Fad.vwright said:So....how do we make tv interactive--this seems to be the new fab, or attempt of it. any ideas on how to make a tv series interactive to the public?
thanks a really cool idea...i wonder how they would make that possible, i feel like the actors would have to be robots...or maybe not, it just couldnt be live viewing...and what audience watcher would get to decide what the actors did next? maybe through a contest of some sort.zingerburger said:Smellevision.
But I always thought the idea of interactive storylines would be cool. For example, you watch a show, and at specific points in the show (say before an ad break or something) you can choose what action the character(s) will take - kind of like those "Choose Your Own Adventure" books.
Of course, that would be highly impractical and expensive to produce. But wouldn't it be cool.
And Smellevision is always on the agenda.
That movie idea would only work for specially made movies though. I'm not sure there'd really be a big enough market for that though. Eg. Two roads: Lovers die in car crash; or lovers stay together forever. Like..who cares? (Bad example maybe, but blergh). Film writers would choose things for a reason, I think they should stay as is.zingerburger said:I was thinking you could have a whole bunch of branching storylines pre-filmed. Then as the show airs on TV, the individual person watching the show on their TV at home could type in a code before an ad break with their remote that coincides with whatever action the characters will take. Of course, as far as I know this kind of technology doesn't exist yet. Regardless, depending on the choices the viewer chooses, you'll get a different outcome/ending for the episode or series.
I thought this could also be applied to movies where viewers can watch a movie through individual headsets and can interact with the movie on-the-fly so that it doesn't break immersion. You could choose to do nothing throughout the whole movie and watch it as it was intended, or you can engage in what is known as a "quicktime event" and press a button at the right time to avoid a car crash, for example. This would ultimately change the outcome of the story, but I'm not sure how practical it would be in a 2 hour movie - the time span is a bit short.
But that's just me and my imagination. What do you think, vwright? Any ideas?
zingerburger said:I was thinking you could have a whole bunch of branching storylines pre-filmed. Then as the show airs on TV, the individual person watching the show on their TV at home could type in a code before an ad break with their remote that coincides with whatever action the characters will take. Of course, as far as I know this kind of technology doesn't exist yet. Regardless, depending on the choices the viewer chooses, you'll get a different outcome/ending for the episode or series.
I thought this could also be applied to movies where viewers can watch a movie through individual headsets and can interact with the movie on-the-fly so that it doesn't break immersion. You could choose to do nothing throughout the whole movie and watch it as it was intended, or you can engage in what is known as a "quicktime event" and press a button at the right time to avoid a car crash, for example. This would ultimately change the outcome of the story, but I'm not sure how practical it would be in a 2 hour movie - the time span is a bit short.
But that's just me and my imagination. What do you think, vwright? Any ideas?
yeah technoloically speaking i geuss our ideas wont work right now...maybe if we flew into a different millenium it would work.zingerburger said:Well, as far as interactivity goes for now, all you can really do is get people to vote via SMS, phone or online. This is pretty limited but I suppose it still gives the audience a feeling that they can change the outcome in shows like Big Brother (which got axed - yay - I'm all for the good old days of Seinfeld reruns).
But out of those three mediums, I'd say online has huge potential but the speed and bandwith (not to mention cost) of internet, particiularly in this country, limits what you could achieve via that platform.
But what you say could prove to be an effective way to engage audiences. I'm glad you like my ideas, but you don't happen to work for a production company do you? Secretly R&Ding new ways to brainwash the masses? I'm all for subliminal *cough*KFC*cough* messaging.