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July 2008
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Lake Placid, NY -- "I don’t think that’s going to work Ken, the recorder is too big. I won’t be able to see the course and the weight is too heavy." I was crushed. Tony Benshoof, the most experienced and most medaled slider on the US Olympic Luge team, was my last hope. Already the public information officer for the Luge team and several other sliders that we spoke with said that attaching a camera to a luge sled was simply not going to work... I am here in Lake Placid, New York along with Allen Schauffler to get up close and personal with Northwest athletes slated to compete in the Winter Olympics in Torino, Italy this coming February. I had pitched purchasing a high resolution helmet camera with an indestructible aluminum housing to our News Director Pat Costello, and I had pressure to deliver. Today was the last day for practice on the luge run and the team was all business. Men's, women's and doubles competitors would be whittled down, and only the best would go on to this winter's World Cup competition in Europe. Clearly it was time to give up the fancy stuff. We shot the 2 hour practice, and got our interviews. As we were leaving, Christian Niccum - our men’s double luge athlete from Woodinville - came up and offered to try and help us with the helmet cam that afternoon. We met him back at the course, jimmy-rigged the camera and recorder onto the sled with gaffer tape, and captured some of the wildest POV (point-of-view) video you will ever see. Here are the pix (and we'll post the video as soon as K.J. and Allen return later this week.)
In all, we get four very good hi-res videos, and I'm sure we will be streaming soon here on KING5.com when we return to Seattle. And you can watch it on KING 5's pre-Olympic coverage in the coming weeks. |
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