About Technology Industry

BNET Technology provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives about all aspects of the high-tech industry. In addition to detailed tech company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new mergers and acquisitions, tech products, investments, patents, and a host of other important technology related business issues.

Twitter's Real TV Hit

By Erik Sherman | May 30, 2009

The news of Twitter in discussions with Hollywood for a Twitter-inspired TV show seems like the silly type of thing you’d have heard during the dot com boom. It seems to be reality show meets fad. But let’s assume for a moment that the people involved are not nuts. I started thinking about this and realized that Twitter could — and, more importantly, already does — provide interactivity the broadcast industry has craved for years.

Given the brief description of the deal, pretend for a moment that it isn’t what you immediately dreaded on first hearing the news: some dopy situation where people are sending 140-character messages to each other on the show. Instead, it becomes a way of connecting actors, characters, and audiences together in a way television has been unable to do before. Consider some of the evidence:

As I’ve seen on a number of online discussion forums over the years, people love to talk about their favorite televisions shows. Now they could have a chance to do that with an officially-sponsored discussion channel, perhaps. Or perhaps interested Twitter users could sign up to receive promotional messages. Or, just perhaps, reality shows could use Twitter as a high recognition way to take in votes to see who is sent away from the island/stage/volcano/house/planet/what have you.

Now also remember all the companies with lots of money that want to own the home entertainment crown. For example, Microsoft has its specialized version of Windows as well as the Xbox, Apple has Apple TV, and Cisco is one of the big producers of set-top boxes, and at least two of the three have a strong interest in keeping Google, with the new Wave product, from getting enough toe hold. So why not buy Twitter and integrate it in to the television, as well as on computers and mobile phones, so that people could literally sit at their televisions and read and write tweets as they watch shows? And then the programming companies, paying Tweeter for the privilege, could watch what was going on in the discussions, analyze it for further program development, and also put the data together for advertisers, wooing companies to re-up at a premium price. Many in the industry may be laughing about a Twitter TV show now, but watch the smiles vanish as they begin to realize how effective and profitable the combination could be.

Remote control image via stock.xchng user omdur, standard site license.

Erik Sherman is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in Newsweek, the New York Times Magazine, Technology Review, the Financial Times, Chief Executive, and other publications. Follow him on Twitter.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Twitter TV a Hit? Don't Count On It

    BusinessWeek - 182 days 2 hours 46 minutes ago

    Posted by: Stephen Baker on May 26 OK, chances are that the Twitter-inspired TV show will be a flop. Most shows are. But when it comes to successful tech-inspired plots, think about Martin Scorcese’s The Departed. The plot revolved around the cell phone. The story could not be told without it, could not have happened without it. And yet very...

  • Do we still need the Webby Awards?

    CNET News - 168 days 17 hours 41 minutes ago

    NEW YORK--"They've created quite an industry around this whole thing," one woman in a black cocktail dress and diamond earrings commented as the lights dimmed for the start of the 13th annual Webby Awards on Monday night.The annual awards ceremony for all things in digital media, held once again at the lavish Cipriani Wall Street restaurant, had...

  • China Pleads Innocence For YouTube Outage

    WebProNews - 243 days 12 hours 51 minutes ago

    By Frank Reed - Thu, 03/26/2009 - 11:50 Remember all the discussion of China and its approach to the Internet that was heard around the Beijing Olympics? It seems that a lot of that type of coverage has slid into the background until recently. Apparently once Google gets involved these items become news again. At this moment China's Internet...

  • “Inane and Half-Baked” Twitter Is the Forrest Gump of International Relations [BoomTown]

    Wall Street Journal - 161 days 17 hours 10 minutes ago

    In what is quite possibly the most spot-on comment about Twitter that BoomTown has heard thus far, Harvard University Professor Jonathan Zittrain said: It is easy for Twitter feeds to be echoed everywhere else in the world. The qualities that make Twitter seem inane and half-baked are what make it so powerful. Zittrain was being...

  • Twitter Helps Inglourious Basterds to $37.6 Million Weekend Box Office

    Mashable - 92 days 11 hours 41 minutes ago

    There seems to be a growing belief in Hollywood that Twitter is becoming an increasingly important component of box office success. The so-called “Twitter effect” either sees a movie’s opening weekend numbers increase or decrease on Saturday and Sunday based on the 140 character reviews coming out from early viewers on Fridays. The...

 
Reply to Story

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Subscribe to this discussion via Email or RSS

  •  
    1

    kyller1

    05/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Twitter's Real TV Hit

    i'll like to know how to go about getting direct tv latin in st maarten

  •  
    2

    ErikSherman

    05/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Twitter's Real TV Hit

    I checked the web and it certainly seems that DirecTV is available in St. Maarten. Have you tried going to www.directv.com? I'm guessing that would redirect you to the right country version of the site. You might check with the tourism and visitors bureau on the island and ask them, as they would probably know. Also, you could try going to DirecTV's site and either emailing customer service or getting on Twitter and sending a message to the company's account, as they apparently monitor the channel.

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
Click Here
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement