|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
A public display of nationalism
Sydney Olympic organisers dump international youth band
By Milan Zubic and Richard Phillips
9 July 1999
Use
this version to print
According to its organisers and sponsors, the Olympic Games
embody the spirit of international fraternity and goodwill between
nations. Lip-service to this rhetoric, however was unceremoniously
thrown aside last June 24, when the Sydney Organising Committee
of the Olympic Games (SOCOG), in a very public display of Australian
nationalism, voted to dump a long-planned 2,000-member international
youth marching band from participating in the opening ceremony.
The band, consisting of 1,300 American, 200 Japanese and 500 Australian
students, was to have performed a seven-minute routine as part
of the three-hour opening ceremony.
Olympics Minister, Michael Knight, claimed SOCOG's decision
was taken because of "very strong public opposition to the
proposal" for an international marching band. In fact, it
was made in response to a short and somewhat hysterical campaign
orchestrated by a section of the Australian news media and right-wing
radio talk show hosts.
The proposal to bring together an international band was made
by the opening ceremony chief organiser Ric Birch in April 1998.
It was endorsed at that time by SOCOG. Birch wanted an experienced
and lively group of young people able to perform difficult and
exacting routines.
Auditions were held in Australian schools and highly skilled
marching band members selected from the US and Japan. After practising
in their separate countries, all band members were due to come
together two weeks before the opening ceremony for final joint
rehearsals in the Australian country town of Bathurst. Naturally,
the largest number of marchers was drawn from the US, where there
is a long tradition of school marching bands.
After SOCOG issued official invitations in August last year
to band directors and students in the US and Japan, the band members
began raising money to attend. Some US students changed schools
in order to join the band, others purchased new instruments, raised
loans or took up part time work in order to pay the $5,400 required
for their Australian fares and accommodation. Strenuous rehearsals,
including memorising 60 national anthems and complex marching
patterns began immediately.
The campaign to scrap this unique project began in earnest
on June 19 when the Sydney Morning Herald publicised the
protests of a local band, the Golden Kangaroos which had been
excluded from auditioning because it was not a school band. The
SMH claimed that SOCOG organisers were ignoring local Australian
talent. This was taken up and given an anti-American spin by right-wing
radio talk show hostsAlan Jones and John Laws in particular.
Pop singer Johnny Farnham and John McAuliffe, federal secretary
of the Musicians Union, also joined in. McAuliffe said the international
marching band was an attempt to impose American culture
on the Sydney Olympics. Mr Birch is hijacking our Olympics.
When Birch, with 20 years experience producing international
events including the Olympic opening ceremonies in Los Angeles
and Barcelona, initially threatened to quit over the SOCOG decision,
he was vilified by the talk show hosts. Olympics Minister Michael
Knight is reported to have threatened Birch with legal action
if he resigned and a member of the New South Wales state parliament
demanded that a special investigation be conducted.
Opposition to SOCOG's stand was immediate, and not just from
American and Japanese students, band leaders, teachers and parents,
but from local community leaders in Bathurst and Australian participants
who had been selected to join the international band. Angry letters
to Australian newspapers as well as irate calls to radio stations
denounced the SOCOG decision and asked why radio hosts were dictating
changes to the opening ceremony.
An American teacher angrily wrote that SOCOG's actions were
in poor taste and bad international relations and
added that the Olympics were a worldwide event and should
depict a worldwide culture. She said she would boycott the
Sydney Games and would urge all her Internet contacts to do the
same.
An Australian letter writer admitted: I was one of the
critics of the large number of overseas bands participating in
the opening ceremony of the Olympics. However, at that stage there
was no mention that these young musicians had been invited nine
months ago and had been saving and practising since then. To cancel
now is a disgrace and SOCOG (which seems to make blunder after
blunder) must find something similar to the original concept or
make Australia the laughing stock of the world.
But these and other calls for the Sydney Olympics organisers
to reverse the decision were met with even greater contempt and
arrogance.
On July 2 Prime Minister John Howard weighed in declaring that
SOCOG had made "the right decision" and that the marching
band "should be Australian". SOCOG member and Olympics
village mayor Graham Richardson, a former Keating Labor government
minister now employed by media magnate Kerry Packer (who has substantial
financial interest in the Sydney Olympics) insisted that SOCOG
would not budge over the decision.
"If you don't like it, if you don't find it acceptable
... then go ahead and sue us. We'll give you nothing. [The kids]
won't be appearing anywhere," Richardson, who has his own
radio program, declared.
Insult was added to injury when SOCOG, in an attempt to extricate
itself from contractual obligations, offered to the American and
Japanese band members that they perform at some non-Olympic local
Sydney venues, with the possibility of appearing at an Olympic
soccer game in Canberra.
Michael Knight claimed the insulting compromise deal would
be a "fantastic Australian Olympic experience" for the
American and Japanese band members. He ruled out any reversal
and said SOCOG would play "hard-ball in the courts"
in order to avoid paying $10 million in legal costs for compensation
and breach of contract.
There is no doubt that this sordid episode reveals the inward
looking, short-sighted and provincial character of those running
the Sydney Olympic Games and exposes the disproportionate influence
radio talk show hosts and a small group of right-wing elements
have over the political and social agenda. The question that has
to be answered is, however, why has SOCOG made a decision that
has alienated so many, may involve millions of dollars in legal
costs, and added to the already badly tarnished reputation of
the Olympic Games?
Two factors are at work. Firstly, SOCOG confronts serious financial
problemsa product of the ongoing allegations of bribery
and vote-buying against the International Olympic Committee and
its delegates, including one of Australia's IOC representatives
Phil Coles, and a serious shortfall in corporate sponsorship and
ticket sales.
SOCOG faces a $200 million sponsorship deficit and last May
slashed $65 million from the Games' budget. More than $600 million
must be generated in ticket sales, half of this in Australia.
While SOCOG has refused to release any detailed information, the
sales campaign has been a marketing disaster, with the high-priced
tickets way out of the reach of most families.
A mid-range ticket for the three-hour opening ceremony costs
$500, the best seats $1,382. A 12-session pass for decent seats
at the diving costs $5,600 or a good seat at one of the swimming
semi-finals $455. According to one survey only 9 percent of households
with incomes under $30,000 plan to attend the Games, but even
amongst higher-than-average income earners, only 31 percent of
households say they will buy tickets.
While SOCOG members, to a greater or lesser degree, embrace
the nationalist political outlook of the talk show hosts, their
decision to dump the international marching band is conditioned
by the view that if they appeal to the most right-wing layers
they may be able to overcome flagging ticket sales.
Secondly, SOCOG's actions demonstrate something more fundamental
about the degeneration of the Olympic Games as a whole. As the
Olympics have become more commercialised, with billions of dollars
in advertising, media and broadcasting deals up for grabs, the
sentiment dominating those organising and hosting the event is
the single-minded pursuit of the financial bottom line.
SOCOG's dumping of the international marching band is yet another
public demonstration that nationalism, provincialism and crude
money-grubbing take precedence over contractual obligations and
international commitments, let alone any adherence to the so-called
Olympic spirit.
See Also:
Big business demands a corporate
Olympics
[16 March 1999]
Sydney revelations deepen
Olympics corruption scandal
[30 January 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |