There has been a few crews hired by xfc, on site all week.
There have been interviews of every pilot, and videos of every flight.
It is very hard to have live coverage as the event never stops. Events like nall and seff stop at night, and are slow paced.
Xfc is a high energy competition that never stops. There is too much going on at all times of the day to stop and post info.
I understand what you are saying, I just don't buy it. I agree live coverage is not easily done for a reasonable cost. However there can be daily vids shot ( short clips, bumpers, interviews, ect) that can be done on day one, and be edited and uploaded on day two. Standings can be posted real time almost. And 1min BTS vids can be uploaded daily as they happen.
The way it should work is there should be a media center with many workstations, and editors, and production assistants working to process all of the content.
The Photogs, and Videographers should be out and about with crews capturing the content and runners should be shuttling media from the capture points to the media center so the people generating content can stay working, and the production can be happening at the same time, with it all uploading as soon as possible.
Along side of the editors and assistants, should be some writers and bloggers that feed stills and written content in real time to the various social media outlets.
Combine the media center with the actual crews working directly for Futaba, and the other pre screened credential holding crews (the invited people), the media center/press room becomes a social media gold mine.
Looking at the past performance of the XFC I hope they have made some major changes from years past (so far it doesn't show from where I am looking).
The flying completion is awesome, it always has been. You know that has nothing to do with Futaba right? It's you guys ( the pilots) who work so hard developing the skills and building kick ass planes and traveling that make the event so special.
Look at XFC website for this event, for a company like Futaba, they didn't really invest much effort in it. I guess in a nutshell, for the hobby to grow, things need to change majorly. If one of the biggest RC companies in the world misses the mark like this over and over, who is going to be the one to step up and lead by example?