Roiling grey skies and regular flashes of lightning. “I’m fucking fed up of this shit,” says one of you artic drivers. He’s been waiting for Curtis to seal him. It has been a hot hot day. Hard work for these athletes, who stride around in the stadiums godlike.
I got hot today just buzzing around. TRO (cadero) first, with Wyn in full rebellion after waiting too long for his signs. He’s ordered them from another company now, he tells me, looking at me hard for a reaction. He’s a smart man, Wyn. I wouldn’t want to get in a fight with him, but I’d do the pub quiz. He likes to provoke though. He’s tried it every time I’ve seen him. Says something controversial then looks hard at you. He hasn’t hit on something I give a fuck about yet, but he’ll keep looking.
After TRO I’m going to EIF (fel) but there’s no answer from Scott, my contact. Later I discover I’ve been messaging him on a French burner phone he doesn’t check, but at the time I actively want to get an upgrade pass before I go to the van check area, and he wants to control flow. When it’s secure, the clowns really want to turn people away. Without a venue pass the first time I try, I know I’ll never get in. With a venue pass I can work in my own way and get it where he needs it without bothering him. But he clearly wants to be bothered. He keeps a tight stranglehold on his passes.
Stuck in TRO is a young German camera op, and he has waited over an hour for his driver. “He probably hasn’t got a VAPP so he’ll never get here,” I tell him. He’s not answering his phone either. I check his boxes and give him a lift to his hotel. Then I call his boss. One good turn deserves another. His boss lends me a media upgrade pass. He’s an Aussie guy who’s just arrived in Paris and is still full of adrenaline and jetlag. His eleventh Olympics now counting winter. He started out like me, he tells me as he waves me in to his posh crowded catering tent where they give you free flasks. He knows I’m gonna rush. He just wants to share his excitement, and having been in my position he knows I’m not gonna stop for lunch unless it comes as part of the job.
The Champs de Mars are pretty big carrying boxes in the heat so we go by golf buggy. It’s about who you know. We drop off at Scott and despite all my workarounds he still won’t give me a spare venue pass. So Micheal took me to the gate. And I stole the pass he lent me. After all his hospitality.
Didn’t do it knowingly. Meant to ask him. Texted a suitably contrite apology. “No worries mate, maybe you can use it to get in so we can watch the volleyball some time,” he posits. “I won’t have time.”
I’m not here to watch sport sadly. I’m here to ping from place to place, to be undaunted, to learn the systems and look for the cracks. My EIF media pass is one of the last pieces in the puzzle that’s called “how to maximise the last minute nature of what I have to do”.
Lou thinks he might have been hitting on me. I never notice such things but I don’t think that was the vibe. I think he would have behaved similarly in my situation and now he’s management he can’t have the strange joy of hard solving, but he sees it and it is difficult to find people who will drop everything and immediately carve out a role for themselves and put the hours in without bringing negativity. Lunch was an interview in events terms, in the same way that the first time I met Kester he got me to drive him somewhere in a van. “Maybe I’ll have to get you out to Sydney.” He does cricket. Maybe I’ll get to come be responsive at The Ashes… That’d be a slice of life. A possible interesting confluence of energies here, at this vast metal antenna as the storm gathers over Paris.












