Fleeting Ideas

  • ZA by the theater company NoMeets

    • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yPAT86FFfH0
    • I thought it would be interesting to bring kineto-like synchronization and pseudo-synchronization to theater.
    • When my thoughts are organized, I want to talk to someone from NoMeets about it.
      • The video above presents various forms of a new theater company, so they might be interested.
    • Elastic synchronization
      • It seems like it would be like passing on the synchronization.
      • Simply watching a video elastically synchronized is just a video with slightly changed speed.
      • Therefore, introducing elastic synchronization involves creating a counterpart (preferably multiple) who synchronizes with the characters in the play.
        • For example, one character could be a YouTuber character who is live streaming (=synchronizing).
          • In this example, it might be possible to deliberately display something like a YouTube seek bar to make the audience gradually realize that they are becoming out of sync.
  • [Reversing the “Time” of “Line Count Time” and “In-World Time”] also seems interesting.

    • Playing with the time in the world of theater, real-world time, and the position of the seek bar.
      • If we deceive the audience, “real-world time” is not equal to “the position of the seek bar”.
      • There is also playback speed to consider.
  • [2r96]

    • Each character in a text has positional information and temporal information within the text. Therefore, by treating each character as a frame, it is possible to read the text as an animation.

    • @2r96 January 17, 2021

    • image

  • The following is a copy-paste of something I was thinking about a month ago.
    • The experience of intentionally watching real-time theater in a semi-asynchronous way (real-world time is shared and linear, but the playback position is not)

      • The content at 05:23 when you watch it right at the beginning and the content at 05:23 after some time has passed are different.
      • Introduce a character who can manipulate the timeline of the video (like in TENET), and the past changes based on their actions.
    • Incorporate the movement of the viewer’s video playback position into the script.

      • Prepare the script assuming that the viewer will check the past video when a certain fact is revealed.
    • Problem: If we do it now, it might feel like a copy of TENET.

    • I’m starting to think that a semi-synchronous and semi-asynchronous format is quite possible.