Social media Olympics started in 2010 when Instagram barely existed and 16.6 million Canadians watched Sidney Crosby score on one screen. You're planning to watch this year's Olympics on your TV while scrolling TikTok. That's the official strategy now. TikTok is the second screen partner. NBC lost $233 million in 2010 trying to figure out this new world. Now you need two screens because one isn't enough to hold your attention.
The 2010 Vancouver Games were called the first social media Olympics. Instagram launched that year. No betting apps. No vertical content creators. No AI-generated fake results circulating before real ones. This year brings all of that. You'll have to verify whether Canada actually won gold or if an AI fake went viral first. The expectation is you can't watch without your phone in hand anymore. Zero attention span requires dual screens.
The next viral moment you share from the Olympics might be completely fabricated. The sacred untouchable event now gets the same AI treatment as everything else. And you're supposed to watch it all happen on two devices at once because single-screen viewing is over.
Topics: social media Olympics, 2010 Vancouver memories, TikTok second screen, AI fake results, multi-screen consumption
Originally aired on 2026-02-05

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