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Did You Enjoy the Olympics Opening Ceremony?

SodaHead News 2012/07/28 17:37:10
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The opening ceremony for the 2012 summer Olympics aired last night and was a sight to be seen! The production values and imagery may have been the best in Olympics history. Taking place at the sight of the Olympic games in London, England, the ceremony featured some of the most memorable characters and public figures in the country's history.

Viewers saw Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling read a short tale before the appearance of England's most infamous villains--including her own creation in Voldermort (100 foot tall version). Then, we a fleet of Mary Poppins, not Harry Potter, come to the rescue and fight off Voldermort and the gang of villains.

Millions also watched Rowan Atkinson reprise his role of Mr. Bean on the grandest stage imaginable, complete with the hilarious facial expressions that made fans fall in love with his character nearly two decades ago. As usual, it didn't end well for Mr. Bean, who couldn't keep up with the orchestra or the runners from Chariots of Fire.

Perhaps the most memorable entrance of all was that of Queen Elizabeth, who jumped out a helicopter piloted by the current James Bond, Daniel Craig. OK, maybe she had a stunt double, but it still looked cool! In a fun twist, we saw a brief musical on the new age of social media, complete with Facebook statuses and tweets popping up as the performers presented a young love story. Overall, an impressive show visually!

But, what about you SodaHeads: Did you enjoy the opening ceremony?

Do You Enjoy The Opening Ceremony

Read More: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetorch/2012/07/28/15752...

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  • GaolBlaze 2012/08/21 00:26:13
    Yes
    GaolBlaze
    Some bits weren't fantastic, but overall it was great :D LOVED the Mr. Bean bit. The history bit was really good, too.
  • E.Griffin 2012/08/20 16:50:31
    No
    E.Griffin
    No for two reasons, it was on NBC and the mayor of london had to make it political.
    Photobucket
  • MusicMan 2012/08/12 11:25:38
    Yes
    MusicMan
    The entrance of the torch and the lighting of the cauldron was a real highlight. The individual leaf-flames of the various countries rising up together into one united flame was truly spectacular.
  • smileysouma 2012/08/02 19:23:22
    Yes
    smileysouma
    A lot!!
  • mikeeonly 2012/07/31 06:32:10
    No
    mikeeonly
    +1
    I found it as dry as British humor. I think it has gotten way out of hand and takes away from the basic premises of the Olympics.
  • MIRANDDAAA :) 2012/07/30 22:25:01
    Yes
    MIRANDDAAA :)
    I loved the giant Voldemort with the Mary Poppins. It made me wish I was British.
  • GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~618 BLOCKT 2012/07/30 21:44:53
    Yes
    GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~618 BLOCKT
    +3
    The labor movement was quite interesting, & the UK seems quite proud of their NHS. Hopefully America will have universal coverage also. I certainly did enjoy seeing the James Bond--"Queen Elizabeth" helicopter ride.

    I definitely enjoyed it. It was worth sitting in front of the TV all them hours.
  • Anonymo... GuruA2J... 2012/08/01 00:00:56
    Anonymouse BN-0 ~bibbityboo~
    That's not the general consensus here - most of us feel that either the NHS needs a major overhaul or complete replacement.
  • Ben Anonymo... 2012/08/01 10:42:07
    Ben
    +1
    I think very very few people here would argue that the NHS needas replacing. Most people in the UK are proud of the NHS. Most do feel it needs changing in various ways, but then it's one of those institutions that for as long as I can remember, people have been criticising one part of it or another. Even if the NHS managed a 100% cure rate, 100% patient care satisfaction and waiting times measured in hours, people would still find something to complain about it. It's what we're good at.
  • Anonymo... Ben 2012/08/01 14:01:59
    Anonymouse BN-0 ~bibbityboo~
    It needs radical change. The socialised care system cannot cope with obesity, increased hereditary problems, increased elderly population, increased population in general, and all the new expensive drugs and equipment it is expected to buy. We need a new system for the NHS to work on, budgets do not work in this day and age, and it gives the government's situation too much control over care. You know they're introducing actual rationing, in addition to the rationing by long waiting times? It has been euthanising the elderly and seriously ill to save costs. It tells cancer patients there is nothing they can do when they can be cured, the NHS just doesn't want to spend money on it. It doesn't matter to them how well they do, because it has no impact on their incomes or budgets, and if they do really badly their budget will be increased! It's a broken system and doesn't work in the 21st century. We need to reform it with either a voucher system or compulsory insurance system, like France or Switzerland.
  • Ben Anonymo... 2012/08/01 14:49:24
    Ben
    +1
    It needs some change, but I do question the validity of some of what you said:

    Firstly, are there actually increased herditary problems or just better detection of these problems?

    Secondly, hasn't the NHS always needed to buy new (and often initially expensive) equipment and drugs? How is now any different to the last 64 years?

