翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ ARP4761
・ ARPA
・ Arpa (river)
・ Around the Clock (song)
・ Around the Day in Eighty Worlds
・ Around the Fur
・ Around the Horn
・ Around the Horn (album)
・ Around the Horn (disambiguation)
・ Around the Horn with Maynard Ferguson
・ Around the House
・ Around the Moon
・ Around the Mountains Cycle Trail
・ Around the Piano
・ Around the Pink House
Around the Rings
・ Around the Sun
・ Around the Sun (album)
・ Around the Way Girl
・ Around the Well
・ Around the World
・ Around the World (1943 film)
・ Around the World (1956 song)
・ Around the World (1967 film)
・ Around the World (1997 film)
・ Around the World (Ami Suzuki album)
・ Around the World (Ami Suzuki song)
・ Around the World (Aqua song)
・ Around the World (Bad Boys Blue album)
・ Around the World (Beat Ink song)


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Around the Rings : ウィキペディア英語版
Around the Rings

Around the Rings (ATR) is an Internet-based publication covering the business and politics of the Olympic Movement, as well as a wide array of issues in international sports.
ATR had its beginnings in the late 1980s when Atlanta was bidding for the 1996 Olympic Games. The company – originally known as Radio Atlanta – was founded in May 1992 by Ed Hula. The company’s global headquarters remains in Atlanta, with contributors and sales staff around the world.
Over the years, ATR has become known as “the go-to source for Olympic bid information” and is frequently quoted across all international media.〔()〕 A subscription to the site is required in order to access premium content, although many articles and features are open to all visitors.
Around the Rings delivers news across every distribution platform: print, online, email, and phone app.
==History==

Beginning in 1992, Ed Hula formed Radio Atlanta to provide radio networks in the U.S. with reporting about the 1996 Olympics. Hula has provided coverage about every Olympics since Barcelona.
From 1994 to 1996, he was the Olympics correspondent for WGST, the official “information station” for the Atlanta Games.
From 1998 to 2001 he was based in Sydney as the Olympics editor for Radio 2UE, the rights-holding radio station for the 2000 Olympic Games.
Even in the mid-1990s, Hula was in the vanguard of new media, when he served as AOL’s Olympics reporter in Atlanta.
While delivering his radio coverage to clients worldwide, Hula realized there was a need for specialized business news about the Olympics .
In the mid-1990s, he was asked to write a column for a weekly political newsletter that was mailed out across the Southeast. “The Hula Report”, as it was known, soon outgrew its one-page space allotment and became its own four- to eight-page fax distributed twice monthly.

By 1998 electronic technology and delivery platforms were becoming increasingly important. ATR’s website, launched in late 1996, was already becoming a powerful point of delivery. As the fax expanded to 12 to 16 pages, it became necessary to convert the publication to an email format – and to open an office in Sydney, Australia, to cover the Games of 2000. Sydney was a watershed for Around the Rings. It also resulted in phenomenal growth for their readership as well as the range of their publications.
The Nagano Olympics in 1998 were a milestone for Around the Rings and the Olympics when Ed Hula became the first New Media journalist accredited for the Games.〔http://aroundtherings.com/public/EdHula_1st_Accredited_E-Pass.gif〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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