Local TV stations are restricted on what they can air to cover the Summer Olympic Games in Rio, so they are coming up with creative ways to talk about all the news coming out of Brazil without running afoul of the rules.

Comcast-owned NBCUniversal paid $7.75 billion for exclusive rights to all Olympics through 2032. As a result, it’s not surprising that the company is a little touchy about anyone else taking too many liberties to cover the Games. Moreover, the International Olympics Committee has strict rules surrounding commercial use of its intellectual property, requiring anyone who’s running a for-profit operation to tread lightly.

Stations such as Tribune’s WGN are doing things like using an R. Kelley song in place of the very well known Olympics anthem. Sports anchor Pat Tomasulo, obviously annoyed by NBCU’s content restrictions, told viewers: “Let me just say once again, it’s not the actual sports of the Olympics I don’t like. It’s NBC’s restrictions on the TV rights and anything Olympic-related.”

Tomasulo also showed five interlocked triangles instead of circles in place of the famous Olympic rings, and aired camcorder footage shot by his parents of him wrestling in high school instead of actual Olympics coverage.

ABC affiliate WEWS Cleveland used stick figures to illustrate the day’s highlights. “Who needs video,” said anchor Elizabeth Noreika. “When you have a pack of Sharpies?”

And CBS affiliate KKTV Colorado Springs tweeted out a picture of a cat wearing red, white and blue patriotic gear instead of an Olympic athlete, captioning the photo: “Stock photo of a cat we have clearance to use on-air and online and I don’t know why we haven’t.”

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