The loud trumpets called vuvuzelas will continue to be allowed for the time being at the World Cup, despite complaints from some international broadcasters, players, and fans, the tournament’s organizing committee has said. Danny Jordaan, the chief World Cup organizer, told the British Broadcasting Corporation that use of the trumpets was “something we are evaluating on an ongoing basis.” He said he would consider banning the horns “if there are grounds to do so.”Rico says the latest is that the television stations will use sophisticated frequency-blocking technology to filter out the noise of the vuvuzelas from their broadcasts. (Thus primitive technology drives modern technology...)
Some broadcasters have been complaining since last June’s Confederations Cup here that the vuvuzelas are too disruptive to the international television feeds, subduing announcers’ voices and irritating viewers.
Patrice Evra, France’s captain, complained to Agence France-Presse that the horns played a role in his team’s lackluster 0-0 draw with Uruguay on Friday, saying, “We can’t hear one another on the pitch because of them.” Evra also said that the horns were disrupting the French players’ sleep, and awakening them as early as 6 a.m. at the team hotel.
Banning the trumpets, though, would undoubtedly unleash a fierce response from South Africans, who see the vuvuzelas as an indispensable part of their soccer culture. Sepp Blatter, the president of FIFA, soccer’s world governing body, has supported the trumpets, saying Europeans must adjust to African traditions.
In a statement, Rich Mkhondo, a spokesman for the World Cup organizing committee, reiterated that “the vuvuzela will continue to be allowed during the tournament and the status quo has not changed,” adding that complaints had been isolated. The organizing committee will continue to evaluate the use of vuvuzelas, the statement said, and will not tolerate “any vuvuzelas landing on the field of play during matches or being used in a threatening manner at the stadiums, which has never before been the case.” The organizing committee said that fans had heeded requests to refrain from blowing the vuvuzelas during national anthems and stadium announcements.
Jordaan told the BBC he would prefer singing and chanting instead of the vuvuzelas, saying that in the days of struggle against apartheid “we were singing all through our history.” “It’s our ability to sing that inspired and drove the emotions,” Jordaan said.
16 June 2010
Vuvuzelas
Rico says that maybe it's just him (ah, hell, we know it's just him), but vuvuzelas sounds dirty... (That 'vulva' thing, probably.) It's not, of course, not even in whatever the hell language it comes from, but Jeré Longman (now there's a name) has an article in The New York Times (complete with a sound file, in case you haven't heard the things on the news) about what they really are, and why they're irritating:
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