1. Never show the action if you can help it. But tell us all about it out of either your
2. Bring in an ad just when an event is in its final moments. Come back to a priceless shot of a tt table with two bats lying on it, after the match has ended.
3. Go off to another event when the one being covered is reaching its climax. Just when Nadal is about to win a set in tennis, you go off to show some table tennis.
4. Wear the ghastliest ties you can find.
5. Spend five minutes gravely telling the athlete you are interviewing, just what he has achieved. As with boxing quarter finalist Jitender. Just in case he didn¿t know.
6. Take the oldest, most untelegenic male commentators you can find and put them air (from
7. Choose the most boring match of the day and stick with it to the end. If it¿s a riveting one, switch at all enthralling moments to something else.
8. Someone about to win a gold? Go off to an ad. Return to
9. Make Saina Sania. Ki pharak painda?
10. Phelps at the pool? Then DD will be at the handball prelims. You can bet a gold on that.
(Readers are invited to add to this list. Write us at editor@thehoot.org )
Rachna Burman responded to our invitation to add to the golden rules list.
11. Hold forth for half and hour on the previous day¿s results that every newspapers had already covered in the morning, then turn to the other anchor who will repeat the same thing in Hindi.
12. Keep the same scroll running for 48 hours --not on the latest results, the medals tally or the schedule of events that everyone was dying to know-- but on who the youngest sportspersons at the O-lum-pics were. It went on for 48 hours, honest.
13. When every news channel in
14. In fact, can¿t get over DD¿s merry men in
15. And one final one I can¿t resist from one of those merry men covering the sprints in Hindi...he kept saying "Gay Tyson", and referring to SKN (St Kitts &