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Hear from NBCUniversal Employees On What It’s Like to Work On the Olympics

July 15, 2024

Brett GoldmanBrett Goodman at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona 


As NBCU employees from all around the company start packing up for the Paris Olympics this summer, hear from a few of the Olympic veterans who got their start working on the sporting event, on their favorite memories, and what they’re looking forward to most this year. 

Tune into the 2024 Paris Olympics this summer from July 26-August 11 on NBC and Peacock

olympics(LEFT) Paige Shepperly at her first Olympics in Sochi, Russia, (RIGHT) Patricia Vega at the 2014 Sochi Olympics 


How many Olympics have you worked, and what was your first experience with the Olympics?

Alexa Pritting, Senior Producer: The Paris Olympics will be my 10th Olympics and 6th Paralympics.  In 2006 I was an intern at the figure skating venue in Torino, Italy. 

Kristen King, Senior Director, Consumer Engagement: Paris will be #8!  My first Olympics was Vancouver 2010 when I was an intern at the figure skating venue, which was a dream come true because I was a competitive figure skater and went straight from Vancouver to compete at the U.S. Synchronized Skating Championships for Cornell University. 

Ron Vaccaro, VP, Editorial: 10, Paris will be my 11th! Hopefully at least that many more! My first Olympics experience was Athens in 2004. I was a programming assistant, working with Peter Diamond, the longtime Olympic programming guru. I helped on our on-air cross-promotion guide and tried to learn as much as I could about the entire operation.    

Brett Goodman, General Counsel, NBC Sports Group: Paris 2024 will be my 14th Olympics! In June 1990, just days out of college, I was hired by the legendary Olympic programming guru Peter Diamond to be one of NBC’s two Olympic researchers for the 1992 Barcelona Games. The other researcher was none other than Molly Solomon, who has risen to the role of our Executive Producer!  It is incredibly rewarding to have shared a lifelong professional journey with Molly, one of my closest friends. We’re not done yet! 

Paige Shepperly, Senior Associate Producer: Paris will be my 5th Olympics. 2014 Sochi Olympics was my first Olympics. I was an intern at the figure skating venue.    

Patricia Vega, Chief Financial Officer, Sports Production and Olympics: Paris will be my 10th Olympics!  My first Olympics was the Torino Olympics in 2006. I was a finance manager supporting Marketing and Client Programing and I handled our Rights Payments. I helped out the Client Program team during the Olympics.    

Lyndsay Signor, SVP, Consumer Engagement: 8 Olympics, Paris will be my 9th. My first Olympics was in 2008 in Beijing. I was a communications coordinator for NBC Sports. My role was to support our communications team, book talent radio interviews and keep an eye on any press around the NBC Olympics and our coverage. 

Alexa PrttingAlexa Pitting began her Olympics career as an intern at the figure skating venue during the 2006 Winter Olympics in Torino.


What is your favorite NBCUniversal Olympic moment/memory? 

Alexa: My favorite Olympic moment was producing the figure skating venue at the 2022 Beijing Games. Amidst COVID, it was quite a unique experience, but we had an amazing team in both China and in Stamford and we were able to cover some amazing moments - from Nathan Chen’s gold medal to a dramatic outcome in the women’s event. 

My favorite Paralympic moment was the 2014 sled hockey gold medal match between Russia and the United States. The stands were so filled that people were sitting in the aisles. The crowd was electric cheering for the home team (Russia), while the Americans in the building were stressed hoping the U.S. could hang on to a 1-0 lead the entire third period – and they did! 

Kristen: I will never forget watching Nathan Chen win gold at the Beijing Olympics after shooting features on him since he was a kid. When you’ve personally witnessed what the athletes have dedicated to the pursuit of their Olympic dream, it means so much more when you witness it!  

Ron: The next one! The men’s swimming 4x100 relay in 2008 was spectacular. A few of us were watching that in the bullpen in one of the IBC corridors and the way Team USA rallied back to win gold from France, and what it set up for Michael Phelps, the sheer joy of that moment will be hard to top, but I hope we do! And then the last one, 2022 in Beijing. The Opening Ceremony in particular, being part of the team that was tasked with capturing all of the drama and context of that consequential geopolitical event that also served as the prelude to the Games, and feeling as if we were honest with our audience and to our mission while covering the moment, was a team effort I really appreciated the opportunity to be part of with so many colleagues.   

