Snapchat's new "Bitmoji TV" series is ready for its debut and, yes, it's about as odd as you'd expect.
After weeks of dropping bizarre trailers, the company is launching Bitmoji TV, a new cartoon series located in the app's Discover section which stars each user's personal Bitmoji.
I've now had a chance to watch the first few episodes of Bitmoji TV and I still don't know quite how to describe it. If there's an alternate universe where your Bitmoji "lives" in your Snap Map, then Bitmoji TV is like its Saturday-morning-cartoon-themed playground.
While it's a "show" in the sense that there will be a full season of weekly episodes — 10 in total — there's no actual overarching plot. And the only recurring characters are you and your friends' Bitmoji which appear throughout each "episode." (The company has also tapped a few celebs, like Randy Jackson and Andy Richter, whose Bitmoji personas will make guest appearances.)
"The concept is: What if you sat down one day to watch TV, and you were kind of like flipping channels, and you discovered that you had been cast in every show, every movie, every commercial," says Bitmoji cofounder and CEO Ba Blackstock.
So, while every Snapchat user will see the same four-minute episode, each episode will have random appearances from your ownavatar, as well as that of the last friend you talked to in the app. The idea is similar to Bitmoji Stories, the in-app comic strip the company introduced last year, which is also personalized to each user's Bitmoji.
But Bitmoji TV is much wackier than your standard Bitmoji sticker or even the comic strip. It spoofs reality shows, infomercials, soap operas, and other TV tropes in seconds-long chunks at a time over the course of four minutes. It's weird as hell.
But for Snapchat's most dedicated younger users, it could be a big hit. The company says more than 130 million users have watched their own Bitmoji Story, and a video series could hook those users even more.
As Snapchat continues to push into original programming that looks more and more like Netflix, Bitmoji TV raises some interesting possibilities for the future. That Snap was able to create an animated show that can seamlessly adjust to each of its 210 million users is not a small feat. And while this tech is, for now, limited to Bitmoji TV, it's not difficult to imagine that many other publishers or even advertisers would be interested in making hyper-personalized content for Snapchat.
"Thinking in the biggest way, I see this as the beginning of a new category of entertainment; this personalized entertainment which could go in lots of different directions," Blackstock says. "Maybe not too far off, there's not just one show like this."
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Snapchat's Bitmoji TV cartoon show is here and it's really, really weird-款曲周至网
sitemap
文章
3
浏览
85913
获赞
6525
Facebook engineer quits, says company is 'profiting off hate'
A Facebook engineer has published a scathing resignation letter accusing the company of "profiting oFacebook threatens to block all news from being shared in Australia
Facebook has threatened to stop everyone in Australia from posting or sharing news articles on its pSamsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra specs revealed in FCC listing
Samsung's Galaxy Note 20 Ultra is becoming less of a secret by the hour. A few days ago, Samsung RusEvery platform that took action against Trump accounts and groups so far
President Donald Trump has been saying covertly and overtly racist stuff since before he became theDyson introduces air purifier that destroys formaldehyde
Remember the terrible smell in ninth-grade biology when you dissected a frog? That's formaldehyde, aGoogle bans ads for apps people use to stalk partners
Google's newest ad ban is a classic "better late than never" situation.In its latest advertising polZoom announces 27
Plenty of folks will rely on Zoom for the foreseeable future, so naturally the company is getting inThe Twitter bots that make the internet a little bit nicer
This post is part ofHard Refresh, a soothing weekly column where we try to cleanse your brain of whaThere are four new iPhones. So which iPhone 12 should you buy?
Not long ago, Apple used to release just two new iPhones per year. That number has now ballooned allRidepanda is the online store for e
There are endless apps for scooter- and bike-sharing. On top of that, there's a long list of choicesNo Mercy: SEC charges rapper T.I. over cryptocurrency scam
It would seem T.I. left a paper trail. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Friday announCES 2021 will be entirely online
For the first time in decades, the tech world is leaving Las Vegas alone in January.The Consumer TecUK government ditches 'porn block'. What happens now?
The UK government has shelved its controversial "porn block", which would have introduced legislatioHuawei is running out of display suppliers as Samsung and LG bail out, report says
Huawei's status as the world's largest smartphone maker might get challenged soon, as the company scFacebook improperly gave users' data to third
Stop me if you've heard this one before: Facebook gave user data to third-party developers, even aft