{"id":206252,"date":"2017-02-08T15:41:27","date_gmt":"2017-02-08T20:41:27","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/these-shows-understand-why-tv-cannot-survive-without-the-internet-and-theyre-doing-something-about-it-decider.php"},"modified":"2017-02-08T15:41:27","modified_gmt":"2017-02-08T20:41:27","slug":"these-shows-understand-why-tv-cannot-survive-without-the-internet-and-theyre-doing-something-about-it-decider","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/mind-uploading\/these-shows-understand-why-tv-cannot-survive-without-the-internet-and-theyre-doing-something-about-it-decider.php","title":{"rendered":"These Shows Understand Why TV Cannot Survive Without The Internet  And They&#8217;re Doing Something About It &#8211; Decider"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>        Where to Stream      <\/p>\n<p>    Want to know the dirty little secret of the TV industry? In    2017, no matter how unique your show is, it is only as good as    your digital department. Sure, the pundits are telling us that    were living in the Golden Age of Television, aka Peak TV, but    we all know what that really translates to is I dont have    time to watch all these new TV shows. So how do we decide    which of the thousands upon thousands of shows to watch? The    Internet. Thats what matters.  <\/p>\n<p>    If you star in or host or produce or write a television show,    you should know this: We need you and we love you. That said,    as great as your show may be, the Internet is where people hear    about your show. Sometimes from the stars or the network, but    more often from their friends and their social media timelines.    Its how they discover a new show, with an image, a tweet or,    best of all, a viral clip. People want to feel like they are a    part of something, like theyve witnessed the same thing their    friends have, so as soon as a television shows content hits    the Internet, in whatever form it may take, it is liked,    retweeted, commented on, and absorbed. (Hopefully!) Some shows    get this, and some are, shall we say, experiencing a bit more    resistance to this change.  <\/p>\n<p>    The thing is, your TV show lives and dies by the Internet now.    The end. If you want your show to do well, youve got to figure    out what this means for your show specifically, because what    works for a comedy doesnt always work for a drama, what works    for weekly premium cable shows doesnt always work for    streaming originals, and talk shows are in a league of their    own. Clips are the currency of the Internet, and networks must    provide these in order to boost the conversation (which, in    turn, boosts ad dollars). Being involved with social media is    no longer a novelty, its a necessity for any show. A TV show    doesnt just live in a screen anymore, it has to flood all of    our screens, essentially. These shows must be accessible,    available, tweetable, and most of all, malleable to all of    these factors.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Internet owns your show now, whether you want them to or    not. Give the Internet your show. Let them have it, let them    watch it, let them absorb it. People have got to be able to    access your content, whether its a full hour-long drama or    even a silly gif response to a tweet on any portable    wifi-connected device they carry with them.  <\/p>\n<p>    We spoke to the people behind the shows that get it, that are    using the Internet to their advantage, and its paying off in a    real way for them. As the lines continue to blur between    television and the Internet, these are the keys to keep in    mind, from the people who know best.  <\/p>\n<p>    Gone are the days where networks could simply spend a whole    bunch of money on posters and promo spots and audience would    show up and tune in. Now, shows must first identify and then    directly seek out their fans wherever they congregate to make    sure that theyre impossible to ignore.  <\/p>\n<p>    Especially when youre a new show, you want as many people as    possible to see it. Fewer and fewer people are watching in real    time on their TVs and watching the next day instead, so I think    its incredibly smart that the show has made such an effort to    make the show available in all the places where people view    content, Carol Hartsell, Managing Digital Editor of    Full    Frontal with Samantha Bee, explained to Decider. Her    colleague Mitra Jouhari, Digital Producer\/Writers Assistant,    echoed that sentiment, saying From the beginning of the show    there was a priority to make sure everything got online as    quickly as possible after the show aired so that the most    people possible can see it. For their show, this means    uploading clips to YouTube at 2am EST, immediately    after the show has aired on the west coast.  <\/p>\n<p>    Desus &    Mero on Viceland doesnt even wait until the show is    over, its available on YouTube at the same time its airing on    TV. If its a new show, people dont know exactly what it is.    