StarTalk Radio - Stadiums of the Future
Episode Date: April 24, 2020What do the stadiums of the future look like? Neil deGrasse Tyson, co-hosts Gary O’Reilly and Chuck Nice, and Benjamin Brillat of IBM Sports investigate modern stadium design and tech including the ...new SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons and All-Access subscribers can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free. Photo Credit: Artist Rendering of Sofi Stadium via sofistadium.com Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
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Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
This is StarTalk Sports Edition.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist,
coming to you from my office at the Hayden Planetarium,
right here in New York City at the Hayden Planetarium right here in
New York City at the American Museum of Natural History. Today's topic, modern stadium design
and the tech that informs it. So who do I have here? I've got Ben Brillett. Did I pronounce
that right? You did. Thank you. Ben, welcome. Thanks very much.
You work for IBM.
I do.
You design stadiums.
Wait, you got a title here.
Global Chief Architect for Sports and Entertainment Services.
That's a lot of syllables to say you design stadiums.
Well, I design technology for stadiums.
Oh, shoot.
Yes.
Right.
Yes.
Yes.
I don't want to cause any fights.
So technology for stadiums. So we'll get back to you in a minute. Gary? Yes. Always good. Good to be any fights. So, yeah. Okay. All right.
So, we'll get back to you in a minute.
Gary?
Yes.
Always good.
Good to be here.
Gary O'Reilly.
Chuck.
Hey.
You're my people.
Yes, that's correct.
My sports people.
Yes, we are.
My sports people.
So, recently, I visited the SoFi Stadium just outside of Los Angeles.
Absolutely.
They're in the middle of building it.
Yep.
And I'm looking at the numbers at $5 billion.
Wow. Since when do stadiums cost middle of building it. Yep. And I'm looking at the numbers at $5 billion. Wow.
Since when do stadiums cost that much?
Dude.
Recently.
Recently?
Since 20 minutes ago.
Just saying.
70,000 seats opening summer 2020.
And it didn't look like they're going to be.
You're saying they're not making it.
I'm saying.
You're saying. I was there. I flew over it. It didn't look like they're going to be. You're saying they're not making it. I'm saying. You're saying.
I was there.
I flew over it.
It didn't look like.
But anyhow.
I'll tell you this much.
They better be ready by August of 2020 because they already said goodbye to the old stadium last year.
Otherwise, they're playing.
For the football teams.
They're playing pickup game in the parking lot.
Oh, that'd be hilarious.
Wouldn't it?
Oh, my God.
Just like you can tailgate and watch the game at the same time.
And be in it.
Right.
And be in it.
Hey, you missed it.
Take it back.
A little help.
Yeah, that's great.
So that stadium houses the LA Rams and the Chargers.
Yeah.
And so, Ben, so let's just get back to that.
I got footage of me visiting it.
But, Ben, how long has IBM had such a thing?
IBM engagement started really with the Atlanta Olympics in the 90s.
Oh, wow.
You guys have been in that space for a while.
That's right.
So you were the chief technology architect for the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.
That's right.
But that was way after the Olympics.
Absolutely.
So totally different design.
They didn't have the benefit
of your brilliance.
No, although some of the
fiber infrastructure
actually ended up being reused.
Oh, really?
You mean recycled and reused?
Or...
Nope, nope.
It was still there, still good.
And you just actually...
Okay, well,
way to save them some money.
So how were you combining
this sports and tech at IBM?
Because in these stadiums
where big muscle football players play,
it don't look like you have ever played football in your life.
No, I have not.
So how do you land in that pot?
Yeah, so IBM is approaching technology
and stadiums really from two sides.
The first is sort of the digital
where we're doing AI programs
and how can we help coaches
make better decisions about players.
How can we analyze data,
be able to take a coach
and put them virtually after the game
in a VR room standing next to their player
and say, can I understand better why he missed that
or why he made that?
Can I watch this from a 3D perspective?
Why not put them in during the game? Wouldn't that be cool?
You have a holographic coach
on the field.
That tech is almost around now.
With only a few seconds delay, you can
put someone back into the space
and analyze that play almost real-time.
And that's where I come in, actually,
is that the limitation now
is the technology and the data
bandwidth available on the field.
How can we get enough antennas, enough kinds of radios
to be able to move that information from the field to the stadium?
In real time.
In real time.
To make real-time decisions.
Exactly.
And so I'm involved in all of the physical infrastructure,
the antennas, the cell phone radios, the Wi-Fi access points,
the security cameras, all of the physical tech
that makes the digital tech possible.
So I just got to tell you,
I'm really feeling good listening to you
because I led a geeky life,
but it was early enough in the geek timetable
that not I because I was bigger than others,
but most of my geek friends all got beat up by the football players.
Right.
Okay?
Until the football players needed the geeks to help them with their computer homework.
There you go.
Okay?
Right.
So the balance of power changed.
And so now you are enabling professional sports.
Absolutely.
And now you are like a patron saint
of what enables them to do what they do.
Now you have sports people as your protectors.
Yeah, I mean, we want that data.
We want them healthy.
We want to know where they were.
We want to know that predictive insights in the injuries.
That means he's never gotten a wedgie.
Well, that may be true or may not be true.
However, this isn't the show to explore that.
It's the one thought that's crystallized in my mind.
All my people got wedgies coming out.
I think what Neil is saying is, before you leave here,
I mean, yeah, just watch yourself.
I got a linebacker on speed dial.
There you go.
That is a cool thing because you can just be like,
yo, bro, one line of code and I can make it so that you...
One line of code, bro.
That'd be a great name of a company.
One line of code.
One line of code.
Oh, man.
I saw the difference.
So at what point are you brought in?
So I'm rich and I want to build a stadium.
At what point do I call you?
