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Old Mon Oct 22, 2007, 09:32pm
GarthB GarthB is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Spokane, WA
Posts: 4,222
Quote:
Originally Posted by jimpiano
Ah, the capability exists. Certainly it does, but it is not used to change the sounds of the game.

Why would it be?

The sound may be easier to hear at home, espeically in theater set-ups and and more sophisticated systems..

But it is not changed.

The swoosh at the tee is what you would hear standing next to Tiger.
The same for the ball going through the basket it you were sitting underneath, although you contend it sounds like a cork popping? Maybe you are a lush.

I don't know what hockey games you watch...but the sound of the sticks hitting the ice and the puck, and the skates, the puck hitting the glass and the pipes, the players crashing into the boards are all what you hear at a game....but the "swoosh of a Puck? Are you serious?
Once again, I can't tell if you're really that dumb or purposefully misprepresnting the truth.

I have worked live events with ESPN and I know for a fact that live sounds are sweetened "in the truck."

I have been to the Masters and I know for a fact that the sound heard at on the tee is not the sound the home viewers are treated to.

Hockey broadcasts, back when they added the electronic "trail" to the puck (or, I suppose you'll say that never happened either) also added a "swooshing sound" after the puck was struck. They have since eliminated both.

Networks have long "sweetened" even the crowd noise to give the impression of larger attendance.

Ah, bien, vous reviendrez à la liste d'ignorer. C'est une honte. Parfois vous êtes drôle.
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