You want to be as accessible as possible so people can see it    and get drawn in, Mero said. Now you see people talking    amongst themselves on social media like How do I get Sling?    So people end up going back to the old school version of it,    but even if they dont, theyre still aware of the show. Other    networks, they dont do that. They make it really hard to    access, which is counterproductive to making a show blow up.  <\/p>\n<p>    His co-host Desus went on to say, Its about the content    coming to you, not you going to the content. Were not    punishing you for trying to watch the show. We have a lot of    people who do not watch cable, who dont have cable, because    who can afford cable nowadays, its really expensive! Even the    fans cant believe how easy it is to watch the show, and    because its so easy to watch, I think that also helps people    put other people on to the show. Its just like, yo go to    YouTube, its right there. If you just make it easy for people    to watch what they want to watch, theyre gonna stick with it    and tell more people about it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Making a show so easy to watch and surely benefitted Desus    & Mero which launched this past fall and is growing    rapidly. I feel like a lot of our success has been based on    word of mouth, so Vice is really good about putting up entire    episodes but also about putting up little 4 or 5 minute    segments that really hit, that will really hook a new viewer.    If Im your friend and Im like. Yo you gotta watch this dope    show, they did this amazing joke, and then I give you that    moment, youll see that moment and youre like Yo I want to    watch the rest of this shit, and then you can watch the whole    22 minute episode.  <\/p>\n<p>    Which is why HBO remains    such a conundrum in this conversation. The network made the    wise decision to make clips from Last    Week Tonight with John Oliver available after each    Sunday nights show, but thats it. No other show on the    network provides shareable clips from episodes (save for    trailers and behind the scenes stuff). Like, where is the clip    of Lena Dunham     pulling a Sharon Stone Basic    Instinct on last season of Girls? I mean, a    censored clip, sure. But the whole Internet was talking about    that moment the next day, and being able to share that clip    could mean new viewers to the series.  <\/p>\n<p>    The same goes for this falls buzzy comedy Insecure, a show    that did a good job with their social media, as many viewers    took to the Internet to share their thoughts on the latest    relationship ups and downs of the show. So, why do 3 other    YouTube accounts have more views on a Broken Pussy clip than    the official HBO account? Something went wrong here, because    imagine the reach it couldve had if HBO promoted it,    especially the fact that it aired within weeks of what is now    known as the Billy Bush debacle. They couldve had a worldwide    meme on their hands! To its credit, the show did make the first    episode of the series available on YouTube, but to follow up    with clips (like     Issa and Mollys fancy day!) wouldve been a home run.  <\/p>\n<p>    FX also saw the benefit of putting the first episode of    Atlanta    up on YouTube. The show did well with critics, at the Golden    Globes, and for the network. But again, this is the same place    that made it     a near puzzle to see the most recent season of The Americans    leading up to its nominations at both the Emmys and the Golden    Globes. Come on, FX! Give the Internet a little taste of the    delicious ice cream sundaes that are your programming.  <\/p>\n<p>    Clips have proven to be essential for a show like Conan as well. Team    Cocos head of digital, Steve Beslow, attributes this to the    many different kinds of fans of the show. We have a few    different types of audience and we try to get our content to    all of them. Weve got that core audience that is Conan-centric    and loves seeing everything he does. Weve got a general comedy    audience that just likes comedy bits whether Conans in them or    not, and then weve got your general talk show audience, people    interested in celebrities, the people hes talking to, and then    stand-up comedy and music. All those different categories of    audience connect and engage with different things. Conan has,    and for the most part always has had, the youngest audience in    late night and with that brings really, really savvy comedy    fans. But also brings the audience thats the least likely to    consume our content in a traditional way.  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    It will come as no surprise that Conans best performing    YouTube videos feature his driving segments with Kevin Hart and    Ice Cube in the top 3, with his adventures joining Tinder with    Dave Franco and visiting a Korean spa with The Walking    Deads Steven Yeun not far behind. Everyone likes to    see Conan in unusual, out-of-the-studio experiences, and TBS    has apparently noticed (at least judging from some of the    rumors around a potential re-jiggering of the shows focus and    production schedule).  <\/p>\n<p>    By making his content so widely accessible, its not just    people who are choosing to watch online rather than on the TBS    channel they have at home; its also people who have never    heard of TBS. Conan moving around has spawned, especially the    travel shows, a whole different type of engagement. When he    went to Korea, the amount of excitement for his arrival was    just incredible because were not on TV in Korea. Were not on    the air. So the only way these people knew him, and most of    them were under the age of 20, these were not older folks, they    know him from his Internet bits, especially his remotes and the    pieces that we do. The Conan of it all has become much more    engaging, and people are aware that he is on the move more than    the competition and hes willing to still do things that no one    else is doing out there and those are the things we get    certainly the most response to.  <\/p>\n<p>    Not every show has to look far from home to find the fans. In    the case of The Mindy    Project on Hulu, the    fans are right there, working on the platforms digital team.    It really starts with us being superfans of the show    ourselves, Lindsey Pearl, head of social media at Hulu said.    We really understand what it is that fans of the show love    about Mindy Lahiri and this world that Mindy Kaling built for    her. We know that its the fashion, its the family, its the    love, her romances, its food and its wine. Its clear as day    to us at this point what it is that fans really love about the    show and thats really what we like to lean in to.  <\/p>\n<p>    That they do. The Mindy Project, which jumped from Fox    to Hulu after season 3 of the show, is certainly a different    example as Hulu is not a television network that comes in your    cable package. You need to have a smart TV and a subscription    to the site to access its content, which includes original    programs such as The Path (which    they just made the entire season 1     available on YouTube ahead of the season 2 premiere),    Casual    and Shut    Eye, as well as network shows like The Bachelor,    This is    Us, and NBC late night shows. But what The Mindy    Project and, to a greater extent, Hulu as a whole    understands so well about the Internet is how to target an    appeal directly to the fans of their shows on social media.    There is no shortage of Mindy gifs, fashion pics, and short    clips highlighting jokes from the show. As Pearl broke it down,    the strategy includes showing the diehards that you get them    and youre one of them, so much that it intrigues noobs, gets    them curious, and eventually brings them into the show. If you    can curry favor with the existing fans really, really well and    prove out how well you know the audience with a ton of    engagement on your content, then that signals to the friends of    the superfans or someone who might not be initiated, that    theres a lot of love for this show. While the intent is always    to build as much love with that superfan, we know that if we    can do that really, really well, we have a chance at bringing    in new people.  <\/p>\n<p>    Not long ago, heres how the conversation cycle went: a show    would air, youd go to bed, recap it with your friends and    coworkers in the morning, and then move on with life until the    next week. Well, not so much these days. As Ana Breton, Digital    Producer at Full Frontal noted, Since were only once    a week, one of the strategies was to spread our content    throughout the week and come up with original things throughout    the week to keep people engaged with our content. Plus, thats    not the only way the former correspondent for The Daily    Show is keeping viewers engaged with the topics she    discusses on the show. One of the cool things that this show    does I havent really seen other shows do, because theres such    a heavy research component to each episode, every show and    every clip from the show has extras associated with it on the website, Hartsell said.    So if you want to read more on the topics, you can scroll    below the video and find all these cool articles that will give    you a deeper understanding of what were talking about.  <\/p>\n<p>    Theoretically, a show like Full Frontal can keep    viewers engaged long after the show has finished airing on TV.    But what about a show like Desus & Mero, which    airs half-hour episodes Monday through Thursday nights on    Viceland; are viewers reacting at 11pm eastern when its live,    or the next day, or even later in the week? The response is    always big live which is dope to witness because it doesnt    happen a lot, Mero revealed. Its usually these big shows,    like a big Game of    Thrones that get people to really watch live. A lot of    people watch this show live and then they also just take the    Internet segments and digest those throughout the week which is    ill. Youll do a show on Monday and people are still talking    about it on Wednesday, even when you did 2 episodes in between.    