The earlier, the better.
Right.
So we started in Atlanta when it was still a hole in
the ground uh literally still there because the technology particularly as we start to talk about
of course atlanta is a 4g stadium but as we look at 5g more damn more and more antennas means more
and more wires to the antennas that's. And so we actually have to bury conduit
in the concrete before it even gets poured.
So you have to have a design for that
ready to go right from day zero.
With enough conduit to future-proof it.
So we got some footage of me
at the SoFi Stadium outside of Los Angeles.
The LA, the Chargers and the Rams.
Correct.
Both will play there.
That's right.
And obviously, unless they play each other. Not on the same day.. That's right. And obviously, unless they play each other.
Not on the same day.
Unless they play each other.
Right.
Unless they play each other.
There you go.
Then they do play on the same day in the same stadium.
That'd be kind of cool.
I'll go to that game.
You'll go to that game?
All right.
So I visited it, and one thing I couldn't help notice is just the enormous roof.
A lot of thought went into that roof.
So let's check out this high-tech roof.
What is that transparent roof made of?
It's called an ETFE system.
How transparent is it?
About 60%, from what I understand.
Oh, so what you're saying is it'll block out about 60% of sunlight that could come in.
That's what I understand.
Either reflect it or do something else with it.
That's correct.
Okay. So those are 60-foot by foot grid areas I see them and then what we do is we build that frame on the ground outside the building and as we load this
Diaphragm in place we go ahead and put those in and we pull the ETFE system over time. How long does it stay transparent?
It'll taste stay transparent from the time we finish the project on it.
Not as long as birds poop on it. You got a way to clean that off?
There is a way to clean it.
How do you do that?
I don't see any way anybody's going up there to clean bird poop.
There is access up there and there is a gutter system up there to go ahead and allow for washing down and also the rain.
Oh, so you can hose it off?
That's one thing we can do as far as the birds though is also use a falconer. So you can actually have falcons that come around here
to keep birds away.
Does that help?
I'm trying to be as smart as this man.
That's very National Geographic, right?
Yes.
All right, you glad you turned up for this show?
Yes.
All right, so there's a little insight.
I want to say window, but I've done it now.
Onto what's going on in this 21st century stadium.
What else could we build into a roof like that?
Because that's a massive expanse.
And by roof, he means bird toilet.
Yeah.
So, I mean, are we going to have solar panels?
Because California, I think every new construction has to have solar panels.
Thank God.
Can we use it like a TV screen?
Can we project things out?
What could we do to play with this and make it just a roof?
I mean, you'd love to, right?
The technology for solar panels.
I mean, the problem is the weight today, right?
Can you make it light enough to be able to cover the surface
and still have it span that enormous distance, which it now spans?
We've moved from stadiums where you used to have,
you know, limited site view seats
to stadiums where there's no such thing in the entire place
because these roof materials have gotten so light
that now everyone can see from everywhere.
So the more technology you want to put up there,
of course, the heavier it is.
We actually had problems.
Wait, just to be clear,
heavier roofs require more structures to hold it up
that would block your view.
Potentially.
A light roof, you don't have to hold up the roof.
Yeah, you can stand further away from it.
Stand further away.
So that's what you meant.
Fulcrum.
Okay, I was just trying to follow that.
So it becomes a span.
Exactly.
So how much distance are you trying to span?
How light do you need that material to be in order to make the span
so that you don't have a blocked view?
How does a roof like that affect what you would be able to do in the stadium?
You know, it's interesting. In Atlanta, and presumably they'll have the same problem
in Los Angeles as well, the fact that these materials are now plastics, you know, if we
look at an older building, like if we're in the lower levels here, concrete, rebar, iron,
lower levels here, concrete, rebar, iron, the RF energy of the city. Radio frequency. Yes,
the radio. To be clear. Doesn't make it into your basement here, right? Whereas when you build out of these new materials, these hyper-thin plastics, transparent materials, one of the challenges we're
actually having is that all of the RF energy of the city is penetrating into the building now.
And you don't want that?
You don't want that.
Does that create interference?
Absolutely, yeah.
How can you deliver cell service to 80,000 people sitting in a space which need low signal strength because they're not that far from the antenna?
But wouldn't you want to not provide them cell service?
provide them cell service?
Wouldn't you want to block their cell service and provide them your own particular frequency?
Because then you can determine
what they're going to watch, see, hear,
and how they're going to interact with the stadium
and other people
because you're the puppeteer electronically at that point.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
That's who you work for.
What are you? Are you an IBM operative?
Captain Verizon.
It sounds like you work for a DAS company,
a distributed antenna system,
which is the local cellular system in a stadium.
And the problem with that is
we want to run our DAS in a stadium
and not have it leak out into the city
and not have the city leak in.
So these new materials are really creating challenges
in how we can do that successfully.
Can't you put wires in it and turn it into a Faraday cage?
Yeah, you could.
You know about Faraday cages?
Please, we would like to know about a Faraday cage.
It has nothing to do with prisons or anything.
Oh, thank gosh.
Faraday is credited with this.
So if you have something that conducts electricity,
like wire or any kind of metal,
and you surround yourself in it,
then electromagnetic energy cannot penetrate that surface
because it tries to get through
and it gets conducted into the surface
and it never goes inside.
So, for example, you can walk out in a lightning storm
and if you're surrounded by one of these cages,
lightning will hit.
It will never go inside your bubble.
And the aliens can't read your thoughts.
That too.
Hence the aluminum foil hat.
Exactly.
It's just nothing more than an aluminum foil hat.
That's really what it is.
That's exactly what it is.
Okay, sorry, go on.
Pick it up.
So, with these new materials, it's just become very difficult to create the separation
that we need to deliver that kind of service.
