CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy — Standing on a tower overlooking the cliffs of the Cortina downhill course, there is someone who is just as involved in the biggest skiing races of the Winter Olympics as Mikaela Shiffrin and Breezy Johnson.
Martin Bochatay is the drone cam pilot for the money shots inside the iconic Tofana schuss, the narrow chute between two walls of Dolomite rock.
He is part of a team in control of the buzzing machines that are flying right behind Olympians as they go for gold at the Milan Cortina Games, offering stunning and high-pace visuals to TV viewers back home.
''In my mind, I'm not flying a drone. I'm flying with the skiers,'' Bochatay told The Associated Press before the Olympics. ''It's an immersive thing. ... The skiers don't see us. But I'm right there with them. You become the drone.''
Drone cams have become ubiquitous in showcasing the speeds and angles of skiers, lugers, snowboarders, ski jumpers and other Winter Olympians at these Games.
''The skill of those drone pilots is just phenomenal,'' U.S. bobsledder and flag bearer Frank Del Duca said. ''It gets a really unique perspective.''
Viewers have noted the humming noise coming from the machines, sparking the question: Is it putting off the Olympians in the biggest moment of their lives? Norwegian downhiller Kajsa Vickhoff Lie says that's not an issue.
''No, you just maybe hear them on the start, but you don't hear them when you ski,'' she said.