People just are watching it live and then re-watching it    online.  <\/p>\n<p>      If you can curry favor with the existing fans and prove out      how well you know the audience by getting a ton of engagement      on your content, then that signals to the the uninitiated      that theres a lot of love for this show.Lindsay Pearl,      Head of Social Media at Hulu    <\/p>\n<p>    Pearl has found a similar situation to be true for fans of    The Mindy Project, noting that, While we do see that    some fans do flock to the episode the moment that it becomes    available on the service, they really can watch it anytime and    that does inspire this longer tail of engagement, where the fan    isnt so focused on that one tune-in moment. They can pick and    choose the moments where theyre consuming the show and    therefore theyre probably more likely to engage across    platforms in the same way that they watch whenever they want.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ah, engaging across platforms. Now heres where it gets tricky.    Yes, a TV show needs an Internet presence. But it doesnt need    to have every Internet presence possible. For The Mindy    Project, Pearl has found that Instagram seems to be the    best place to focus their resources.  <\/p>\n<p>    Now with Instagram Stories, there so much more that we can do    and theres longer-form storytelling that we can do. For    example, through Instagram stories, with new episodes launching    on Tuesdays, on Fridays we will do a tap to reveal an upcoming    outfit. Its super fun and the fans love it, we see a ton of    engagement on those. It is a really good example of how we are    doing something unique on that new emerging platform.  <\/p>\n<p>    The key here is realizing that what works so well for    Mindy on Instagram might not work the same on say,    Snapchat. When its a property that in its fifth season, to    expand to new platforms isnt always the best approach. While    sometimes it can seem like a shiny new object and there a lot    of lure to being on Snapchat, to invest the time and energy and    the resources into doing something really kickass on that new    platform, might not be the best use of everyones time,    essentially when we know that on Facebook and Twitter and    Instagram and Hulus YouTube channel and on Tumblr, that we    already have very rabid audience. And if it aint broke dont    fix it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Beslow has a similar strategy for Conan, explaining,    The editorial team and the digital team, we sit and watch the    show everyday and clip out the show essentially minute by    minute, clip by clip and, then assign those individual clips to    platforms. That doesnt mean that the clip that shows up on    YouTube will be exactly the same as the clip that shows up on    Facebook. We might have a segment thats four and a half    minutes long, but theres a really great 30-second chunk that    stands on its own. Thats not gonna fly on YouTube, especially    if you have to watch a 15-second pre-roll before it, but its a    perfect piece of content for Facebook or Instagram and so were    certainly not afraid and were very happy to portion out    different pieces of content to different platforms.  <\/p>\n<p>    But in a few months? Its looking like Facebook will be the    best place to get all things Conan. I think by the end of this    year, that will be the vast majority. It seems like thats the    biggest growth area for us, and the inroads weve made there    have been great, Beslow predicted. Everyday theres another    social media platform that you can invest in content wise and    so it;s really about making smart picks and there are    definitely more opportunities to waste your time than there are    to invest properly.  <\/p>\n<p>    A show like TruTVs Billy on the    Street has really thrived by putting clips on Twitter.    Recently, a segment celebrating the end of the show    Bones was    a huge hit, and involved host Billy Eichner running around with    a bone in his hand and catching NYC pedestrians off guard;    equally, a bit where he asks gay people how they feel about    John Oliver, while Oliver awkwardly stands next to him, also    went viral. They dont need much explanation or commentary,    people just want to retweet and share them to their timelines    with a small Love this or So funny.  <\/p>\n<p>    While Hulus got a great grip on how to use social media for a    show like Mindy, that doesnt mean it translates to    all the other originals they promote online. Its    understanding that not every show is going to be a social    show, theres no such thing as a one size fits all content    strategy for every single show, Pearl pointed out. Dramas    behave very differently in the digital space than comedies do.    We have to tailor our plans to understanding the differences in    those audiences and understanding what their behaviors are.    