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| | London Olympics
LONDON (AFP) - The "iconic" logo for the 2012 London Olympics was unveiled
here on Monday, but critics immediately condemned it as "hideous" and a waste of
money.

The jagged emblem, designed to define the image of the Games in five years'
time, comes in a series of bright shades of pink, blue, green and orange, and
includes the signature five Olympic rings emblazoned onto the "0".
"This is the vision at the very heart of our brand," said London 2012 organising
committee chief Sebastian Coe, the former 800m and 1,500m world record holder
who won gold in the 1,500 metres at the 1980 and 1984 Olympics.
"It will define the venues we build and the Games we hold, and act as a reminder
of our promise to use the Olympic spirit to inspire everyone and reach out to
young people around the world," he said at the London launch.
Organisers hope the logo, designed to be instantly recognisable worldwide, will
help boost its campaign to raise two billion pounds to stage the Games.
"This is an iconic brand that sums up what London 2012 is all about -- an
inclusive, welcoming and diverse Games that involves the whole country," said
Olympics minister Tessa Jowell.
But critics were not impressed.
Bob Neill, 2012 Olympics spokesman for the main opposition Conservative Party,
was disparaging about Coe's optimism, despite him being a fellow Tory lawmaker.
"Lord Coe has described this logo as 'ambitious, interactive and
youth-friendly'. I would describe it as hideous," he said.
"Questions need be answered as to how we have ended up in this situation. Was
there an open competition to supply the designs? If so, what on earth do the
rejected ones look like!
"We need to know how much money this exercise has cost, because whatever it was,
it's been a complete waste of money."
Initial public reaction was also less than positive.
"This logo makes me embarrassed to be English," said a contributor called
Clumbers on one online message site devoted to the logo, which was devoid of
supporters of the chosen design.
"It looks like it could have been done by a six year old. I could do better with
my eyes closed," added someone called Bige.
A poll by the BBC News website asked readers to give it a gold, silver or bronze
medal, or a wooden spoon if they really didn't like it. Eighty three percent
gave it a wooden spoon.
The budget for the 2012 Olympics has soared to 9.3 billion pounds, nearly four
times more than the first projections of how much it would cost to stage the
Games in London
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