
"You have a very important role! As a first-person-view camera drone, you soar high above the action at the Milan Cortina Games, capturing aerial footage of Olympic athletes as they fly through the snow and slide down the ice. You will zoom around at speeds of up to 75 miles per hour, capturing immersive, verité-style footage that makes these inherently exciting sports feel even more exciting. You make the luge come alive!"
"You are a real "value-add" to the NBC Olympic broadcast. You can go places that earthbound human camera operators could only dream of going, such as directly behind, above, and/or in front of the world's favorite Winter Olympians as they zip down the slopes of Cortina d'Ampezzo. You will offer viewers a brand-new perspective on just how fast those skiers are going, and just how scary their sport is."
Drones hover above athletes at the Milan Cortina Games to follow and film Winter Olympic competitors while trying not to collide with them. First-person-view camera drones soar above action and capture aerial, verité-style footage at speeds up to 75 miles per hour. Drones can position directly behind, above, or in front of athletes, offering viewers new perspectives on speed and danger that ground-based camera operators cannot safely achieve. Drones enhance broadcast coverage by animating events like luge and conveying just how fast and scary these winter sports can be.
Read at Slate Magazine
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