So that's meaning new antenna designs,
new antenna placements, more antennas.
In fact, in Atlanta, we have a first-of-a-kind deployment
of the cellular phone antennas are actually under the seats
in the upper levels of the stadium.
Wow.
Because what we want is very low signal power
to only go a few meters to the nearby seats.
And it sterilizes your gonads.
I don't feel a little warm right now.
What am I doing?
Oh, that's so that you get strong signal.
Don't you want that?
Ticket sales have just gone down in Atlanta.
We did a lot of testing all right yeah a lot of
engineering went into making that so another interesting fact that we don't think about much
here on the east coast but on the west coast it is in every design point what do you do about
earthquakes oh can you earthquake proof a stadium yes so at the sofa tour that I took, I had to ask him about it. Let's check it out.
This bowl structure is a separate element to the roof structure.
All right.
And it's separated by what's called an MSE wall,
Mechanical Stabilized Earth Wall.
So it's panels that go in.
So if you were to walk through the rest of the stadium,
you'd go to a back area that has about 12 foot of gap in between
so that this stadium can change.
It can move independently. It can move independently and then the blade columns
support the roof structure that actually go to butterfly caps and struts and to
dead men and that acts independently with isolators at the top that can move
up to 81 inches. So you can sustain an earthquake it it sounds like. Yes, we can.
That's code for this statement, because shake and bake.
You can shake and bake. It's got a little bit of movement to it.
It does.
And you got it.
And you wouldn't even know, because as you walk in, we have a moat lid.
So there is a moat that goes all the way around that most people don't know.
A moat.
A moat.
M-O-A-T.
M-O-A-T.
With crocodiles.
Exactly. It could be.
It could.
You see it.
Because, I mean, the history of learning about earthquakes
and other sort of issues is you don't want movement over here
that have to be felt in the rest of the structure.
No.
Right?
Because that could take down the whole structure.
Correct.
So everything can have some independence.
Right.
And then it just lives as almost an organic element.
And you have these, almost like these cut lines.
Yes, expansions.
Yeah, yeah.
The usual, that'd be thermal expansions and things.
So Ben, working in the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta just a few years ago,
did they have to put in any sort of disaster-proofing, if not earthquakes, some other kind of protection?
I mean, it has to be built for the environment it's in, right?
So Atlanta is a very wet, very windy place.
You know, the movable roof is there
because Atlanta has quite a lot of days when it's rainy.
You can't play football in the rain anymore.
In my day, you couldn't even see the gridiron.
That's how much snow would be on the field, and they'd still play.
Right.
How many fans were there?
I don't know.
But in my day, we played football with a baseball bat.
That's right.
That's how tough it was.
Sorry.
Continue.
I know you're not apologizing to me.
That's right.
Yeah, yeah.
So all of the facilities are instrumented throughout.
So within the roof,
within the columns that support it, the structural steel, the structural concrete,
there's instrumentation throughout all of it, which today is more wires that we have to bring
to be able to measure the stresses that are on a given piece of steel.
When you say instrumentation, you mean diagnostic tools.
Absolutely.
So you always know the structural health of your facility.
Yeah, so in Atlanta, there are pedals that open and close to move the roof,
and you want to know the health of the pedal system.
So all of that is instrumented so that you know that it's in balance
and all of the motors are operating correctly.
Okay, so you wouldn't be taken by surprise if anything was about to fail.
Yep.
Thinking about what you said about
footballers can't play and there's rain,
da-da-da-da-da.
So when you or someone like you
is involved in design in a stadium,
who are you looking to please?
The owners?
The coaches?
The players?
The fans?
Yourself?
Why would that be mutually exclusive? No, I'm just wondering. Is there, you know, the fans, yourself, all of the above?
Why would that be mutually exclusive?
No, I'm just wondering.
Is there, you know, the owner says, I want it done this way,
and the owner's the guy with the paycheck,
therefore the owner gets what he wants, or is there... Even if that might conflict with something else.
Correct.
Got it.
I think it starts with the fans, right?
Because...
Because they're paying.
That's right.
They're paying the owners.
Right.
The owner works for the fans. That's right. They're paying the owners. Right. The owner works for the fans.
That's right.
They're the source of revenue
for everything else that comes after it.
And what you want to deliver
is a great experience for them.
And with stadiums, huge stadiums,
they're getting bigger,
they're getting more complex
because you have to compete with the fact
that it's not that expensive
to buy an 85-inch television
with 4K Ultra HD
and put it in your man cave.
That's what I did.
Hey, man, you're working against yourself there, man.
That's what I did.
No, that's got to be the thought process of every owner.
Yeah.
How do we get you out?
We want you out of your house.
Right on.
Well, you can give crappier television coverage.
That's why I missed that.
We got to be at the game.
That's true.
We're going to show the replay only at the game.
Yeah, well, there you go.
Well, we want to do both, right?
We want to have you have fun on the days you can make it,
have fun on the days you can't make it.
You want to have everything bringing together best possible experience.
But the stadium itself is really competing for that.
Let me get you out of your house in Atlanta or in Los Angeles
to come into the stadium.
We got to take a quick break.
When we come back, more on the innovative designs of modern stadiums on StarTalk. We're back.
StarTalk Sports Edition.
Gary O'Reilly.
Hey, yep.
Former footballer.
Apparently.
Apparently.
You keep telling yourself that.
Yeah.
Chuck. Yes. Who do we have here? Ben. Brilat. Apparently. Apparently. You keep telling yourself that. Yeah. Chuck.
Yes.
Who do we have here?
Ben.
Brilat.
Brilat.
Thanks.
None of us even knew that such a person as you existed.
