Short show due to Saturday being the last full day of Olympics coverage from Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Nonetheless, Dylan Dreyer did arrive home safely this past Wednesday. I noticed right away two major changes--as the interior of 30 Rock has undergone a makeover:
1. The couch was nowhere to be seen, plenty more stand-up segments.
2. Dylan's weather map looks close to what Ginger Zee has used at ABC periodically since early 2017.
Here were the caps from this morning, plus a special set of surprises when you scroll down a bit:
Here are the surprises that Dylan snapped up courtesy of her Twitter account while spending most of the month in South Korea.
First up, on February 11 (wasn't posted on her account until the 17th) is a shot with Natalie Morales taken inside the USA House--where they could do some shopping with all American citizens around:
Here is a shot of her on the ice rink one day after being stuck in bed due to suffering the flu. On February 12, she said in a hastag to "be about 70 percent":
February 13 saw Dylan ziplining and spelunking in some 50 foot wide caves for the "Olympic Zone" program:
Celebrating Valentine's Day, Korean style (which according to their country's custom--"it lasts for a few days"):
February 17 saw Olympic medalist Nathan Chen stop by the makeshift
Today studios:
February 18 inside the hockey arena snapping up a pic with Kathryn Tappen prior to Team USA's women's hockey victory over Finland:
Finally, a pic from the Olympic Village on the 22nd with the Lamoreaux twins--with a special shout out to Jocelyn on her shootout winning goal to give the Americans their first gold medal over Canada since Nagano, Japan in 1998.
#Whatavictory:
Hope you enjoyed her virtual postcards from over half a world away. Her Instagram has a pic of the crew huddled inside an Air Force base to watch Super Bowl LII, plus some other cool video including the one time on a sunny day she would be nearly blown away by a very huge gust of wind--plus other special goodies can be found there as well.
She called her chance to cover the Olympics, "the chance of a lifetime".
At least, until Tokyo comes calling in August 2020.