Sofia\u2019s Diary<\/strong> then went international, adapting to the local audience and culture. For instance, the South American version had a more sexually active teenager than the one in Portugal. (In the UK, instead of Sofia\u2019s family consisting of mum, dad and brothers\/sisters all living together, we had a more dysfunctional UK family. Go figure…)<\/p>\nThe show launched in the UK with 5 million hits in its first week. After 6 months that was up to 30 million hits a week\u2026 The show then began running on Channel 5.<\/p>\n
Nuno explained how it all worked in more detail.<\/p>\n
First of all, it\u2019s important to realize this was an ongoing, live experience – 7 days a week, featuring radio, blogs, live texts, magazine articles, comment boards.<\/p>\n
It was all a constantly on-going story, so there was a strong sensation of living the story, like a great big multi-platform soap.<\/p>\n
Elements were created to interact with each other – for example, the radio show fitted in with the blog, which fitted in with the text messages –\u00a0 but each element could also be viewed\/experienced alone.<\/p>\n
In other words, most of the audience would listen to the radio show one day, receive texts another day, read the blogs for a couple of days, maybe spend an hour on the message boards at the weekend exchanging views and advice. It wasn\u2019t necessary to view everything to understand the story.<\/p>\n
However, all the different platforms were supporting and cross-promoting each other – which is a really interesting concept for writers to think about. Many people are very wary of the whole idea of writing for online drama, or are simply not that interested (“it isn\u2019t real writing”), but viewed in the above terms, it suddenly seems like being given a big box of tricks, in every medium and platform possible, to tell your story.<\/p>\n
The other important aspect was the extent to which the whole thing was hugely interactive.<\/p>\n
The audience\u2019s view and opinion on what was happening to Sofia (and her friends) was actively sought. And as that opinion came in, it could affect the story.<\/p>\n
It\u2019s a fine line, but as Nuno explained, the audience felt ownership of the show, but they weren\u2019t writing it or dictating where it went.<\/p>\n
This was especially true when it came to adding the TV show element, which was filmed way in advance so could never have reacted to the views of the audience anyway.<\/p>\n
Nuno also gave another interesting reason for NOT giving the audience power over the direction of the storyline. The audience will always protect the protagonist (if you are telling your story correctly!) and punish the antagonist, which would ultimately lead to very boring stories, with little conflict or drama.<\/p>\n
However, the feedback from the audience could also act as real time criticism of the story. For example, on several occasions it became clear through the online discussion boards that the audience hadn\u2019t understood very clearly why a character had behaved in a particular way, or had misconstrued their motives because the story, in that instance, had just been told too fast.<\/p>\n
The writers were able to read this and go into the blogs or send out texts the next day and clear those kind of issues up (in character of course), reassuring the audience.<\/p>\n
Therefore this rolling multi-platform story was starting to interact heavily with the audience, -interrupting- their lives with unexpected and unplanned text messages from the characters, (“Oh my god, I\u2019ve just found out Dave kissed Francesca…!”)<\/p>\n
This is storytelling which apes life-like experiences, blurring the story\/reality lines. (Not that I believe that the audience isn\u2019t capable of distinguishing the two. Of course they are. But it questions HOW we tell stories.)<\/p>\n
And then Nuno\u2019s next project took that even further.<\/p>\n
For\u00a0Flatmates<\/strong>, again created originally for Portugal, Nuno took a group of 3 flatmates and an older age group. From a storytelling point of view, this complicated (in a good way) the relationship between the audience and the characters. The audience have favourites, and the three flatmates can fight it out online with their blogs, the users then fighting on the message boards.<\/p>\nThis led to a different, and potentially more interesting, dynamic between audience and characters.<\/p>\n
Another thing they found was that teenagers didn\u2019t like the websites for TV shows. They seemed tacked on, with no interactivity, and histories and blogs which started the day before the show\u2019s debut. Therefore, when creating the blogs, they created a past for the characters, even using the actors family photos, etc to fill that past out.<\/p>\n
The audience chose the actors through online auditions which the audience voted for. This had also happened with Sofia\u2019s Diary<\/strong>.<\/p>\nThe community\/fans were invited to come along to the bar featured in the show, to mill around as extras, but also to interact with the actors, who stayed in character the whole time.<\/p>\n
The actors appeared on a daytime talk show as their characters, and the show introduced them as such, blurring the lines between reality and fiction, or at least playing with them.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
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