The tech, geeky person who empowers modern stadiums to do and be what they need to be
to satisfy the fans, the owners, the players, all of the above. The great and wonderful Oz of stadiums to do and be what they need to be to satisfy the fans the owners the players all of
the above the great and wonderful oz of stadiums well that's what you are man that's what that is
i mean we hope it's that way right if we don't want to be too noticed right man right on so as
you know we're featuring my footage from my visit to the sofi stadium under construction not even
built outside of los angeles it's great because one of the landing routes and takeoff routes from from my visit to the SoFi Stadium under construction. They're not even built. Outside of Los Angeles.
It's great because one of the landing routes
and takeoff routes from LAX goes right over the stadium.
So you just look out the window.
There it is.
Very cool.
That is cool.
That's why I know it didn't look like they'd be ready
when they said they'd be ready.
I'm just saying.
I'm just saying.
A lot of late nights coming up.
There's the exterior design,
but there's also what's going on on the inside.
And as you said
the user experience comes first that resonates with what i learned from the designers of this
stadium let's check it out the oculus will actually start over here in this corner so
what is the oculus so the oculus is actually the the tv screens and or scoreboards everything
everything that will be announced the world's largest score scoreboard. And where's it going to be?
Is it going to be in the middle or somewhere else?
No, it actually follows the line of all this.
So right where that green box is, that hydraulic box,
imagine about eight feet away from that.
We start building sections of it.
And we start building sections, and we stack sections on it.
Such as this one, too, on this side as well?
All the way around the entire bowl.
And then we go ahead and put a strand jack similar to this assembly up here.
And we introduce load.
We pull down.
It pulls on the roof.
It weighs 2 million pounds when it's completed with components.
We assemble it here.
We commission it here.
And we take it all the way up.
And you hoist it up.
And we hoist it up.
So when you're standing on level 8, you see that guy there in the yellow?
Yes, I do.
So that's level 8.
And then level 9 above, you'll actually be staring right out at that Oculus.
Got it.
So you're going to have those types of seats in the views.
But you can still see the feel.
Still see the feel.
Right.
Still see the feel.
Yeah.
So that was access for the cheap seats.
The cheap seats.
Helping those guys out.
Yeah.
It seems to be there's an arms race with stadiums now for the world's biggest, like jumbotron or fans jumbotron that's so
80s i know i haven't been to a game in a long time can you tell absolutely i mean that atlanta's the
current record holder so they're they're trying to beat atlanta absolutely over it so far yep
oh see he he's he's like do you him? He's feeling it. He did.
His face got a little red.
He puffed up a little bit.
Yeah, he got a little puff.
A little chest beating going on right there.
That's it.
So now this will definitely be the world's largest screen
or fan screen in the world after it's done.
Yeah, so the new Oculus here has screen services.
Here in SoFi.
In SoFi.
It has screen services on both sides of the circle.
So it's not just a single ring.
There's display elements on both sides of the circle that's hanging down.
Ooh.
So it's a double-sided screen.
It's inside, outside.
It's a Kandinsky painting of jumbo screens.
Oh.
Kandinsky.
Man, he's damn.
He's on something today.
Man, Chuck.
I don't know who said that.
All right, let's play the game here.
What other tech
could you introduce
to improve something like this Oculus?
What could then take it to another level?
Because this seems, as Chuck says,
a bit of an arms race.
Yeah.
I mean, the holy grail really is
to have VR players on the field, right?
Oh, my.
Projected augmented reality more than VR, really.
Yeah.
But augmented reality players projected onto the field.
We're still some ways away from that.
But what would...
Oh, that would be so cool.
I don't get it.
So check it out.
So an instant...
I asked him, please. Oh, I'm sorry. Who am I... I don't know that would be so cool i don't get it so check it out so an instant i asked him please i'm sorry so who am i i don't know who you are are you there do you work for
ibm no well i mean let's just take this example if you are an atlanta fan and uh your team is
playing in los angeles you want to be able to go to atlanta and watch that game on that field
in front of you in your home stadium.
As a matter of fact, they do that now.
Oh, so I could be in the field.
They don't see me, but they run through me.
Well, you could have that maybe.
You could also have just an away game played at home.
Right.
So like they have viewing parties now for the playoffs?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like your team goes to another city, right?
So you all put on VR and you're all in their stadium.
Now you're in their place. But you're in your stadium. And now you're in... In their place.
But you're in your stadium
watching the game
on your field.
Your hot dogs.
Oh!
Yeah.
So here's the thing.
As a stadium owner,
you got to love this
because that means
everybody's got to buy hot dogs
and their soft drinks.
That's true.
And not watching
on the 85-inch.
And not watching.
They're actually watching the field
just like a regular game.
Give them a reason
to get out of home
and come to the stadium. No, get out of home and come to the stadium.
No, get out of home and go to the bar and put on your...
Because, you know, the truth is...
Actually, Neil makes a really good point.
The truth is, if you bring that technology to a stadium,
it will only be a very short period of time
before bar owners bring that technology to their venue.
They get a miniature version of the stadium.
A miniature version, and then basically you'll be watching.
More work for me.
He's like, that works for you too.
Go do more work for him.
He's like, hey, guess what?
I'm good.
Right.
So is that real?
I mean, we're really going there?
Not yet.
Not yet.
The display projection technology is the problem.
Pokemon Go.
That's right.
Yeah.
If they can just show up in places.
So we could do it today with looking through your phone, right?
But that's not the best experience.
You want to be able to look at it in a seamless way.
So there's a couple of barriers,
one of which we're about to solve with 5G,
which is the ability to get that data out of the field real time,
recording what they're really called voxels,
the volumetric image data,
so that you can project from any position.
So it's a three-dimensional pixel.
Three-dimensional pixel, and get that out of the current stadium.
So 5G will help with that.