    Thirdly, the rationing doesn't need reform, it needs money. The UK spends less than several western countries on its medical care and substantially less (as percentage of GDP) than the US. What evidence is there that reform will change the need for rationing instead of increasing health spending?

    Fourthly, The euthanising elderly and seriously ill (from what I can see) was a story released by the Daily Mail based upon the claims on one single Doctor. As far as I'm aware, other than the testimony of this one individual, there is no actual 'evidence' to back up this scare story.

    Fifthly, if the NHS cannot afford certain cancer costs, then this shows it needs extra funding in line with other countries rather than reform.

    Sixthly, France and Switzerland also have their issues as every system does. The reason they have fewer systems is linked to funding rather than organisation. As a percentage of GDP, both receieve more funding than our UK healt...
    It needs some change, but I do question the validity of some of what you said:

    Firstly, are there actually increased herditary problems or just better detection of these problems?

    Secondly, hasn't the NHS always needed to buy new (and often initially expensive) equipment and drugs? How is now any different to the last 64 years?

    Thirdly, the rationing doesn't need reform, it needs money. The UK spends less than several western countries on its medical care and substantially less (as percentage of GDP) than the US. What evidence is there that reform will change the need for rationing instead of increasing health spending?

    Fourthly, The euthanising elderly and seriously ill (from what I can see) was a story released by the Daily Mail based upon the claims on one single Doctor. As far as I'm aware, other than the testimony of this one individual, there is no actual 'evidence' to back up this scare story.

    Fifthly, if the NHS cannot afford certain cancer costs, then this shows it needs extra funding in line with other countries rather than reform.

    Sixthly, France and Switzerland also have their issues as every system does. The reason they have fewer systems is linked to funding rather than organisation. As a percentage of GDP, both receieve more funding than our UK health services. Can you prove that a reform along the French or Swiss models would give the improvements as opposed to increased spending in line with those two countries?
    (more)
  • Anonymo... Ben 2012/08/01 15:54:40
    Anonymouse BN-0 ~bibbityboo~
    There are increased hereditary problems because people with hereditary problems are reproducing rather than dying. The NHS has needed to buy an increased amount of equipment since the 1990's due to the technological revolution, in a similar timeline as the NHS going downhill. It can't afford all of the equipment it needs, so is now outdated. If we can reform it by increasing spending, making hospitals more efficient and competitive, and give them more money if they ration less, then rationing will be decreased, like in most European countries. There have been several cases, one of a young man who was being cared for, who was purposefully dehydrated to euthanise him because the NHS hospital wanted to make cutbacks and he was expensive to treat. The NHS cannot afford cancer costs because NICE tells it not to - it isn't cost efficient enough. France and Switzerland's systems work very well, France's system has 1/3 more funding and 25% comes from patients directly. The Swiss system is almost completely patient funded through compulsory insurance and they are both some of the best systems in the world. And yes - we give hospitals budgets. They are allowed to do what we like with these budgets, and only have to adhere to a few targets. Hospitals actively keep care just abo...
    There are increased hereditary problems because people with hereditary problems are reproducing rather than dying. The NHS has needed to buy an increased amount of equipment since the 1990's due to the technological revolution, in a similar timeline as the NHS going downhill. It can't afford all of the equipment it needs, so is now outdated. If we can reform it by increasing spending, making hospitals more efficient and competitive, and give them more money if they ration less, then rationing will be decreased, like in most European countries. There have been several cases, one of a young man who was being cared for, who was purposefully dehydrated to euthanise him because the NHS hospital wanted to make cutbacks and he was expensive to treat. The NHS cannot afford cancer costs because NICE tells it not to - it isn't cost efficient enough. France and Switzerland's systems work very well, France's system has 1/3 more funding and 25% comes from patients directly. The Swiss system is almost completely patient funded through compulsory insurance and they are both some of the best systems in the world. And yes - we give hospitals budgets. They are allowed to do what we like with these budgets, and only have to adhere to a few targets. Hospitals actively keep care just above the minimum and extend waiting times as long as they can to make people go to different hospitals, so they can give the management more of the budget in their salaries. If we increase spending, they will spend more on the higher ups and claim inefficiency and lack of money. However, if we give hospitals money based on how many patients they treat, and how well they treat them, the hospitals will compete for patients by drastically improving cleanliness, quality of care, the staff will be much friendlier, the waiting times will be shortened, the hospitals will be extended and more beds and facilities will be available, and most of the bureaucracy and inefficiency will be scrapped, as all of a sudden the management get more money by getting more patients, rather than less. However, to prevent people from being taken in by the hospitals trying to get them to take more care, the patients must carry part of the cost of the treatment, and that's where the French system comes in - if you need more treatment, the government will pay it all, if you need less, you pay part of it.
    (more)
  • Ben Anonymo... 2012/08/03 11:05:19
    Ben
    "If we can reform it by increasing spending, making hospitals more efficient and competitive, and give them more money if they ration less"

    This isn't a reform, this is giving them more money and telling them to be more efficient. It's what the Labour government did for years. Hardly a reform, just more spending.

    "There have been several cases, one of a young man who was being cared for, who was purposefully dehydrated to euthanise him because the NHS hospital wanted to make cutbacks and he was expensive to treat".

    Evidence please. I find it hard to believe that a hospital basically murdered a man through dehydration and it wasn't one of the biggest loudest scandals in British history. Without actualy evidence this happened, this is just another scare story.

    "France and Switzerland's systems work very well, France's system has 1/3 more funding"

    So again I ask why you are so certain a complete radical reform is needed rather than increased funding and minor changes? Can you prove that reforming along the French model without providing the extra funding will make a difference? Or that keeping the current model but providing funding in line with France won't significantly raise care to an equal level?


    "The Swiss system is almost completely patient funded through comp...






    "If we can reform it by increasing spending, making hospitals more efficient and competitive, and give them more money if they ration less"

    This isn't a reform, this is giving them more money and telling them to be more efficient. It's what the Labour government did for years. Hardly a reform, just more spending.

    "There have been several cases, one of a young man who was being cared for, who was purposefully dehydrated to euthanise him because the NHS hospital wanted to make cutbacks and he was expensive to treat".

    Evidence please. I find it hard to believe that a hospital basically murdered a man through dehydration and it wasn't one of the biggest loudest scandals in British history. Without actualy evidence this happened, this is just another scare story.

    "France and Switzerland's systems work very well, France's system has 1/3 more funding"

    So again I ask why you are so certain a complete radical reform is needed rather than increased funding and minor changes? Can you prove that reforming along the French model without providing the extra funding will make a difference? Or that keeping the current model but providing funding in line with France won't significantly raise care to an equal level?


    "The Swiss system is almost completely patient funded through compulsory insurance and they are both some of the best systems in the world"

    But again, can you prove that this is because of the health system itself and not because of the high levels of funding it receives? You look at the data and the correlation is between levels of care and funding as % of GDP, not between nationalised/privatised/antyhing in between.


    "However, if we give hospitals money based on how many patients they treat, and how well they treat them, the hospitals will compete for patients by drastically improving cleanliness, quality of care, the staff will be much friendlier, the waiting times will be shortened, the hospitals will be extended and more beds and facilities will be available, and most of the bureaucracy and inefficiency will be scrapped"

    This all sounds good in theory, but the main argument for not doing it is that a hopsital that is struggling will then recieve less money, meaning it has to cut services, meaning it does even less well, so it receieves even less money etc. It would mean that once a hospital falls into trouble, it will be extremely difficult to pull themselves out of a very rapid downward spiral.
    (more)
  • Anonymo... Ben 2012/08/03 11:10:07 (edited)
    Anonymouse BN-0 ~bibbityboo~
    No it's not, definitely don't throw money at them, that never works. Pay them like you'd pay a private hospital, then the government pays you back between 50 and 100% depending on how much you needed it/how ill you are, etc. That's how they do it in most 1st World countries. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/he...
    Because as you just said, you can't throw money at them, it doesn't work. Also, the biggest problem is the fact you give them a budget to do everything from - they are dissuaded from expanding and opening more beds and improving the hospitals because that means less wages for them. Also, the amount of bureaucracy in the NHS is very restricting and they spend half of their time filling out forms and they spend lots of their money on management, because they have no incentive to get better. Look at Communism vs Capitalism - State run industries that are told to reach targets never performed anywhere near as well as Private industries that had competition and money as incentives.
  • GuruA2J... Ben 2012/08/02 21:28:29
    GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~618 BLOCKT
    +2
    People certainly are good at complaining Ben. I've encountered so may here in my country (US) I've come to the conclusion they aren't happy unless they're complaining about something.
  • Torchmanner ~PWCM~JLA 2012/07/30 21:09:35
    No
    Torchmanner ~PWCM~JLA
    Did not waste time to watch.
  • Nomad58 2012/07/30 20:53:54
    No
    Nomad58
    Just Boring
  • joy 2012/07/30 19:57:22
    Yes
    joy
    +3
    Watched on the BBC whose explanations of what was actually happening helped alot, and that's coming from an Englishman ! At the beginning we were hiding behind the couch with our heads in our hands watching people dancing round the maypole. But the change from rural setting to industrial age was amazing, but again we did have the BBC telling us what the hell was happening. The rest was completely novel and original, with the comedy, music etc. Just a note on the NHS scene, Great Ormond Street Hospital is a hospital for kids in central London, which has been directly effected by the build up to the Olympics in terms of transport to etc. Therefore it was staff and patients/parents who made up 90% of the dancers for this segment, learning all choreography etc in theirspare time, to have the opportunity to be involved. Another point, all involved were volunteer's and yet no secrets were revealed before the ceremony started. All in all I thought it was great, most on here who voted NO, then say they didn't watch it ?
  • GuruA2J... joy 2012/07/30 21:47:47
    GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~618 BLOCKT
    Thank you Joy for the additional info. I would venture to say, the ones who answered "No" are probably hateful US CONS.
  • mm61675 2012/07/30 19:25:40
    No
    mm61675
    lame and boring.......

