This shared playlist feature will help me get my dad watching better media.
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This shared playlist feature will help me get my dad watching better media. I can set up a list for him and my mom and stack up things I want them to see instead of texting a link to him.
(My dad loves youTube but watches it on a TV ... so the interface is horrible, this means he ends up watching nonsense sometimes.)
This is awesome.
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This shared playlist feature will help me get my dad watching better media. I can set up a list for him and my mom and stack up things I want them to see instead of texting a link to him.
(My dad loves youTube but watches it on a TV ... so the interface is horrible, this means he ends up watching nonsense sometimes.)
This is awesome.
@futurebird I only watch YouTube on the television.
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@futurebird I only watch YouTube on the television.
You still can use playlists and other features on the TV.
But on a TV I can't find a way to block "mid roll" ads. Though if you pay it will block most of the interrupting ads.
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This shared playlist feature will help me get my dad watching better media. I can set up a list for him and my mom and stack up things I want them to see instead of texting a link to him.
(My dad loves youTube but watches it on a TV ... so the interface is horrible, this means he ends up watching nonsense sometimes.)
This is awesome.
@futurebird A trick I use sometimes is to start and make immediately pause a video on my phone so that it shows up in my watch history, then go to the watch history on my TV and start it from there
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You still can use playlists and other features on the TV.
But on a TV I can't find a way to block "mid roll" ads. Though if you pay it will block most of the interrupting ads.
@futurebird my approach to advertising is to attempt (partly successfully but not wholly) to âcurateâ my advertising viewscape â I instantly block any advert for a motor vehicle, and if it doesnât stop playing once blocked Iâll just switch the whole thing off and walk away then come back (with a coffee). I also block food adverts that focus on meat. I instantly block any advert that starts with an irritating clicky-ticky sound (no advertising agency should hold the mindset that an upbeat percussive-only clacky bangy ticketyticketytickety sound is going to help their objective by attracting attention, youâve already got the attention, treat it carefully).
On the other hand, I very much like a lot of the adverts I do see. For example, the new Tesco ad campaign (the âFor the love of itÊŒ campaign, created with BBH London) is absolutely one of the best adverts Iâve seen in a long time, I was just watching a thing now and it came on and I watched it all the way through and smiled again, itâs excellent.
Iâm not willing to block every advert, a lot of them are pleasant and enjoyable even if Iâm never going to buy the product or use the service. Also advertising isnât the âevilâ people consider it to be, or if it is, then choosing your own content or products to consume purely by peer influence is just as bad, if you donât get influence over mindshare one way, itâll be through another, and just because one way seems overtly commercial doesnât mean other ways of being influenced are pure and loving and full of light. And if a person isnât influenced theyâre not really doing anything much in life, a person isnât an island, theyâre not going to formulate directions to act or think just by themselves, that doesnât happen despite what some macho but insecure members of society would like to portray âoh I make up my own mind about things in lifeâ oh really.
Also having spent quite a while as a freelance designer and graphic artist (most actively in the 90s but with huge gaps of inactivity) the whole advertising agency world was a complete laugh, wonderful atmosphere, lots of money and resources to get things done (and be paid in), generally nice and smart people, not overworked but lots of work to do, and a good respect for the skills we all had. The advertising world was a lot of fun and did good things, I consider. At least in London this was the case, Iâve no idea outside that. So maybe that alters my view of advertising, I see it a tiny bit from the inside too. -
@futurebird my approach to advertising is to attempt (partly successfully but not wholly) to âcurateâ my advertising viewscape â I instantly block any advert for a motor vehicle, and if it doesnât stop playing once blocked Iâll just switch the whole thing off and walk away then come back (with a coffee). I also block food adverts that focus on meat. I instantly block any advert that starts with an irritating clicky-ticky sound (no advertising agency should hold the mindset that an upbeat percussive-only clacky bangy ticketyticketytickety sound is going to help their objective by attracting attention, youâve already got the attention, treat it carefully).
