It’s the Winter Olympics, that special season every four years in which everyone you know is suddenly an expert on luge strategy and curling technique from the comfort of their couch.
There’s plenty to dive into this year, at the unusually spread-out Milan Cortina Olympics.
Hundreds of athletes from around the world — including 232 from the U.S. — will descend on over two dozen venues across northern Italy to compete in 16 different sports. There are 116 medal events on the line throughout the 2 1/2 weeks. And this time, unlike the COVID-era 2022 Beijing Winter Games, spectators will be allowed to watch in person.
But you don’t have to board a plane or sport hand warmers to get a good view, thanks to NBC’s robust broadcasting rights and NPR’s scrappy team of journalists on the ground. Here’s how to follow the action — and peek behind the curtain — from home.
How to watch the opening ceremony
The Feb. 6 opening ceremony marks the official start of the Games (even though several sports, including curling and ice hockey, start competing two days earlier).


