[opendtv] The plot thickens / Now it's not enough to watch your favorite TV show -- you may soon have to pay to get the full story

  • From: Monty Solomon <monty@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: undisclosed-recipient: ;
  • Date: Sun, 18 Dec 2005 16:08:36 -0500

The plot thickens
Now it's not enough to watch your favorite TV show -- you may soon 
have to pay to get the full story

By Matthew Gilbert, Globe Staff  |  December 18, 2005

Madly in love with ''24," or ''Invasion," or ''Prison Break," or 
''Family Guy"?

Then get ready to spend more, a lot more, time with it.

In the coming months, you and your TV addiction are going to be 
reeled into an expanded ''environment" of your favorite network show, 
one that may require a cover charge for entry into certain exclusive 
zones.

You'll be invited to visit characters' blogs at MySpace.com, or pay 
for mobile phone episodes (known as mobisodes), or buy DVD packages 
and video games containing new and additional plot information. Your 
once-simple affair with your TV ''story" could have as much to do 
with your PC, your cellphone, and your DVD player as it does with 
your TV set.

In other words, your relationship is starting to get complicated. 
Network TV is becoming only the first step in what is known as a ''TV 
series." It's becoming an entry point to show-o-spheres, where you 
not only watch ''24" on Mondays on Fox but you purchase a ''24" DVD 
set that contains clues to the season's big mysteries.

You not only watch ''Lost" on Wednesdays on ABC but you check into 
the weekly podcast to hear, say, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje talk about 
playing Eko. You don't just laugh at ''The Office" on Tuesdays; you 
laugh at Dwight's blog entries on the NBC site and on MySpace. 
Recently, ''Invasion" even included a plot in which paranoid Dave was 
abducted because of his blog, which actually exists on ABC's site. 
And Neil Patrick Harris's Barney on ''How I Met Your Mother" 
frequently refers to his blog, which is on the CBS site.

Extras such as commentary and deleted scenes have been with us for 
years on DVDs, and of course T-shirts and knickknacks are Marketing 
101. But now timely information and integral plot and character 
developments are also becoming available outside of the televised 
mothership. Last week, for example, Fox announced plans to create new 
episodes of its animated hit ''Family Guy" exclusively for the Web 
next year, for a fee.

...

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2005/12/18/the_plot_thickens/


 
 
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