Robert Livingstone

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Robert Livingstone
Born (1967-10-10) October 10, 1967 (age 56)
Toronto, Ontario
OccupationProducer, journalist
NationalityCanadian
Website
www.gamesbids.com

Robert Livingstone is a Canadian journalist. He is the creator and producer of GamesBids, a news and information website for the Olympic Games bid process, since 1998. He is a member of the International Society of Olympic Historians and "is widely considered one of the world’s foremost experts on the Olympic bidding process."[1][2]

Covering the Olympic bid process[edit]

Livingstone's specialty is the Olympic Games' site selection process and he frequently comments in the media as a notable expert on the issues related to hosting of the Olympic Games by various cities.[3][4][5][6]

Robert Livingstone wrote a weekly op-ed column about New York's 2012 Olympic bid in the New York Sun newspaper.[7]

In 1998 he launched GamesBids.com, a reference site for Olympic bids as well as BidIndex,[8] an original Olympic bid rating system. There, he also serves as senior journalist.

Since 2000, Livingstone has been said to have been "comprehensively covering all Olympic bids for over two decades".[9] He also covers bids for Commonwealth Games, FIFA World Cup, Pan American Games, Asian Games and more[10] in both journalistic and opinion pieces.

Livingstone is an expert on all Olympic bids, but was noteworthy during the failed Calgary 2026 Olympic bid when he published his "Dear Calgary:" series[11] that guided the city through the complexities of an Olympic bid prior to a decisive plebiscite. The series received media acclaim in Calgary along with several Q&A interviews.[12][13] Calgary mayor Naheed Nenshi apparently took inspiration from Livingstone's remarks during his 2026 Olympic bid campaign when he said “This has been called the most transparent process in Olympic history.”[14] "The mayor was alluding to a tweet from GamesBids.com journalist Robert Livingstone, who covers Olympic bids worldwide" a journalist from The Sprawl reported.

As a long-time Olympic journalist, in 2014 Livingstone was invited to carry the torch in the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics torch relay where he ran a leg in Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia.[15] In 2010, Livingstone became one of the first web-only journalists accredited to cover the Olympic Games.[15]

Television, video, radio and podcasts[edit]

Livingstone appeared as an expert on the television show "Tarnished Gold". Investigative Reports. Season 10. 2000-09-14. 60 minutes in. A&E. to discuss the controversial Olympic bid vote-buying scandal involving Salt Lake City. He also appeared as an Olympic bid expert on show "De Sotchi à Pyeongchang". Les Grands Reportages. 2018-01-25. 60 minutes in. CBC/Radio-Canada. where he discussed issues with siting the Olympic Winter Games.

In 2021, Livingstone was featured in an Olympic-themed Off The Podium podcast which discussed his career included becoming one of the first-ever web-only journalists to receive accreditation to cover the Olympic Games and running in the Olympic torch relay at the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games[15]

Livingstone appeared in a CBC Sports Program "The Breakdown"[16] in 2022 that took a critical look at the history behind Beijing being awarded the 2022 Olympic Winter Games, a process that he extensively covered with multiple visits to China, Switzerland, Indonesia and Kazakhstan from 2013 to 2014.

Livingstone had also been a guest on several radio programs including in 2021 on the Scott Radley Show[17] in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada to discuss the city's Commonwealth Games bid.

Awards[edit]

In 2015, Livingstone was nominated for an inaugural International Sports Press Association Sport Media Pearl Award in the category of "Journalistic Weblog" for his work on GamesBids.com.[18][19] In 2018 he was ranked first in North and South America.[20]

Year Award Category Work Result
2015 AIPS Sport Media Pearl Awards Best Journalistic Weblog[21] GamesBids Shortlisted
2018 AIPS Sport Media Awards Best Journalistic Weblog[20] GamesBids 5th (Winner in Americas)
2021 AIPS Sport Media Awards Best Column[22] GamesBids Shortlisted

References[edit]

  1. ^ Michael, Tom. "With Two Weeks to a Decision, Kazakh Olympic Hosting Bid Stands Strong". Edge Magazine. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
  2. ^ Smith, Aaron. "Chicago's Olympic bid: An expensive proposition". CNN Money.
  3. ^ Edwardson, Lucie. "Calgary now front-runner for 2026 Winter Olympics, says online bid tracker". CBC News. CBC.
  4. ^ Mclinden, Amber. "The race before the torch: How does Calgary stack up against other 2026 Olympic Games bid contenders?". Calgary Journal.
  5. ^ "Tokyo throws hat into ring for 2016 Olympic Games"Chicago Sun-Times. June 8, 2007. Accessed July 3, 2008
  6. ^ "O, Shea Can You See As Olympics Plan B? Alternate sites are longshots to Games hopes" New York Daily News, June 12, 2005. Accessed July 3, 2008
  7. ^ "Robert Livingstone - Archive". The New York Sun.
  8. ^ "Olympics: Bid pundits say London is eroding Paris's lead". New York Times.
  9. ^ Chan, Kenneth (2022-02-04). "Daily Hive". Daily Hive.
  10. ^ Livingstone, Robert. "Robert Livingstone Archives". GamesBids.com.
  11. ^ Livingstone, Robert. "Dear Calgary". GamesBids.com.
  12. ^ Small, Kaylen (2019-06-25). "Why insider says 2026 Olympics wouldn't have been good fit for Calgary". Global News Calgary.
  13. ^ "'Calgary might be the only city left standing': A glimpse into Olympic bid politics". Calgary Eyeopener.
  14. ^ "The Mayor Cannot Be Leading It Anymore". The Sprawl.
  15. ^ a b c Waterworth, Ben. "Robert Livingstone Interview". Off The Podium - An Olympics Podcast. Transistor.FM.
  16. ^ Strashin, Jamie. "The Breakdown". Youtube. CBC Sports.
  17. ^ Radley, Scott (2021-09-27). "Scott Radley Show". CHML Radio Hamilton.
  18. ^ Sport Media Pearl Awards Website - Nominations List
  19. ^ Staff, G. B. (November 4, 2015). "GamesBids.com Producer Nominated For AIPS Sport Media Pearl Award".
  20. ^ a b "AIPS Sport Media Awards: The Top 10 finalists". aipsawards.com.
  21. ^ Sport Media Pearl Awards Website - Nominations List Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ "Writing - Best Column". AIPS Awards. AIPS. Retrieved 1 Apr 2022.