Posts Tagged ‘Interactive Video’

Zugara - Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

What’s New in Interactive Video – 2/16/10

matt - Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Live Webcast Fail

Live interactive webcasts are definitely the technology trend to watch this year but as with most new tech, you’ll have the good and the bad when it comes to people experimenting with content streamed live for the first time.  Unfortunately, I don’t think there’s any debate as to what category the webcast below falls under… (via Kontraband)

Zugara - Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

What’s New in Interactive Video – 1/5/2010

Zugara - Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

What’s New in Interactive Video – 12/01/09

matt - Monday, November 16th, 2009

Shakira Just Became Social TV’s Latest Advocate…

shakira_facebook

Via an earlier Techcrunch article, Shakira just livestreamed her latest music video via Ustream and Facebook.  This is another major artist helping to validate both Social TV and the livestream format.  I’m sure U2′s recent live concert on YouTube made this decision easier (10 million streams might do that), but 2009 is definitely shaping up to be the year the masses started embracing Social TV – at least online.  What will be interesting is to see how Traditional Media tries to screw this up…

Live video chat by Ustream

Zugara - Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

What’s New in Interactive Video – 09/29/09

Zugara - Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

What’s New in Interactive Video – 09/15/09

matt - Friday, September 11th, 2009

Very Cool Interactive Video Advergame For Playboy

We love Interactive Video Advergames around these parts…and Playboy.  Straight from the Netherlands and another fine example of how Interactive Video is making games more interactive and engaging.

You can play the game here.  Link courtesy of Mr. Ford and FWA

Zugara - Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

What’s New in Interactive Video – 09/08/09

matt - Monday, September 7th, 2009

What Fox Did Wrong With The Fringe / Twitter Social TV Experiment…

We’ve been very big advocates of Social TV for awhile, so it was quite surprising to see a recent high profile Social TV launch fail.  Fast Company has the details here. Cliff notes version:

“Fox ran reruns of Fringe with Twitter integration so people watching the show could comment on the show in real-time.  The Twitter overlay took up 1/3 of the bottom portion of the screen and as would be expected, drew outrage from viewers.”

While Fringe has been a show that’s not afraid to use the latest innovative interactive marketing programs such as ARG’s, it did seem odd that a show built on the success of these types of innovative and alternate interactive marketing initiatives would receive the backlash it did.  However, it’s not the idea that’s the problem here but rather the execution.

As the screenshot above shows, Fox was going for a VH-1 Pop-Up Video Style Integration.  Big mistake.  Anybody who’s ever watched this show (which is basically X-Files 2.0) knows that you have to pay attention to keep up with the plot so any type of animated interruption in the form of oversized graphical tweets, is of course, going to hinder versus enhance the interactive viewing experience.

Fox should be commended for recognizing a trend with Social TV and trying it out with one of their most popular new shows.  However, Fox does need to revisit how they’re using Social TV with a program (and genre) like Fringe. I don’t think just reducing the size of the Twitter integration and focusing on Fringe trivia will help overall.  Nor will using viewer’s Twitter conversations that are just feeds pumped into and overlaid on the broadcast itself.

Fox should be using Twitter integration (ala Social TV) to provide sub-stories on the characters in Fringe and continue using alternative marketing methods that appeal to the core demographic.  Fringe is a unique show (like Lost and the upcoming Flash Forward) that has a built-in audience that is expecting to find and participate in alternative story lines, engaging puzzles and other enhanced content to create a richer, more satisfying interactive story driven experience.

Social TV has already been a huge hit on the web from Barack Obama’s Inauguration to a recent Jonas Brothers Online Concert on Facebook / UStream so it was only a matter of time until Social TV moved from the web to broadcast.  Social TV has already proven a success in other areas as well with theaters using MuVChat which encourages audience participation via SMS, so the overall idea of Social TV definitely works and is definitely a trend – 57% of internet users already surf the internet while watching TV.  Hopefully more networks give Social TV a shot to provide a more interactive viewing experience.

On a side note, I thought the Observer / MLB All-Star Game integration was great and showed how a subtle cross promotion can help spread awareness and build an audience for television series such as Fringe.

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