    yawn
  • eNewsAlerts 2012/07/30 19:06:14
    No
    eNewsAlerts
    Didn't watch. Hear it was a real yawner; As are most of the Olympic events NBC chooses to show. Apparently the events that are important in America don't matter to them.
  • mm61675 eNewsAl... 2012/07/30 19:23:53
    mm61675
    +1
    it was soo boring!
  • freebirdie 2012/07/30 18:28:47
    No
    freebirdie
    +2
    I only saw a little bit and most of that was commercials. Really NBC? You couldn't skip the majority of ads and let us watch the whole thing? THEN there was the incessant talking through the show like they were MC-ing the Rose Parade or like it was in a foreign language and they were interpreting for us! Talk-talk-talk-talk-talk...I couldn't hear the music to enjoy it. The HC theme was so political and LAME. Sad to see it there. I hated the "Digital Age" music/dance montage. B-o-o-o--o-r-i-n-g! Saw some of Paul McC. before I had to leave again and he was so off key I was glad to turn it off.
    Like I said, I only saw a little bit but it was not fun to watch with NBC hosting it. Maybe they should have all of the networks cover it and give the viewers a choice and a chance to see/hear it.

    On the other hand the two other things I saw, and thoroughly enjoyed, were Rowan Atkinson and the Queen with James Bond. Well done and funny. If those were the best parts, I am glad I was able to see them.
    JMO.
  • Culgan 2012/07/30 17:43:16
    No
    Culgan
    Didn't watch it nor have I watched anything of the Olympics yet. I just don't care.
  • LeroyRogers 2012/07/30 17:39:08
    No
    LeroyRogers
    +3
    Boring. The closing ceremony will show England under Islamic rule.
  • Groundskeeper Willy 2012/07/30 17:36:07
    No
    Groundskeeper Willy
    +2
    absolutely lame. touting NHS was perhaps the epitome of Bullcrap.
  • Lady Winters 2012/07/30 17:27:47
    Yes
    Lady Winters
    +1
    I enjoyed it; though I've always been sort of an anglophile. I love seeing all the culture references and shows/movies I like.
  • Gahnzo 2012/07/30 17:07:56
    No
    Gahnzo
    +1
    Bored the hell out of me.. watched it for a half hour.. didn't "get it".. and turned it off. The only cool thing was seeing the rings.. now that was cool.. the rest.. meh....
  • JS 2012/07/30 16:38:01
    Yes
    JS
    +2
    I loved the ongoing stories, I thought it was very well done.
  • lilcoco1998 2012/07/30 16:34:16
    No
    lilcoco1998
    I didn't see it..I wish I saw it thoigh,.
  • Dub 2012/07/30 16:33:42
    No
    Dub
    Don't care too much....not to say its not a good thing, I just don't care about it.
  • Lanikai 2012/07/30 16:32:23
    Yes
    Lanikai
    +2
    Mr Bean was the absolute highlight for my daughter. LOVE him, we watch british comedys all the time,.
  • Dolly 2012/07/30 16:05:39
    No
    Dolly
    I missed them, I was busy sleeping and keeping Sodahead company.
  • Professor Wizard 2012/07/30 15:50:28
    Yes
    Professor Wizard
    It was "OK".. but not much more then that!
  • bluelady 2012/07/30 15:14:22
    Yes
    bluelady
    +2
    very much ....especially the part with Her Majesty and Daniel Craig...marvelous
  • Mymi 2012/07/30 14:31:02
    Yes
    Mymi
    it was ok ^^,
  • LibertyorDeath 2012/07/30 14:04:59
  • Mitri 2012/07/30 13:56:38
    Yes
    Mitri
    +4
    Yeah, it was really good.

    Worst bit: The two young teenagers in love, so confused on that bit.

    Best bit: The Queen and James Bond. But mostly Mr.Bean!
  • Anonymo... Mitri 2012/08/01 00:06:03
    Anonymouse BN-0 ~bibbityboo~
    +1
    I hated that bit and about all the digital media - it has nothing to do with anything. They should have done more literature.
  • Mitri Anonymo... 2012/08/01 06:18:52
    Mitri
    +1
    I agree. I love English literature, I liked the music timeline though. British music is awesome, too. At least it wasn't a total flop! :)
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