2006年VOA标准英语-Sponsors Use Olympics To Improve Corporate(在线收听) |
By Brian Padden
VOA’s Brian Padden reports from Turin on what companies pay to become an Olympic sponsor and what they hope to get in return. ------------------------------------------------------- The Olympic Sponsor Village in Turin, Italy is a mini-amusement park where visitors to the Fiat car company can play fuzz-ball. And at the Coca Cola exhibit people can try to score a goal. Corporate sponsorship of the Olympics is now an accepted part of the games. One of the major sponsors of the Olympics is GE, General Electric, which is paying between $40 million and $60 million to be associated with the Winter Games in Turin. GE also owns NBC, the exclusive U.S. broadcaster of the Olympics. It recoups some of its sponsorship costs by providing over 620 electrical generators and lighting for all the Olympic venues. At the Sponsor Village GE visitors can take a virtual ride through the human heart. At the Samsung exhibit, Italian ski legend Alberto Tomba signs autographs. While there visitors can try out the South Korean company's newest mobile phones and cameras. While the costs of sponsoring the Olympics may seem excessive, these companies are competing in a global market. And as advertisers will tell you, you have to spend money to make money. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/2/30918.html |