We started with live game broadcasts and are already evolving into 24/7 sports coverage. Because Hot Takes are not tied to a particular game or event, Colorcast will stay dynamic and interactive any minute of the day. Whether it's 1:00 in the afternoon or 1:00 in the morning, users will be able to hear and respond to LaVar's take about LaMelo winning the MVP. Lafer-Sousa continued, "One thing we are particularly excited about is the asynchronous nature of Hot Takes, while still being timely and relevant. In less than 5 minutes, a user can listen to LaVar Ball make his case as to why his son, Charlotte Hornets' superstar, LaMelo Ball, should win the NBA MVP, and why, according to "Wayne Gretzky's 216-point-season is 'the most unbreakable record in sports.'" And then, with one tap, that same user can give their own take about whether Kobe, MJ, or LeBron is the greatest of all time. Just two days after releasing 3.0, Colorcast's community is already weighing in on the Hot Take prompts alongside celebrities and athletes like LaVar Ball, Myles Gaskin, Doug E. Sunday's release of "Colorcast 3.0" includes a feature titled "Hot Takes," a first-of-its-kind audio exchange where users can create, share, and vote on short-form sports takes, in the form of 30-second to 3-minute sound-bites, on topics like: "Is LeBron James the GOAT?" "Who will win the NBA MVP?" "Should the College Football Playoffs be expanded?" and more.Ĭolorcast Co-Founder and CTO, Luis Lafer-Sousa explained that Hot Takes were "built in direct response to community excitement to extend sports conversations outside live events." He noted that " users wanted three things: (1) to consume audio content, not just during the game, but before and after the game, (2) to share controversial sports opinions, and (3) to join in on the social sports experience with limited preparation." 07, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) - Colorcast, the Texas-based media tech company, has released a new version of its social sports talk app, hot off a $1.5M round of financing. To watch the 1960's CBS Color Presentation logo, click the right screen above.AUSTIN, Texas, Dec. The CBS Color Presentation logo was seen on shows such as "The Smothers Brothers." KAKE and other ABC affiliates finally began color transmission when the ABC network joined CBS and NBC to become "full color " networks in the mid-60's. Imagine the disappointment I experienced as a teenager when the crew at ABC's non-color Wichita affiliate KAKE-TV didn't block out this ABC Color Presentation logo before their weekly "The Flintstones" broadcasts. ABC joined the color revolution on a very limited scale in the early 60's with color broadcasts of the hit animated series "The Flintstones" and later "The Jetsons." Not many ABC affiliates had color transmission equipment however, so most viewers watched those early ABC color broadcasts in old-fashioned black and white. To watch the 1960's ABC Color Presentation logo, click the left screen aboveĬBS's own non-compatible color broadcasting process had been a failure, and the sour taste kept the "Eye Network" out of color broadcasting until the mid-1960's. CBS and ABC had no interest in increasing RCA's profits by broadcasting in color in the 1950's. Color television set manufacturer RCA owned the NBC and took advantage of that synergy to sell RCA color TV's by broadcasting color programs on the NBC network using RCA-equipped studios. Although ABC and CBS briefly experimented with color broadcasts in the 1950's and early 60's, few of their affiliates were equipped with transmitters capable of broadcasting the color signals.
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