On the other hand, I very much like a lot of the adverts I do see. For example, the new Tesco ad campaign (the âFor the love of itÊŒ campaign, created with BBH London) is absolutely one of the best adverts Iâve seen in a long time, I was just watching a thing now and it came on and I watched it all the way through and smiled again, itâs excellent.
Iâm not willing to block every advert, a lot of them are pleasant and enjoyable even if Iâm never going to buy the product or use the service. Also advertising isnât the âevilâ people consider it to be, or if it is, then choosing your own content or products to consume purely by peer influence is just as bad, if you donât get influence over mindshare one way, itâll be through another, and just because one way seems overtly commercial doesnât mean other ways of being influenced are pure and loving and full of light. And if a person isnât influenced theyâre not really doing anything much in life, a person isnât an island, theyâre not going to formulate directions to act or think just by themselves, that doesnât happen despite what some macho but insecure members of society would like to portray âoh I make up my own mind about things in lifeâ oh really.
Also having spent quite a while as a freelance designer and graphic artist (most actively in the 90s but with huge gaps of inactivity) the whole advertising agency world was a complete laugh, wonderful atmosphere, lots of money and resources to get things done (and be paid in), generally nice and smart people, not overworked but lots of work to do, and a good respect for the skills we all had. The advertising world was a lot of fun and did good things, I consider. At least in London this was the case, Iâve no idea outside that. So maybe that alters my view of advertising, I see it a tiny bit from the inside too.That makes sense. I'm more fanatical about advertisements. If I could find a way to block the ads that play on the subway too I would. I'm like... Amish or something.
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That makes sense. I'm more fanatical about advertisements. If I could find a way to block the ads that play on the subway too I would. I'm like... Amish or something.
@futurebird it might be a cultural/national thing too â the adverts we get here in the UK are if anything probably more respectful and dare I say it more cerebral than the country you have to put up with seeing adverts in. From the little Iâve seen (some has escaped over the times) the only thing I can say about adverts from your country is (to use an -ism from your country) âsucks to be youâ â but then adverts across Europe are their own thing too, Spainâs advertising is just, well, like the UK but hi-energi and louder (but then so are the Spanish).
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@futurebird it might be a cultural/national thing too â the adverts we get here in the UK are if anything probably more respectful and dare I say it more cerebral than the country you have to put up with seeing adverts in. From the little Iâve seen (some has escaped over the times) the only thing I can say about adverts from your country is (to use an -ism from your country) âsucks to be youâ â but then adverts across Europe are their own thing too, Spainâs advertising is just, well, like the UK but hi-energi and louder (but then so are the Spanish).
@futurebird I think about advertising a lot (we all do, but I mean differently) and I think half (approx 50%) of the reason so many people object to the advertising weâre all subjected to all the time is not so much because of the content or style of the adverts themselves, but rather, that âhow dare you have found a way to present adverts to me so freely and effectivelyâ. Itâs that advertising has that sort of access to your mind that people object to, not the adverts themselves. This is an important difference.
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@futurebird I think about advertising a lot (we all do, but I mean differently) and I think half (approx 50%) of the reason so many people object to the advertising weâre all subjected to all the time is not so much because of the content or style of the adverts themselves, but rather, that âhow dare you have found a way to present adverts to me so freely and effectivelyâ. Itâs that advertising has that sort of access to your mind that people object to, not the adverts themselves. This is an important difference.
@futurebird Having said that, I will mute most casual average general adverts and just not point my head in the direction of the telly, which means that when the YouTube video itself starts I miss the beginning often, because YouTubers just start straight in and begin talking or whatever from the first millisecond. I appreciate a YouTuber giving the video a nice relaxed approach and give me time to unmute in a civilised manner.
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You still can use playlists and other features on the TV.
But on a TV I can't find a way to block "mid roll" ads. Though if you pay it will block most of the interrupting ads.
@futurebird @u0421793 There are ways to do it but you start falling down the tech rabbit hole.
Most people don't have the time, knowledge, or inclination to do browser plugin ad blocking, much less a pihole or other advanced methods.
I forget who, but someone commented that as techies we need to work harder at changing the whole system instead of relying on our skills to whack a mole.
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