Brett: I am asked this all the time, and I always struggle with the right answer. It’s been an embarrassment of riches, to be honest. If pushed, I would say the women’s beach volleyball final at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. I had become very close friends with Kerri Walsh Jennings and Misty May Treanor, and their gold-medal match, against a Chinese team playing on their home sand, in the driving rain, was incredibly memorable. Kerri and Misty triumphed, and it was one of a number of matches that established their partnership as the greatest ever. I think I’m still wet from standing for two hours in the monsoon, but it was worth it! 

Paige: My favorite Olympic Memory was my first Olympics. I was a figure skater growing up and always loved watching the Olympic Figure Skating. I grew up watching Tara Lipinski and Johnny Weir compete. Getting to work with them in Sochi, Russia was a real pinch me moment. They were so kind and gracious and I loved getting Johnny his special lavender tea and making sure Tara had her dark chocolate Hershey kisses. I look back on that month in Russia so fondly. I know that experience helped launch my career and has lead me to where I am now. It’s a privilege to work with Tara and Johnny as their producer now and it is a real full circle moment. To see how far we have all come in our careers and to call them colleagues and friends is such an honor.   

Patricia: I have so many amazing Olympic memories but nothing beats being with the Olympic Team after the Closing Ceremonies end. Watching the recap of all the special moments makes you appreciate how talented the Olympic team is and how hard everyone worked to showcase the athletes victories and defeats. 

Lyndsay: I have two favorites: First was at my first Olympics in 2008 in Beijing and my shift was over so I stopped by the Water Cube to catch some swimming. I was able to witness the relay that Jason Lezak anchored and won in person and it was really exciting. I also was fortunate enough to watch TJ Oshie’s incredible Olympic Shoot Out run in Sochi.   

Ron VaccarroRon Vaccaro (back right) at the 2022 Beijing Olympics


How have the Olympics changed throughout your time working on them? What is the most unique aspect about working on the Olympics? 

Alexa: Every Olympics we are forced to adapt to changing technology, consumer habits, you name it. It is cool to see how we can use our past experiences to inform us, but also must continue to try new things and innovate.  

Coming together with a new group of people for a short, but intense amount of time. You form lifelong friendships in just a few weeks due to the nature of the Olympics and the work it requires to produce the best coverage possible.   

Kristen: This year especially, I love that our leadership has thrown out the roadmap and started from scratch to ensure that we’re speaking authentically to today’s audience with a show that will engage them and build new fans for the future. The amount of celebrities we’re working with to grow our audience is truly remarkable! 

The stamina that everyone has to have to keep working at an extremely high level for several weeks straight – the athletes inspire us to bring our very best! 

Ron: They’ve grown! More athletes, more events. Their place in the world has also evolved, and not always in linear ways. I am very optimistic that the next several Olympics will help ignite the next generation of Americans with an insatiable appetite for the unmatched splendor of the Olympics.   

It really is a team of teams. Thousands of people across the company, staffers and freelancers alike rowing in the same direction and working together to bring the Olympics to life. It’s an unmatched intensity for 17 straight days and then just like that it’s over, but the memories of working together to achieve something memorable are never extinguished. 

Brett: Even for an Olympic veteran like myself, it is often difficult to get my arms around how big the Olympics are. In the week prior to the Opening Ceremony, I like to think about the fact that athletes from 206 countries – 206! – are packing their suitcases and heading to a single location.  Overwhelming!    

Paige: Each individual has a special connection to the Olympics whether it’s your first or your 20th, we all know how special each one is. Everyone who works the event has a story from growing up or a story from working one of the games that keeps them coming back year after year because it means so much to all of us. 

Patricia: When I started in 2006, the Olympics aired on NBC and our a few cable channels. We held all the best live Olympic content until primetime. The production was all based out of the site of the Games, Torino, Italy. The Paris Olympics will air on 10 linear channels and will stream 5,000 hours on Peacock. Olympic coverage will air live during the day, including the best content on NBC, with a reimagined primetime show at night. Our Olympic operation will be split between Paris and Stamford, Conn., and a few other U.S. locations with more people back home than abroad. Our Olympic coverage has become more efficient and more expansive! 

Lyndsay: I have watched the Olympics go from primarily a television experience in primetime to 24/7, cross platform presentation that is customized for all generations and demographics which is an incredible feat but a testament to the people we have at the wheel in all areas of our business. There truly is no global event like the Olympics. The scale and storylines are incomparable to anything else and you only really can understand it if you watch, but it truly can be a life changing experience.