Where we're falling a little short still is in the display technology.
So right now you need something like maybe Google Glass,
an augmented reality display to look at it.
Eventually we'll be able to project it in fog or something like that.
You know, that technology still weighs off.
But, I mean, they're working on it.
Man, that is so cool.
I mean, like, in a way, though, let's play this out just for a second now.
Because, see, if I'm an NFL player and I'm smart. And I hear you say what you just said.
You're no longer my friend that helps me.
You are now my competition.
And now we go back to where jocks beat the hell out of geeks.
Okay.
The biggest regression.
Exactly.
Because let's be honest.
What you just said there is one step away instead of an augmented reality which is
basically the real-time transmission of data to why do i need that i'll just create the data myself
and transmit it so that you're seeing a game that is really an algorithm that even though it may be predetermined, it's still a game
that happens, right?
And you can watch football.
Nobody gets hurt.
It's AI football.
Isn't that just John Madden football?
No, it's not John Madden because, see,
John Madden, you're playing, whereas
this would be
an indeterminate algorithm
that would... So none of the outcomes are predetermined and you would see a real game. Whereas this would be an indeterminate algorithm.
So none of the outcomes are predetermined.
And you would see a real game.
We're going to put Watson up against Siri, right?
Right.
So in this next clip, I snared one of the engineers to ask him,
is there any other technology that the public doesn't see that might be going on on the field?
Like with the players or the coaches.
Let's check it out
in modern times football teams keep track of their players and with high-tech monitoring systems and gps how far they've moved will there be any sort of high-tech sensor systems yeah and that can be
invoked yep at field level it's actually not GPS based, it's arm based.
Okay.
So we have a ring of basically sensors around.
So when the players walk out of the dressing room,
they have a chip in their pads that gets turned on
basically when they exit the locker room.
And then within the playing surface basically,
they track the movements.
They can then figure out things like velocity and top speed and all that.
But that's not unique to the stadium, if everyone has a chip in the modern NFL.
The league basically mandates that system.
Plus for the health and well-being of the players, too, right?
You can track how far they run, how fast they run, how much they're on field, etc.
That means you can also measure how fast they decelerate in a block.
Like you're running and I run at you and I got your speed, all of a sudden, BAM!
You go from 20 miles an hour to zero in...
In a meter or whatever.
Right, right.
So Ben, why are they using RF technology if 5G is basically available?
So, it depends what is that sensor trying to accomplish.
So, on a high school field, you have GPS.
You're out in the air.
You can see the satellites.
The GPS trackers will fit in their pads.
More importantly, the GPS satellites can see you.
The GPS?
Well, no, but that's okay.
And indoors, now you have, again, the roof,
which is blocking those signals.
You need to provide some sort of local system
that can now provide that location data.
Okay.
So 5G is not a local system?
Well, 5G is a local system, and they're...
I mean, even within a stadium, local?
Absolutely.
So to that technology of DAS that I mentioned earlier,
we have to build our own 5G network inside of a stadium
to meet the density of people who are there.
You know, 80,000 devices in, well, we might even call 160,000
if you've got a watch and a phone, right?
Devices in a small space.
Now you need dedicated electronics, dedicated antennas and radios just for that stadium by itself.
But that tracking versus making phone calls,
all different kinds of 5G that are starting to come to life.
And the density, the number of devices as we look at IoT,
and really those sensors are IoT,
is just going to balloon as we start.
What IoT stands for?
Internet of Things.
That's what that abbreviates?
Yes.
Internet of Things.
Things should never be abbreviated.
That word is not important enough.
I was like this, thanks for clearing it up.
Internet of Stuff, I don't know what it is.
As I sit here and listen to you explain that, Ben,
I'm looking at it, my cell phone is dating and out of date within two years.
Yeah.
So how do we future-proof?
What's coming that we can do that you're going to be able to jump on and utilize?
Yeah, how about 7G, 8G, 10G?
It'll all be there.
The way that we future-proof in our architecture is we say we don't have a crystal ball.
The only thing we can do is put more pathways for more antennas.
Make sure that you have the ability to put, today you have one antenna in this room.
Tomorrow you have two.
Four years from now, you have four or five.
I got to interrupt you.
Okay.
And Back to the Future 2,
which took place in 2015 or 16,
I forgot, somewhere in our past right now.
Back when it was made,
people had fax machines, okay?
That was the thing.
Oh, that's cool.
That's how you send. So they imagined in that distant future
that households would have multiple fax machines.
Okay.
Of course.
So when Marty was fired from his job, it was sent to him by fax,
and every fax machine in his house out came to think you're fired.
And he said, wow, that's the future.
We'll have more than one fax machine.
So isn't that a little bit short-sighted to say, let's just put more of what we already have?
No, we're not so much putting more.
We're putting more capability, but just the path.
We don't know what kind of cable will go in it.
We don't know what kind of antenna will be there.
So you assume it needs a path.
You need to have a spot to put it, right?
And that's becoming particularly challenging
because architects also want their stadiums to be beautiful, right?
You want to experience the technology, but not have to see it.
So you need to really design in from day zero
the ability to put all of this electronics there
and be able to hide it.
Tell me about helmet cams.
That would be another.
First, it would be interesting just to monitor helmet concussion,
the forces that operate on a helmet.
You should be able to do that.
My iPhone can measure accelerations no matter what I'm doing.
A helmet could do that too.
Absolutely.
Okay.
So, but not only that, just point of view cameras.
Like, suppose I'm going to experience a game as a fan,
and I could flick on, let me see what the quarterback is looking at.
Let me see what the center, let me see what the wide receiver,
and that's their camera.
What's, how about that?
So with, with 5G, we will be able to do that,
especially in a sport like football,
where you have a lot of room to put the heavier batteries
and the camera sensors, things like that.
