Add to Google Add to My AOL Subscribe in Bloglines
Recommended by studenttravel.about.com!

Watching sports on television in India

Submitted by itinerant on Wed, 09/06/2006 - 12:17am.

Watching sports on television in India

Right now I'm watching the U.S. Open tennis tournament on television.

In the last seven months I have gotten almost obsessed over several sporting events.

In Pushkar I got caught up in the U.S. Master's Golf Tournament. It was broadcast in the middle of the night. The only television in the hotel was in the rooftop restaurant. I gave up watching it at night. But they often would show a replay of it the following day and I saw Phil Mickelson won.

In June I watched the World Cup football tournament. Games were on ESPN. All of the games were broadcast live. They would start at nine at night and finish up at three in the morning. The little restaurants in Old Manali showed them. It was rainy and cold at the beginning of June, so Westerners were huddled at the tables. The occasional powercuts usually happened when your team needed to score a goal.

When I left Manali to explore Kinnaur and Spiti Valleys, I went through a World Cup crisis. Towns would have no power, or have only a handful of channels that managed to show cricket highlights all day but no soccer.

Now the U.S. Open is on. It is on New York time, so it starts here around seven in the evening. Ten Sports then shows it continuously live. So I can watch it for a little while at nine at night. Then when I wake up in the morning they are replaying the matches. It's quite remarkable that I can see so much of it. I saw Andre Agassi play the final match of his career and Jelena Jankovic upset three top ten seeds to make it to the semifinals.

It's coming up short on Notre Dame football. I think the best I can do there is try to download an mp3 of the radio coverage the next day.

India television is a subject unto itself. There are a whole slew of channels, many of them broadcast across Asia by large network companies. There is no broadcast television. Instead, the signal is captured by satellite, and then distributed via cable.

While traveling watching television is an escape. It is an immersion in the familiar. For better or worse, American television is part of my culture. It is also thoroughly entrenched in cultures throughout the world.

Watching sports on television in India

Hey!

#139 On Sat, 09/16/2006 9:17am Anonymous (not verified) said,

Hey Mark,
Wats going on? Still hanging out in bang?I was at a conference in Virgia
Tech last week....nice place to be I guess....and yeah..I also watched the Penn State vs. Notre Dame game on tv...

Watching sports on

#140 On Sat, 09/16/2006 9:18am Anonymous (not verified) said,

forgot to put my name...Sohit this side:)

Hi Sohit - I'm envious....

#148 On Wed, 09/20/2006 9:39am itinerant said,

that you got to watch the ND-PSU game!

Cheers,

Mark

Post new comment



The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.



Input format:
Expand filter description
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <p> <img> <div> <iframe>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may link to G2 items on this site using a special syntax
  • Use the special tag [adsense:format:group:channel] or [adsense:flexiblock:location] to display Google AdSense Ads.
  • Web and e-mail addresses are automatically converted into links.
Expand filter description
  • Web and e-mail addresses are automatically converted into links.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Expand filter description
  • You can use Textile markup to format text.