EntertainmentOlympians find love, fame, and fans in Paris 2024 TikTok village

Olympians find love, fame, and fans in Paris 2024 TikTok village

Rugby player Ilona Maher won the hearts of viewers on TikTok
Rugby player Ilona Maher won the hearts of viewers on TikTok
Images source: © @ilonamaher Instagram

28 July 2024 16:09

Life in none of the Olympic villages has been as accessible to fans as in Paris 2024. This is all thanks to the athletes’ coverage on TikTok.

The Paris Olympics are the first games during which TikTok has been so prominent. The app launched a month after the competition in Rio in 2016. During Tokyo 2021 (held a year later due to the pandemic), athletes' posts on TikTok gained popularity, but it is Paris 2024 that has brought full synergy. Rollo Goldstaub, head of sports partnerships at the app, told The Guardian Weekly that sports is currently one of the five most popular categories among viewers.

Coverage from the Olympic Village Paris 2024 on TikTok

One of the people who attracted the largest audience is undoubtedly the rugby player from the USA team, Ilona Maher. She entered the Olympic village with confidence and a mission—well, maybe two; she definitely wants a medal as well. However, Maher's first video from Paris is titled "I'm Setting Out to Find Love in the Olympic Village." The rugby player decided to treat the Games in Paris like the reality show "Love Island."

Maher posts many "Olympic Love Island" episodes on TikTok, which have gone viral. She shows that in her team tracksuit, she looks like Sue Sylwester from Glee and tests the famous cardboard beds with her teammates. She posted a TikTok with Snoop Dogg, whom one of the American TV stations sent to Paris as a correspondent. She also publishes more serious content about body diversity in sports and life and the positive role of carbohydrates as a source of energy.

Different ways to create viral TikToks from the Olympics

Australian water polo player Tilly Kearns made another viral TikTok from the Olympic village in Paris. The video features athletes from Fiji singing gospel. Kearns wrote, "Being among all these different cultures is the best."

For much more down-to-earth reasons, videos by French swimmer Florent Manaudou have gone viral. The athlete knows how to serve "thirst traps." The most popular one is the video where he combines his "ritual" of spitting water from the pool before the start with the "Hawk Tuah girl" Hailey Welch, whose rapid career we recently wrote about.

For a long time, the undisputed social media star has been British diver Tom Daley. The gold medalist of the Tokyo Games is in Paris with his husband and children. And, of course, with his indispensable knitting needles and yarn. Daley uses his free time during competitions to catch up on his knitting projects.

Thanks to the athletes' coverage from the Olympic Village, we know that the dining hall is open 24 hours a day, and the windows in the rooms where they stay do not have curtains or drapes. The atmosphere is somewhat reminiscent of a summer camp for high school students. For example, an obligatory part of the program is trading metal pins with athletes from other countries, with many people aiming to collect them from all national teams.

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