never quite the right shade, and in a nation where they don’t have aborigines, you can sort of see where they’re coming from, right? And yet, you sort of can’t, because how could a well-traveled world-class Olympic possibly think using a “skin suit” to alter the color of his “skin” is a good idea? Conclusion: Be offended, and pity the victims of cultural relativism. There are a lot of them.

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And the Gold Medal for Most Racially Insensitive Figure Skating Routine Goes to…

Harry Potter Wins First Gold Of The Games

Switzerland's Simon Ammann, a Harry Potter look-a-like, won the first gold medal of the Vancouver Winter Olympics in ski jumping. It was simply magical. The Best Links: Ammann soars to Games first gold View

Olympic Luger Nodar Kumaritashvili Dies In Crash

Georgian racer was killed while training for upcoming Olympics events. By Josh Wigler Paramedics attend to Nodar Kumaritashvili after his fatal accident in Vancouver on Friday Photo: Peter Parks/AFP/Getty Images Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili died after an accident at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, according to multiple reports. He was 21 years old. While practicing on the Olympic luge track, Kumaritashvili was ejected from his sled at a speed of roughly 80 miles per hour and, according to the Seattle Times, “flew completely off the track at a high rate of speed. He immediately smashed off of metal poles adjacent to the track.” According to Agence France Presse, Kumaritashvili was placed on a stretcher and taken away on an ambulance immediately following the accident. He died shortly thereafter. “It is a tragedy for his family and the team,” said Thomas Bach, vice president of the International Olympics Committee. “It casts a shadow over the opening ceremony.” Kumaritashvili’s death comes shortly after another recent accident on the Olympic luge track. Days ago, 2002 and 2006 gold medalist Armin Zoeggler of Italy also suffered a crash on the course but survived the incident without serious injury. The back-to-back accidents have raised some serious safety concerns amongst competitors, officiators and others. “Our first thoughts are with the family, friends and colleagues of the athlete,” IOC president Jacques Rogge stated in a press conference attended by The Vancouver Sun . The whole Olympic Family is struck by this tragedy, which clearly casts a shadow over these Games.” “This is a terrible accident,” added Josef Fendt, president of the International Luge Federation. “This is the gravest thing that can happen in sport, and our thoughts and those of the ‘luge family’, are naturally with those touched by this event.”

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Olympic Luger Nodar Kumaritashvili Dies In Crash

InfoMania Salutes Our Olympic Unhopefuls…with Burning Snowmen

To honor the opening of the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympic Games, infoMania brings you the best snow explosions from all of YouTube. infoMania is a half-hour satirical news show that airs on Current TV. The show puts a comedic spin on the 24-hour chaos and information overload brought about by the constant bombardment of the media. Hosted by Conor Knighton and co-starring Brett Erlich, Sarah Haskins, Ben Hoffman, Bryan Safi and Sergio Cilli, the show airs on Thursdays at 10 pm Eastern and Pacific Times and can be found online at http://current.com/infomania/ or on Current TV. And make sure to check out our facebook profile for special features at http://infomaniafacebook.com . added by: Conor_Knighton

The Winter Olympics Are the Best Olympics

So the Vancouver Winter Olympics start tonight , and, awful incidents aside , I am pretty fucking excited. What’s that? The Winter games suck? Can’t hold a candle to the Summer? Well, Nancy Naysayer, I beg to differ. I have to admit that a large part of my love for the Winter Games is sentimental. The first Olympics I really remember watching — sat on the couch every night and marveled at the variety of countries and weird little snow sports and, most of all, the swirling drama of the ice skating rink — were the Albertville games in ’92. Sure Barcelona intrigued me later that summer (remember when both games were in the same year?? Crazy!), but Albertville truly captured my heart. There was that horse-jawed wonder Kristi Yamaguchi who skated to a gold while future stars like Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan nipped at her heels. And there was Paul Wylie, that tuft-headed Harvard grad (ohhh a Boston connection!) who glided and hopped to a silver in the men’s icecapades. My mother told me all about the great Italian skiing star Alberto Tomba and we watched him together, trundling down the mountain to win what would be his last Olympic gold. Plus there were ski jumpers and lugers (hopefully safe-and-sound ones), cartoony looking sports that I’d never seen before. They were my first Olympics and thus the best ones, and they’ve endeared the Winter games to me permanently. That Lillehammer came just two short years later to help shore up the snow-madness (Why me? Why me???) certainly didn’t hurt matters. But there’s also something a little less personal about why I love the Winter. Sure the Summer games have way more events, and feature somewhat more relatable sports, but for me that almost makes them a bit too familiar, too colloquial. No, I don’t often go flipping off of narrow beams or see people jumping between two uneven bars when walking down the street, but we’ve all swam before, we’ve all run, and we’ve probably seen someone throw a javelin at a high school track meet. But the Winter games feel more rarefied, they’re stranger and more hinged on circumstances, on climate and place. Does that, by cruel trick of geography, make the Winter games pretty lily-white? Yes, unfortunately. (Though who can forget the magnificent Surya Bonaly??) But that unpleasant fact aside, the sports at hand feel more like an odd human accomplishment, a sign of people taking hard and icy and snowy situations and making the best of them, strapping two planks to their feet and going flying. Humans persevere in harsh conditions and here’s a fun way to celebrate that. I like that quaintness and ingenuity. It feels slightly more special and small than the big grand-stand Summer games (which, obviously, I am wholeheartedly obsessed with as well). Plus in the golden years of my Olympic boyhood, the Winter games were in quaint little European hamlets that may as well have been from a fairytale. A bunch of internationals coming together every four years, with turgid pomp, to do wacky things on ice and snow? Yes, absolutely, sign me up. It was like Ice World from Mario 3 made manifest. The Winter Olympics could never be in Boston (sorry, Wachusett), so they just seemed all the more magical. The world is terribly big and terribly strange and isn’t that wonderful, is what the TV said to me for those two weeks in ’92. But mostly, guys, it’s the skating. I mean, the skating . Agony, ecstasy, crazy music, crazier clothes. That’s a sport I can really get behind.