They're like, oh, this is too heavy.
Yeah, but.
Well, that's a baseball player.
Right.
But as a soccer player.
The good news...
You guys, when you get clipped on the side...
Oh, man, that's it.
I can't get up.
The weight's too much.
I'm falling.
I can't get up.
You soccer players.
What the hell is wrong with y'all?
Well, we got good news for...
We're precious.
We got good news for soccer, football.
Have you?
Is that with...
Is my team going to win?
With the 3D volumetric pixel imaging, it's now possible computationally
to recreate any view from an array of, say, 32 cameras around the stadium.
This is like bullet time.
Yeah.
Like in the Matrix, where you can get any camera angle.
Yeah.
So you, as a viewer, could pick, you wouldn't even have to be limited to a specific helmet
cam. You could pick the view right in even have to be limited to a specific helmet cam.
You could pick the view right in between the two helmets
and have that computed for you dynamically from the images that are already taken.
That's pretty wild.
That's badass right there.
See, now, once again, it seems like you're working.
Okay, so this would be an end.
See, that's something that you want to keep to an end stadium experience, right?
Because to be able to come and look on your phone
and see a completely different game
than you're actually watching on the field.
Why be limited to some cameraman
who's parked on some spot on the sidewalk?
You can actually curate your own game
in real time as you're sitting there.
Let me see that replay.
That's kind of cool.
Yeah, you could end up with Twitch-style re-edits of the game.
We've got to take a break.
Can you hang around for, like, the third segment?
Absolutely.
Because normally we just sort of, you know, chew the fat.
But I want to chew the fat with you in the room.
Sounds great.
Thanks.
Yeah, that'd be cool.
All right.
This is StarTalk Sports Edition.
We'll be right back. We're back.
Star Talk.
We have a special guest brought in from central Pennsylvania.
Where this dude lives.
Nobody's out there.
Well, no, he's here.
He was the only one there.
Now he's here.
Ben Brillat.
Thanks for hanging out.
Normally, we just sort of chew the fat this segment, but I want you there.
Thanks. While we chew the fat. Sounds good. Normally, we just sort of chew the fat this segment, but I want you there while we chew the fat.
Sounds good.
So I'm curious about something.
I'm looking at the rate at which stadium design is changing,
and that always tells me things.
It says if the rate is changing rapidly now,
we can praise any newly opened stadium,
but if the rate is fast, it means in five years,
that's going to be an old stadium.
Just like technology itself.
Technology itself.
You're actually self-owned.
So how do you feel about this?
I mean, it's good news for me, right?
The more tech changes. Job security.
Yeah, job security.
But now, do you build that into your design?
Because you have to.
He future-proofs by putting conduits
and places where you would put stuff.
Okay.
Yeah, I mean, there's capitalization terms
for all of these things.
You want to be sure you get your money's worth out of it.
You need to be able to...
Especially when it's $5 billion worth of your money.
Yeah.
But go ahead.
But it is a big challenge.
What can you do?
How far into that crystal ball can you see?
And, you know, we make our best attempts at it,
but, you know, some questions.
Okay, so we touched
on augmented reality.
Now, I'm just thinking if we really
throw it a long way away,
do we actually need stadiums?
Because you're going to sit there with your
VR goggles, and I'll give you an immersive suit
so you can actually feel the hits yourself
while you're sat there.
That's too much.
Well, you can dial it up.
That's too much.
It just depends.
You dial it up or you dial it down.
Dial it down, yeah.
Can I dial it down to a relaxing massage?
Yeah, if you want.
Negative three.
We're talking about we've got to get people out of their homes.
We need to, you know, our competition isn't this, this, this.
It's getting people away
from their TV sets
and it's the arena.
But is it just going to come down to,
let's save the money
and put it all into the fan experience?
You know, you'd think
that would have happened
with video gaming,
but what has actually happened
is that e-gaming
has now become
a huge spectator sport segment.
Watching other people play their e-game.
But in a stadium.
You go to a stadium to watch on the big screen video games get played.
It's true.
Don't look at me like that.
It's not me doing it.
We're all sitting in this room looking at each other the same way.
It's like, what the hell is wrong with these people?
It's a huge thing.
Is that Gen X?
Is that Gen Y?
Is that millennials?
Let's get to the bottom of this.
Yeah, it is.
Who's doing this?
The under 25 side.
It is, yeah.
My son is totally into it
and I was completely...
He's 12.
Right, and I was
completely against it
until I found out
that these so-called
E-athletes,
many of them
have seven-figure deals.
Yep.
And now he gets home, and I'm just like,
you better get upstairs and play that video game.
Get those thumbs moving.
Get those thumbs moving.
Boy, what's your problem?
Don't read a book.
That's right.
Are you reading?
Oh, my God, are you reading?
What the hell is wrong with you?
Yeah.
Are fans the whole thing here now?
Stadiums were built to honour the gladiators and the athletes.
Now we are seeing a shift away to the fan, the spectator,
the person who provides the income as being the point of view
that is the most interesting.
Where can we take that?
Where can IBM, where can the stadium builders
and architects of the future take that?
Yeah, I mean, the fans,
what we're trying to do with technology
is deliver a better game through improved insights
into how the players are moving their physio mechanics,
the coaching calls. Physio mechanics, the coaching calls.
Physio mechanics? I hope so.
I like learning new words.
Okay, alright.
And help the coaches
to be able to make the best decisions
that they can. Help the players to be able to get
the most that they can out of their own body
to put it into an
ever more entertaining game.
So I think everybody is benefiting.
You know, we talk about the greatest players of 60 years ago
versus, you know, sort of your mid-tier players today.
The mid-tier player had so much more information available to them
to help them train exactly the right muscle,
rest on exactly the right rest day.
