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Yeltsin, Hostages the Only Ripples in Live TV Coverage

Media: After months of planning, networks report few glitches despite complicated logistics as they capture the arrival of 2000 around the globe.

JANUARY 1, 2000 EXTRA

January 01, 2000|ELIZABETH JENSEN and BRIAN LOWRY, TIMES STAFF WRITERS

NEW YORK — From native dancers in New Zealand ushering in the millennium's first sunrise to Rio's sunny beaches filled with revelers, from confetti-covered partyers in Times Square to rain-drenched celebrations in Los Angeles, television panned its lens across continents, oceans and time zones to capture the dawn of a new century.

Beginning in the early morning hours Friday, CNN, soon joined by ABC and PBS, provided the bulk of the live television coverage available in the U.S. to an audience expected to rise to record levels as midnight approached. Other networks and cable channels joined with their own live coverage as the day progressed.


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Fears of Y2K-induced blackouts proved groundless, with few glitches reported. Those that surfaced were chalked up to the normal difficulties arising from undertaking any live telecast. The only real disruption in broadcasters' plans came with the surprise resignation of Russian President Boris Yeltsin and the release of hostages in Afghanistan.

Despite obvious relief as each time zone marked the arrival of 2000, broadcasters generally remained cautious, with several stressing that it would take several days before the impact of potential Y2K bugs could be gauged adequately.

Coordinating hour after hour of worldwide live coverage was a highly complex operation for both networks and cable channels, requiring thousands of split-second decisions. For ABC, which spent the last eight months planning its 24-hour marathon broadcast from Times Square--the most ambitious of the major networks--anchor Peter Jennings was the visible ringmaster.

But his staying power paled compared with the scene in the windowless ABC control room. There, a team of three executive producers, ABC News President David Westin and more than a dozen supporting players, all under the command of executive director Roger Goodman, coordinated a remarkable technological array.

ABC had 80 of its own cameras deployed around the world and access to 450 more from a consortium put together to provide pictures of the historic night. Goodman, overseeing everything from whether to go live to the South Pole to when to take the word "live" off the screen, had the ability to access 500 communication sources at any one time. Twice that many were providing information, all of which he distilled into the single broadcast going out on the air.

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