Its what keeps us up at night and what makes every campaign    unique. It definitely impacts which platforms we decide to lean    in to. It impacts the volume of micro-content we make    available. The willingness of talent to partner with us and    engage also impacts the decisions that we make in our social    strategies.  <\/p>\n<p>    No matter how talented a given networks digital department    might be, the ultimate key to online and social success rests    with the shows talent. They have to be willing to promote the    show, to remind their followers when and where to watch it, and    they have to be personable and give us a look at their own    lives, really. For Mindy, Instagram is a really    strong platform. I think it has a lot to do with the fact that    Mindy herself is very active. Its clearly there for you when    you look at The Mindy Projects own social channels,    you can see just how engaged and involved the cast is and it    just makes it all sing and we really do take a lot of cues    directly from Mindy, shes a wonderful partner to us. The fact    that she has such a strong foundation in social makes our jobs    so much more fun and a lot easier, Pearl said.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ever since Conan landed at TBS and Team Coco was born,    hes used the Internet wisely. It goes back to Conan    announcing tour dates for the tour he did after The Tonight    Show on Twitter and using that to become what you would    recognize as the Louis C.K. model, Beslow said. Just directly    addressing fans and directly communicating to them; he would do    direct address YouTube videos to fans well before that was a    normal thing in the run up to the TBS show. Just the general    sense of knowing that the Internet in general, and obviously    social media in particular is such a great way to access your    fans directly. Conan has always been one of the first and one    of the best at doing that.  <\/p>\n<p>    Because fans have gotten the chance through the web to connect    and feel like they know Conan, it could be the key to those    ultra successful Conan in the wild videos that continue to    perform for the show. Because we are just completely assaulted    with content all the time, I think people really respond to the    authenticity of Conan out on the street interacting with real    people. Even though hes just as funny in the studio, its    something theyre a little more used to seeing and that other    people are also capable of doing. There are very few If any    people who are capable of going out into a real life    environment and being as funny as Conan OBrien.  <\/p>\n<p>    I think he would do everything we ask him to do. I think our    audience has seen a lot more of Conan this past year than    before, weve done a ton of YouTube and Facebook Live Q&As,    every time he goes on a travel show well do a Q&A, hes    taken over our Instagram account, he started that with the    Korea trip and has continued in the nine months since then and    I think that the audience has really responded to that. If    theres one thing they want more of its just more Conan.  <\/p>\n<p>    Heres the less fun part. Most TV shows still depends on    Nielsen ratings, which helps determine how much they can charge    advertisers for spots that will run during the show. Its how    they make their money, along with sponsorships and brand deals.    But how well is your show really doing on TV if people arent    interested, arent talking, or even arent accessing it on the    Internet? While at the end of the day you have to have    (linear) ratings  thats the currency of TV  but the    engagement levels online, thats very important to Vice, Desus    said. You have networks that were established and then at some    point they had to spin off and create their digital unit and    their social media stuff, where as Vice, they had the social    media in place before they even had the network. So they come    up with strategies and theyre aggressive on social media but    not in a way where its spammy. Theyre not forcing the show on    people. So we get the numbers, and theyre very happy with both    [the ratings and digital numbers]. And I dont want to get my    Trump on and brag but were winning bigly online and offline,    huge numbers.  <\/p>\n<p>    From Beslows perspective, We have a two-fold mission where    which is obviously be as successful as possible digitally, but    we are also the digital marketing arm of the TV show. So its    really important to us that people know this is on four nights    a week at 11 oclock on TBS and making sure that they get a    chance to actually watch the show the way it was designed. Late    night shows in particular, and Conan especially, are    ripe for clipping and getting the best pieces of content to the    audience that will appreciate them the most. Back in say 2010,    we were much more attached to a traditional business model of    pre-roll, getting as many people to look at display media on    teamcoco.com. Were very    lucky to have teamcoco.com,    most of our competitors are forced to associate themselves with    huge network websites but were able to run our own website. If    you go to teamcoco.com\/korea, you get a    much more in depth experience on everything from interactive    maps and behind the scenes footage and extra social media    content than youd be able to get at a lot of other places. But    as the model for digital has changed and become much more    sponsorship and branded related and a little less reliant on    traditional pre-roll and display media, weve pivoted to become    much more platform agnostic, which has really helped us reach    our audience. Since theyre so young, they tend to be on a    variety of platforms, so well go and find them where they are    instead of trying to force them to come to us.  <\/p>\n<p>      While at the end of the day you have to have (linear)      ratings  thats the currency of TV  engagement levels      online are very important to Vice. I dont want to get my      Trump on and brag, but were winning bigly online and      offline. Huge numbers.Desus, co-host of Vices Desus &      Mero    <\/p>\n<p>    So has the actual TV show changed at all, with digital in mind?    I do think whether its conscious or subconscious, the timing    and pacing of pieces has become even more digital friendly,    Beslow admitted. While you can feel the energy in the studio    theres no doubt that the writers are seeing the responses and    the view counts online and realizing that those are resonating    with people. And for how much the ratings involve his job in    the digital department at a show like Conan? I would    certainly say the ratings have little to nothing to do with any    way that I think of my job. We are extremely lucky to have a    ton of high quality comedy every day and how that plays on    television is almost irrelevant to anything that we do. I would    hope that no digital department is really effected by those    things. I think were thought of completely separately, and    certainly in my interactions with our executive producer Jeff    Ross and Conan I dont know that the word ratings ever gets    mentioned when we talk about the digital side. Essentially we    have our own ratings system that is instantaneous and we know    generally when weve done something that resonates with our    audience or something that doesnt.  <\/p>\n<p>    So what about digital ratings? How do shows interpret the    social engagement they are seeing with clips, with tweets and    with other online tools? Pearl was straight up in stating, We    look at everything. All digital engagement is engagement to us.    We do see it as a strong signal of a consumers affinity for the    Hulu brand and for that Hulu subscription. Its the wild wild    west of engagement metrics out there when it comes to social    media. We love a partner called ListenFirst. We love their    methodology because they really do look at digital engagement    holistically, across platforms. Theyre not just looking at    tweets or just looking at Facebook likes, they look at the    larger ecosystem and show you how your content is performing in    digital engagement compared to other shows. Our audience has    only so much time in their day, we can only hope to earn so    much love and so much of that mindshare and so we try to use    competitive metrics and benchmarking to understand how well we    are engaging our audience.  <\/p>\n<p>    Hartsell at Full Frontal admitted, I personally get    excited when I see our column on Tweetdeck moving really fast    right after we tweet something, but Im not gonna get    disappointed if I dont see that. And how do they know if that    might be in their future? If its something thats making    everyone in the office laugh their heads off, its going to do    well online.  <\/p>\n<p>    Bottom line? The relationship between TV and Internet needs to    be symbiotic. A TV show gets its inspiration from the Internet,    and the Internet is where the TV show can do things they didnt    have the time, among various other reasons, to pull off. What    Desus brings from the Internet to TV, Its whatever we see, so    it might be something from the Bronx or something hood, like a    video trending on Black Twitter that hasnt hit peak Internet    saturation yet and hasnt gone viral yet but you know early on    its going to. Something like that we definitely jump on and    talk about. And this is at the network that he says knew    right off the bat how to handle the shows social media    presence.  <\/p>\n<p>    Digital was being utilized terribly at the other place that we    worked (before Vice), Mero admitted. They werent using    digital to reinforce the show. To bring awareness to the show,    give you the best parts of it. Early on when we were first    starting with Viceland, they would put in the promos who we    are, where we come from, our sense of humor, all that stuff    displayed. They laid the groundwork with that before we even    had our first episode. And when we came out with the first    episode, all that shit was made available immediately to    everybody. It wasnt like sign up to get this, it wasnt little    teasers and sign up and youll get the rest. It was like,    heres the show in its entirely, enjoy it. The strategy is    making good stuff that people are gonna want to come see as    opposed to just chasing eyeballs like what is everybody else    doing. Its risky but it worked out really well.  <\/p>\n<p>    Again, Vices experience with the Internet is what the talk    show hosts point to when it comes to the social strategy of    promoting the show. But it should also be noted that the hosts    of this particular TV show are products of the internet with    continuously funny Tweets and podcasts. Desus explained, They    knew exactly because they got a sensibility that a lot of    people at Vice already followed us on Twitter and knew of us    and they were waiting for us to come. It was a no-brianer for    us to end up at Vice. As far as the marketing strategy    integration with social media, all we had to do was sit back.    We didnt have to say, Hey set up this account, and do this    and take a picture like this and tweet like this. They set all    that up, it runs flawlessly, we have very few issue with social    media stuff. Theres nothing on the social media side that we    see and think we would never do this or this is off brand.    Thats the important thing, as long as they get the brand and    keep it consistent, were happy with it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Just as a TV show feeds the Internet content, the Internet also    feeds a TV show content. Beslow has certainly noticed the    difference at Conan, noting Probably our most favored    digital-only series are these scraps that we do that are    essentially just outtakes and funny moments from rehearsal and    things like that. It started just out of a goof, but thats    another great example of something that fans respond to. They    are definitely a fan favorite to the point where now every year    for the past 2 or 3 years, weve done a Scrapisode where TBS    actually airs a full episode of these outtakes set up by Conan.    Now, when a funny thing happens in rehearsal or someone    embarrasses themselves or a sketch just flops, youll hear    someone scream Scraps! more often than not, and theres this    realization that this is no longer just for us. Even these    moments behind the scenes are a very real part of how we engage    with our audience.  <\/p>\n<p>    So yes, something might be labeled a web exclusive but that    doesnt mean its not good enough to be part of the show. The    rule with Sam and Jo and the digital department is that it has    to be as good of a joke that would go on the show. Its not the    leftovers, it has to be a quality joke in the voice of the    show, Hartsell said. The main focus is on creating good half    hour of television. The web is there for that extra content. At    other shows, you generate tons and tons of content and a lot of    it ends up on the floor because you dont have time for it in    the show, and I love that theres such a value placed on the    work thats created here that it doesnt have to be lost if    its good and funny and is important.  <\/p>\n<p>    Everything we do online is aimed to be an extension of the    voice of the show, even the original content that we put out,    its all in the same voice, her co-worker Caroline Schaper,    Digital Producer at Full Frontal said. It might be a    little snottier because the internet is full of little snots,    but it is still a reflection of how we feel at the show.  <\/p>\n<p>    One thing thats different from last year is that the digital    department has grown, Breton from Full Frontal    pointed out. If that gives you any indication that more things    are going to be produced, more things are going to happen.    They sure are. And theyre happening online. Stay tuned.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Link:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/decider.com\/2017\/02\/08\/tv-shows-that-understand-internet\/\" title=\"These Shows Understand Why TV Cannot Survive Without The Internet  And They're Doing Something About It - Decider\">These Shows Understand Why TV Cannot Survive Without The Internet  And They're Doing Something About It - Decider<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Where to Stream Want to know the dirty little secret of the TV industry? In 2017, no matter how unique your show is, it is only as good as your digital department <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/mind-uploading\/these-shows-understand-why-tv-cannot-survive-without-the-internet-and-theyre-doing-something-about-it-decider.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[431593],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-206252","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-mind-uploading"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/206252"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=206252"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/206252\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=206252"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=206252"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=206252"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}