The Olympics onsite is incredible and exhilarating but also exhausting and fulfilling. Although experiencing the competition in person is unlike any other event, the heart and soul of our operation is in Stamford and the energy there when our teams are covering the Olympics is unmatched.

Kristen KingKristen King working her first Olympics in 2010 in Vancouver 


Why is NBCUniversal the best home for the Olympics? 

Alexa: Teamwork! We assemble such talented people and work together to produce amazing coverage of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. 

Kristen: It’s got to be the secret sauce - Symphony! The way the whole company comes together to support brings the Olympics to consumers in a way that is unique and meaningful to each individual. The decades of experience of our production group means that they have invaluable knowledge and relationships to produce the best show in the world! 

Ron: Because there is a core team that knows the ins and outs of the Olympic movement, and that allows expertise to inform the smallest details and even more importantly be informed enough to achieve bold swings and get them done. The blending of a culture of innovation, the backing of our broader company for technological innovation, and people who love evangelizing the Olympics makes NBCU an awesome home for the Games.   

A lot of our best sporting events are one climactic event per day. The Super Bowl. An individual game at an NBA Finals, World Series or Stanley Cup Final. One game per day. Now imagine 17 straight days where there are 20+ gold medals on the line one after another, after another, it can become a cavalcade of thrills unmatched anywhere else. 

Brett: The Olympics are in our corporate blood.  I love how Brian Roberts has completely embraced the Olympics, and everyone else has followed suit.  It’s so rewarding when your colleagues outside of the Sports division are as pumped as you are for an upcoming Olympics.  It’s very humbling, and it gives us a lot of energy to do our best as representatives for the entire company in Paris.   

Paige: NBCU is the best home for the Olympics because of the love and care that goes into the storytelling. We hire the best in the business to work the games across all jobs and every single person shows up to work ready to give their all. Every person that works for NBCU wants to cover these athletes and their stories in a way that makes the world fall in love with them because we know how much the Olympics mean to them but, it also means so much to us. 

NBCU spends years planning each games, hiring the right people, researching each athlete across all sports. There’s so much time and energy and care given to each games. The energy is so special and palpable whether you are in Stamford, CT or in Paris because of the hard work and planning that has gone into each Olympics. It’s a magical event that never ceases to amaze me. 

Patricia: The NBC Olympics team is the most dedicated, creative and passionate team that you could ask for. Our Olympic coverage, our athlete profiles, our features, and our promotion are all best in class. We have the best team in place to plan and execute everything involved with the Olympics. I am truly honored to work with such talented and wonderful people.   

Lyndsay: We have a legacy that has defined the Olympics in the United States for generations coupled with an innovative spirit that comes through with each Games. Those elements that are then amplified by Symphony, no other media company can do what we do every two years.   

Brett Goodman and Molly SolomonBrett Goodman with Molly Solomon during their first Olympics in 1992


What are you looking forward to the most during the 2024 Paris Olympics? 

Alexa: I am excited that we will have a disabled hosts for the first time for both the Olympics and Paralympics. It is so important to increase representation. To have more disabled talent on screen during the coverage is a huge step forward.   

Kristen: We know that the city of Paris will be one of the biggest stars of our show and I’m excited to see how we’ll make Paris come to life for the viewers back home. By moving so much of our production out of the International Broadcast Center and to popular locations like the Eiffel Tower, it will really give our viewers the feel for what it’s like to be at the Olympics in Paris.    

Ron: For the previous 10 Olympics I have worked on, it seems we have either had the biggest events LIVE or on tape. But I like to say these Olympics, it’s not either/or, but BOTH!  Live presentation on NBC and Peacock as they’re happening, and then a taped presentation of the best of the best in prime time when most people are in front of TV sets and other devices to watch the Olympics like you’ve never seen them before with enhanced, immersive storytelling as part of the coverage.   

Brett: Here’s my very predictable answer: looking at the Eiffel Tower all day, every day from my office near our primetime set. I’ve been to Paris many times, and yet it never fails: I cannot tire from looking out and up and that incredible landmark.    

Patricia: I can’t wait to see the primetime show. Since we are airing live sports during the day, the production team has worked really hard to enhance primetime’s coverage. It will truly be a spectacular show and will highlight athlete stories, reactions from the athlete’s friends and families, and celebrity collaborations.     

Lyndsay: I’m looking forward to seeing how all of our efforts on site with our creator program comes to life. There is so much buzz and energy around Paris I’m excited to see how these creators harness that energy on the grounds and showcase it to their fans and followers. 

 Stay up to date with all NBC Olympics content with our Olympics Hub.