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As young people tune out, can Olympics vault over the generation gap?

  • IOC frets about ageing TV audience for Games, as well as legacy of Olympism – its promotion of sports as key to a balanced lifestyle and harmonious development
  • While it has teamed up with social media platforms and is experimenting with esports, experts say current situation may just reflect a natural cultural shift

Reading Time:6 minutes
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The Olympics has a young-people problem. Illustration: Joe Lo

Our Tokyo Trail series looks at key issues surrounding the 2020 Olympics, which are scheduled for late July.

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Fadel Bahrain, 19, has a pithy description for the Olympic Games: “highly irrelevant”. In his eyes, the quadrennial sporting event that many regard as the pinnacle of national glory and a celebration of human spirit has fallen far behind the likes of video games and YouTube videos in the popularity stakes.

“I’m not excited about the Olympics as I lack interest in sports in general,” said the English literature student at Goldsmiths, University of London.

Others of a similar age feel a similar way. Francis Huang Shao-hsuan, 25, a furniture designer from Taiwan, said the Games were mostly good for small talk on lunch breaks.

And Crystal Pang Wing-sze, 25, who works in communications at a Hong Kong university, said: “There’s a feeling of it not having anything to do with me.” 

03:13

Inside China’s gymnastics school that churns out Olympic champions

Inside China’s gymnastics school that churns out Olympic champions

It’s clear the Olympics has a young-people problem – and analysts say the mode of delivering sports programmes to them needs to change.

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