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The Winter Olympics Are the Best Olympics

Olympic Skeleton Racer Noelle Pikus-Pace Powered By Taylor Swift, Pampers

‘I really like country music … if I’m too hyped up, I like to chill out,’ says the U.S. Olympic athlete. By James Montgomery Noelle Pikus-Pace Photo: MTV News VANCOUVER — As we’ve mentioned, most members of the U.S. Skeleton team are pretty nuts, unafraid not only to stare death in the face but rocket towards it at 90 miles an hour. Face first. With no brakes. And while one-half of the U.S. women’s team here at the Winter Olympics outwardly embraces the sport’s daredevil mystique (that would be 25-year-old firebrand Katie Uhlaender), her partner does not. The most risqu

U.S. Olympic Team Member Katie Uhlaender Does It All For The Snooki

Meet the skeleton racer who embraces danger, ignores the competition and loves ‘Jersey Shore.’ By James Montgomery Katie Uhlaender Photo: MTV News VANCOUVER — The Olympic sport of skeleton takes its rather ominous name from the stripped-to-the-bone sleds that athletes use to rocket down ice tracks, and not from the fact that you can totally die doing it. But still, when you’re throwing yourself face-first downhill at 90 miles an hour, your chin hovering inches above the ice, with no brakes and no way to steer, well, you tend to think about stuff like death (or at least serious bodily harm) on a fairly regular basis. The key — at least to U.S. Olympic team member Katie Uhlaender — is not just to be OK with that fact, but to revel in it. “You’re going really, really fast. Head first. And, to be honest, that’s what drew me to it,” Uhlaender laughed. “I was 19 and anything that looked scary and challenging, I was like, ‘I wonder if I can take it?’ So I tried it, and eight weeks later, I was National Champion. It just came naturally to me; the relaxed chaos of it. The intensity of going so fast, and inside you’re just really calm and taking it all in.” And that attitude, which extends to her off-the-track life as well (in addition to hurtling down ice at terrifying speeds, Uhlaender spent time working behind the scenes on CBS’ “Survivor,” where she tested immunity challenges to make sure no contestants croaked) has made her great, and a favorite to medal at the Vancouver games. She’s already won two Skeleton World Cup championships and appeared well on her way to a third before a pair of nasty knee injuries — one of which involved a snow mobile — slowed her down. And yes, she’ll show you the scars. “I shattered my kneecap twice. I have a really great scar on my left knee,” she said, lifting up her pant leg. “Please excuse the hair. I have no lover, so, in the winter, excuse the hair. Anyway, it’s getting better now. Driving the sled actually hurts, because we use our knees and our shoulders, so putting pressure on my knee to steer the sled, it’s pretty painful.” Part Pink, part punk, Uhlaender is driven, determined and definitely unafraid to speak her mind. It’s a confidence she’s carrying into Vancouver, which means that her competition has officially been put on notice. You know, if she ever actually noticed them in the first place. “I don’t really care about them, to be honest. That’s how I’ve always rolled in, you know, when I first started this sport, took one run and I was like, ‘I’m going to the Olympics.’ And everyone was like, ‘Who’s this chick?’ ” she smiled. “And I was like, ‘I’m Katie Uhlaender.’ That’s kind of the attitude I’m taking here too. That’s what got me here, so why would I try to focus on someone else? If I’m on my game, eat my ice.” And while that swagger motivates her, she’s also come to these Olympic games for another reason: to represent her country. After all, she’s just another proud patriot, not to mention a pretty huge Snooki fan. “Being here, with this flag on your sleeve, it’s something that gives me a lot of pride,” she said. “There’s no better country in the world than the U.S. of A. I mean, where else can you have ‘Jersey Shore’ on TV?” Which is your favorite Winter Olympics sport? Let us know in the comments below! MTV News is on the ground in Vancouver all week, so stay tuned for more coverage of the 2010 Winter Olympics.

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U.S. Olympic Team Member Katie Uhlaender Does It All For The Snooki

Colbert Takes Vancouver (Shepard Fairey Style)

Last night, Stephen Colbert revealed his official poster for the Vancouver Olympics, created by Shepard Fairey. Now it's time for you to take action and show your support by downloading the poster , printing it out and plastering it all over Vancouver. View

The 2010 Opening Ceremonies Drinking Game

The Vancouver Opening Ceremonies are mere hours away!!!! Prepare your adult beverages. View