To broadcast the Games around the globe, CBC/Radio-Canada created the Olympic Radio and Television Organization (ORTO). Its mission was straightforward, but ambitious: provide audio and visual coverage of the Games to both Canadian and foreign broadcasters.
At the event sites, approximately 3,000 radio and television professionals, from 125 different countries, speaking more than 30 languages, worked side by side.
Thanks to ORTO, over 1.5 billion people tuned in to watch and listen to the Games—a record for the time!
To offer the audience a cutting-edge experience, ORTO introduced several new ways of operating. For example, installing mini-consoles at the event sites meant commentators could be close to the action. Also, lightweight cameras and new techniques made it easier to capture images of the athletes in action. In short, ORTO showed no lack of creativity!
The 1,600 ORTO staff members were easily recognized by their brightly coloured shirts and jackets emblazoned with the new CBC/Radio-Canada logo. This logo features a stylized letter “C,” radiating in all directions to represent radio and television broadcasting. The shirt was created by designer Jean-Claude Poitras.