You know, the level of play is just going up, up, up.
All right, so let me ask you this.
With that in mind, talking about the fan,
let's talk about the owner for a second
because here's the way I'm thinking.
I spent all this money.
I got this high-tech stadium.
How am I going to make even more money
off of all of this 5G-capable technology?
Yeah, what's the business model?
Where's the business model?
How's the money come back into his pocket?
Right, I need that money to come back to me.
So am I going to be charged to see, like,
certain replays that nobody else can see?
Or, I mean, what?
Because you know no fan experience.
What kind of paywall are you going to put up?
Right, there's no fan experience that's complete
without an owner saying,
nah, you don't have to pay for that.
I mean, all of that is possible, right?
You can have, you know, premium subscriber level features. You can have entry features. You can have features
you can only get if you are actually there. That happens today a lot because of TV licensing
agreements. We can do more when you're physically in the stadium than we can outside. I'll give an
example of that, a really lame but heartfelt example. When I was nine, we went to the Bronx Zoo,
and we were very frugal as a family.
I saw other rich kids.
They could buy the elephant key.
There's a plastic key, and the elephant's nose sticks out.
And at every cage, back when animals were in cages,
there was an information recording,
and you put the key in and turn it,
and you get a narration about the animal.
Right, but you had to buy that key.
You had to buy the key!
Right.
And we didn't buy the key, so...
Yeah, I would just stand next to the rich kid.
Listen.
Mommy, why does this black kid keep following me everywhere?
I'm sorry.
So I felt... I didn't feel like I was a part of the experience.
Right.
And it didn't feel good to me.
Even though we had paid admission to the zoo itself,
it was, I felt left out.
Yeah.
Just because I couldn't afford it.
And that was a visitor experience in 1968 to 67
that was its version of what you're describing.
Yeah.
Okay, so picking up
on your elephant key analogy.
By the way,
I still own that elephant key.
Just want you to know.
For real.
For real.
I'll bring it in.
You did get one.
The elephant in the room.
The elephant in the room
or the stadium.
Gambling.
When you've got
all of this ability
to stream and do stuff.
Oh, my God.
It's a lot of money.
Pop, pop, pop.
Yeah?
So now you're talking about…
There's more money gambling than any of it.
Oh, my God, Gary, you are brilliant.
How do we get in on this right now?
Because I'm telling you…
Okay, shut off the cameras.
We'll find out.
Let me tell you something.
Real-time betting while you're in a stadium?
That's a moneymaker.
Shake it.
It happens a lot more overseas than it does here.
We have stronger laws.
Anti-gambling.
Yeah.
Right.
But if I've spent $5 billion to create my stadium entertainment palace,
I'll be pushing really hard to get the gambling laws changed in the state of Richmond.
Oh, without a doubt.
Yeah.
For sure. Every state, yeah. Now, without a doubt. You're just sure?
Every state, yeah.
I mean, we're seeing data that comes just for fantasy football, right?
So fantasy football, fantasy baseball, the decision-making data that's available to you for your own fantasy league would probably knock the socks off of a coach from 1955 to
have access to the kind of information that you're holding.
No, 1975, 1985, the data they have.
See, going back to your point of what else happens,
how does the owner, you the owner, make money?
I put a massive big complex of theaters, show movies.
I have shopping malls.
I was about to say that.
Why aren't stadiums, when we were about to come out of it,
why don't stadiums
have multiple use
built into,
it's like the stadium
sits empty
for most of the time.
But this is the whole deal
with SoFi.
SoFi is a great example.
Okay, so,
okay, but,
all right,
so SoFi,
so a professional
football schedule
today is 16 games
if you don't go
into the playoffs,
correct?
Okay.
So most football, pure football stadiums
are used 16 weekends out of 52, period.
Then I noticed 10 years ago, 20 years ago,
they tried to turn them into conferencing centers and things,
get a little extra money on the side.
But still, what are you doing?
Hold your event here.
Maybe hold a rock concert, okay?
So with SoFi, it has two teams interlaced.
So now it's 32 weekends.
That's way better than 16 out of 52.
But still, you got another 20 weekends
when nothing's happening.
Is the business model so lucrative
that you can go unused for 20 weekends?
No, you need to drive that attendance up
and the use of your facility.
So in Atlanta, they have also Atlanta United,
the MLS soccer team.
Is Atlanta your Mercedes facility?
So the Atlanta United MLS soccer team
has games that are played there also.
So that has really driven up, yep,
really driven up the usage of the building.
And then all the immigrants come in,
they get something to watch, right?
Right.
Because all the immigrants play soccer. They get something to watch, right? Right. Because all the immigrants play soccer.
Absolutely.
Every last one of them.
They've put 70,000 fans in the Atlanta stadium for MLS soccer.
Wow.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
It's a huge drop.
And not an American amount.
It's a huge drop.
There's more.
I'm just kidding.
No, but in a way, you're right.
When the World Cup is on and you walk around Manhattan.
It is so, people are so indifferent to it.
It's like people don't care. and then you look in every bar,
and it is filled to the brim.
Right.
You know, and none of them are Americans.
Atlanta's culture is changing with the Atlanta United, actually.
Yeah.
The Atlanta United are driving fans into that sport at a rate that is just crazy.
Sweet.
Yeah, I mean, you walk by bars in Atlanta,
and there is an Atlanta United flag.
There are kids going to Atlanta games.
All right, so America might come around on this.
The soccer thing.
Yeah, you're getting there.
But I think the footprint of the SoFi Stadium,
I think, is greater than Disneyland.
Well, including parking.
Yeah.
Are you for real?
It's this multi-use district.
What else is there?
What else is in that stadium?
No, they're building in the multiplex.
