Posted on 12/28/2005 4:32:50 PM PST by NormsRevenge
PASADENA In the land of perennial youth and movie star beauty, most centenarians just can't compete. That's why the Rose Parade is getting a major makeover for the first time in 117 years.
With CBS having quietly decided after 45 years to drop its coverage, parade organizers, hoping to keep TV viewers and the remaining broadcasting outlets happy, have ratcheted up the rolling flowerfest's entertainment quotient.
So, the annual Tournament of Roses on Monday a day later than usual because of a "never on Sunday" policy will kick off with a splashy performance by Grammy-winning singer LeAnn Rimes complete with dancers and aerial performers.
The extravaganza will be jazzed up further by mid-parade performances yes, the whole parade will roll to a pause by singer Toni Braxton and magician Lance Burton.
The fans along the parade route, however, aren't likely to see the entertaining new additions, which have been designed primarily for the TV audience.
"We look at it as we're putting on a parade for television," said Caryn Eaves, spokeswoman for the Tournament of Roses Association. "There are a million people on the parade route every year. Really, we don't need any more."
What the parade does need is television exposure. Broadcast coverage is a longtime tradition and a means of massive international outreach, said Bill Flinn, chief operating officer of the Tournament of Roses Association.
"TV is the way of taking this small-town festival in California and sharing it with the world," he said, noting the "tremendous marketing opportunities" associated with the parade, which, even without CBS' participation, will be broadcast to 120 countries. In the U.S., where it will be seen on ABC, NBC and a slew of other outlets, it is expected to be viewed in some part by about 50 million viewers.
"These are all audiences that companies want to reach (by joining the parade), and reach in a festive manner like this," Flinn said.
When companies such as Ivory and American Honda pay $6,250 to enter their flower-covered creations in the annual procession, they're guaranteed worldwide exposure.
Not that CBS' absence won't be felt.
Wayne Curley, a technician who has coordinated television transmission of the Rose Parade for 25 years, said the CBS pullout is the "biggest change" he's seen in his time with the parade.
As other outlets came and went, "you could just about count on CBS" to provide coverage, he said.
"This was strictly a business decision," said CBS spokesman Chris Ender. "With so many outlets covering it, we weren't giving the viewers anything unique."
The network's ratings for Rose Parade programming have steadily declined since 1988. Instead of showing the parade on Jan. 2, CBS will air its regular morning news program, "The Early Show," followed by "a soap opera or 'The Price is Right,' depending on the market," Ender said.
Still, there'll be no shortage of cameras along the parade route. Despite the declining ratings, nine cable and network channels will offer live parade coverage, starting at 11 a.m. EST.
"The (ratings) numbers have gone down, primarily because the number of outlets covering it have increased," said Curt Sharp, NBC's vice president of alternative programs and specials. "It will be interesting to see if having fewer broadcasters in the space increases our rating." NBC has televised the parade annually since 1954.
The tournament does not charge TV outlets for the right to televise the event, but each pays a fee to a local property owner for camera positions.
Tournament of Roses President Libby Evans Wright insists that plans to include entertainment elements in the 2006 parade were in place before CBS opted out. The additions were based on years of market research that found viewers wanting more entertainment from the petal-pumped procession, Wright said.
"When you're looking at yourself as a brand or a product or a business, you always want to keep renewing yourself," she said. "You want to keep yourself vibrant and interesting to your market."
The parade's new opening and other featured performances will be held at the intersection of Orange Grove and Colorado boulevards, known as "TV corner," Wright said. Fans situated there can behold the performances live. Others will have to catch them on TV.
Parade regulars don't seem to mind. Star power isn't what brings them to the event.
"People come to see it live so they can smell the flowers," said annual attendee Harvey Carey, 56. "It's the sense of being here; that's the attraction of the Rose Parade."
Albert Lee, who works at a restaurant along the parade route, said sidewalk watchers are "hardcore fans" who focus on the floats.
"I don't think they care if they see celebrities," he said. "They're here for the free show."
It's still smart for the Tournament of Roses to freshen up the festivities with made-for-TV elements, said NBC's Sharp.
"They need to continue to make it entertaining and relevant to today's audiences," he said.
The Tournament plans to explore Internet and telephone broadcast opportunities in the future, Flinn said.
Cheryl Ceccetto, producer of this year's Academy Awards Governors Ball and other Hollywood events, is behind the 2½ minute opening. She was invited to "give the parade a kick-start and take it to a new level," she said.
"The parade is always fantastic," she said. "But jewels on any outfit always add."
The jewels might need an umbrella, however. On Wednesday, weather forecasters predicted a 50 percent chance of precipitation Monday. If they're correct, it'll be the first rain on parade day in 51 years.
No matter: Rain or shine, the parade will go on, Tournament of Roses officials said.
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On the Net:
www.tournamentofroses.com/
chance of showers Sat and Sunday. brung an umbrella.
TV parades--what a snooze--I don't care which one we're talking about.
I would sooner do my own vasectomy than watch a parade. I will never understand the attraction.
Usually followed by an even-more-boring sporting event of some kind. Zzzzzzzzzzz.
The band has been there before. But the music director said this, "They charge us above prices for rooms, the airlines do the same and there is litteraly no recognition except maybe the 1/2 minute on national TV. Who needs it?"
If you've never seen it in person, you've missed something special. Grew up in MI, watched parade every year while waiting for the game. Finally got to go last year, and I'll gladly go again. SUPER SHOW!! And the floats are engineering and artistic marvels.
Well okay, I'll say a good word for the Rose Parade. I could never stand to watch it or any other parade on TV. Then when we lived in LA and went first to see the floats the day after the parade when they are on display, and then to the parade itself, we became fans. The artistry used in making the floats is amazing, but you simply can not appreciate them on TV. It's actually a wonderful tradition, the people who run it seem to be old-time Californians, the kinds who elected Ronald Reagan, and you've got flowers in January. It's a very nice tradition (and have lunch afterward at The Derby in Arcadia!)
It sounds like it will be more like Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade: Made for TV cameras. I never watch Macy's anymore.
Who's the grand marshal this year?
I'm not sure that was the longest parade I've ever seen. The parade for Jesse James Days, on the centennial of his 1876 attempt to rob Northfield MN, took 3 hours to pass through downtown Northfield. Pretty impressive for a less than 10 block downtown; I still don't know where they queued them. It even included Miss America (who happened to be a student at the *other* college in town.
Sounds like visual torture to me. But, to each his own
Sandra Day OConnor
This year the grand marshal is none other than United States Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day OConnor.
http://www.tournamentofroses.com/history/grandmarshalpast.asp
"chance of showers Sat and Sunday. brung an umbrella."
but it'll be sunny come Monday...you watch and see...it rarely fails...
in all the years of the parade, I think it's only rained three times. LOL
we'll be there fer sure!
if you've never seen the parade in person; you haven't seen the best parade on the planet.
the floats are AWESOME!
I watched the Macy's, the Rose Bowl and the Mummer's Parades as a kid. But, sometime while I was out of the country in the 70s, TV and their commercials took over the Macy's & Rose Bowl so that you barely saw the floats and lost all the continuity.
The Philly Mummers parade hasn't seemed to attract national attention even with the great music and costumes.
This is just great! I have to work - darn it!
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