Nick DeMartino: "Our data create a new form of identity, what you might call a virtual self -- a concept that will determine the future of the web"...
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Nick DeMartino: "Our data create a new form of identity, what you might call a virtual self -- a concept that will determine the future of the web"...
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Newsweek talks to the creators of today’s most addictive shows about what they’re doing to make sure we just can’t stop.
The Digital Rocking Chair's insight:
Wow! I couldn't stop reading this article ... the science of storytelling and why it's currently the "Age of the Hyperserial."
Dorothea Martin's curator insight,
May 20, 3:30 AM
Absolute Leseempfehlung! Das Phänomen des "Binge-watching"s (Komakucken?!) und "Hyperserien"
Während Serien wie Sopranos, The Wire oder Deadwood zuerst ihre Charaktere entwickelten und die Handlung erst an zweiter Stelle kam, entwerfen heutige "Hyperserien" Tableaus, die von einer zentralen Frage vorwärts getrieben werden - und noch größeres Suchtpotenzial haben: "And that’s ultimately the biggest difference between the Hyperserials and the legendary shows that spawned them: a purer, more intense focus on one linear, series-long plotline. Hyperserials tend to do away with recaps, teasers, and exposition of any kind. They make even less sense when viewed out of order"
Rogério Rocha's curator insight,
May 20, 7:23 AM
IN A certain sense, all television is addictive. This should be pretty obvious, given that Americans watch more than five hours a day, on average. At that rate, a person who lives to the age of 80 will spend 21 percent of his or her adult life—the equivalent of 4,175 days, or nearly 13 years—in front of the tube.
Asil's curator insight,
May 20, 3:45 PM
Machinimatographers can take some tips from this thought-piece on how we consume television serials. Delete the scoop?
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"A good story can make or break a presentation, article, or conversation. But why is that? When Buffer co-founder Leo Widrich started to market his product through stories instead of benefits and bullet points, sign-ups went through the roof. Here he shares the science of why storytelling is so uniquely powerful." Delete the scoop?
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Joe Berkowitz: "Filmmakers like Michael Bay are usually interested only in going bigger--trying to top themselves with set pieces and spectacles that succeed through excess. In the technology space, however, there is a constant race to make things smaller."
The Digital Rocking Chair's insight:
This is so cool! Delete the scoop?
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