Hotels.
Oh, hotels.
Everything.
The hotels, the shopping.
Oh, that's what you mean.
So the idea is to make it a destination area.
The area becomes a destination.
Gotcha.
And then the game is just one other thing you do.
One more thing.
Something to do that you can walk to, yeah.
Wow. Okay, cool. Because there's a finite amount of other thing you do. One more thing. Something to do that you can walk to, yeah. Wow.
Okay, cool.
Because there's a finite amount of people that can go and watch a game,
but they want to come and enjoy the experience,
so you will build fan parks outside.
I have an obscure, geeky, science-y comment, if I may.
I'm ready.
Okay.
If you're charging a battery, either an electric car or any kind of rechargeable battery,
if it's dead and you start charging it, like the first 20% happens very quickly.
And then as the battery gets more and more charged,
the rate at which it reaches the top gets slower and slower and slower.
So that last 5% takes almost as long as the previous,
all the time it took to get to that 95%.
Okay.
Do you know why?
No.
Okay.
I'm about to find out.
Yes.
The analogy is a stadium parking lot.
Because in a dead battery,
you have all these electrons in the wrong place.
Okay.
They done served you.
Now you got to punch them back so that they can serve you again.
They got to swim upstream and they got to park on the other side of that battery.
But they can only park in pre-designated places.
So if you're the first electron upstream, you park anywhere.
I'm by the door.
Yay!
So in a stadium, if I'm early at the stadium, I can park anywhere. I'm by the door. Yay! So in a stadium,
if I'm early at the stadium,
I can park anywhere.
I can park within seconds.
Yep.
The later I come,
even if there is a parking spot for me,
it'll take me longer to find it.
So that when the parking is almost entirely full
and only five slots left,
it could take me a half hour to find a parking spot.
I have to look for those spots.
That's why it takes longer to charge the last part of a battery than the first part,
because of the parking lot problem.
Have you solved the parking problems?
Yeah, we have.
Smart parking systems.
Smart parking.
A sign parking?
Predetermined to sign parking?
We have a sign parking predetermined.
We also have smart parking systems
if you've been like in Heathrow Airport
with red and green lights over every single parking spot
so you can look down a hallway
and see if there's a green light.
Oh, hidden spots.
Yeah, signs that tell you how many are left on each level.
Turns out this is a huge source of pollution in cities too.
So there's companies working...
Not just in parking lots,
period.
In every metro place. Driving around
looking for parking.
I heard about 80%
of all cars
that are in motion
that are not taxis
are looking for parking.
Yeah, so this company
is trying to solve this now
to be able to help you.
There's some new deployments
out in Europe
of smart parking systems
in cities
so that you can know
where to go.
that you could just see
above all the cars
and the green one
is right there.
And simple.
That's some little car that's hidden behind the SUV.
Yes, well, it's motorcycle.
Don't you get angry when it happens?
I always flatten their tires.
So now, how many people are now looking for a space
and there's only one green light?
No, then...
Oh, we meet at the entry.
We converge on the same space.
The lights break out.
How fast can you drive up to that spot?
See, this is L.A., so Larry David's going to be there.
You know that.
You know he's going to be there in his little electric car.
Of curb your enthusiasm.
So we can actually, using cameras,
we can actually follow your car through the parking garage
and provide you individually appropriate signage
at every turn for where you should go to your park.
Smart signs.
Can you talk to the car at turn left, you idiot?
Well, you can change the sign that they can read.
Talk to the thing, and I'm going to sit back and read.
You know, that's where it's actually going.
Let the car park its own name, sir.
There you go.
How much in the game?
You park yourself.
All right, so final thoughts.
Chuck, what do you have?
You know, I'm going to go to a game
and probably be disappointed
because none of the cool crap we're talking about is going to be there.
It's not yet.
It's not happening yet.
But he'll call, get his phone number, he'll call you.
Exactly.
We'll go together.
Gary.
I think it's great.
I think it's brilliant because everybody wins.
The players are going to win.
The coaches.
IBM could become the best football coach ever, right?
All the bio data, all the telemetrics, all the players are going to win
and the fans are going to get better experience. So it's a win, win, win. Brilliant.
So what thoughts do you have at night before you go to sleep about all this?
I want to make sure that my son, when he goes to have, he's four now, when he goes to a game,
that he will be able to have the experience that he is imagining when he gets there. So his world, his world already,
he can talk to the house, right?
And have the lights turn on.
He can type because he just talks to his computer.
The information in the world is at his fingertips.
15 years from now.
Yeah.
15 years from now when he's there.
Your four-year-old child's running the house with his apps.
Yeah.
Alexa, change the locks.
Take that, Dad.
Try to get in the house now.
He hasn't found that command set yet.
You better get some really good parental guidance on that.
Alexa, change the locks.
You know, the world that he imagines is different than I can imagine.
And I want him to have a great experience that keeps his attention and keeps him going.
Here's what I look forward to.
Because I think about this all the time.
I'd like imagining tomorrow's technology for many reasons,
but including the fact that if it's good enough, it will make
everything I think is modern today look old. So in the future, I want the technology to not even be
anything you are projecting for it. I want it to benefit from innovations, may I say, out of left field, something you didn't even know was on its way in,
that lands in your lap technologically,
and you say, oh my gosh, that's a game changer.
And with that, there's a future experience
for the player, the visitor, the coach,
that today we can yet imagine.
Sweet.
It'd be great.
Revenue's sharing.
Looking forward to it.
That's what I...
That's a cosmic sports perspective.
Dude, thanks for coming.
Thanks very much.
Chuck, Gary.
Pleasure.
Always good.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson,
your personal astrophysicist.
This has been StarTalk Sports Edition.
And as always,
I bid you to keep looking up.