| Have you ever found yourself yelling at the TV | | | | (possibly) mortal enemies may be providing live |
| after your team just made a boneheaded play | | | | commentary at BuddyTV. Everything imaginable is |
| and realize there is no one else to share your | | | | available; live video, live audio, live text, and |
| pain? Or, overcome with emotion when your | | | | interactive polls are all part of the BuddyTV |
| favorite character died on the O.C., Lost, or 24 | | | | experience. In fact, you can broadcast your own, |
| and realize there's not another soul in the room | | | | private, live commentary to all your friends and |
| that cares? Have you ever been so engrossed in | | | | neighbors. The television experience is now a |
| a show that you would have given anything to be | | | | communal one, where people can interact and |
| able to interact with the producers, writers, or | | | | socialize with both their friends and celebrities. |
| even the actors? For the past 70 years, television | | | | Television is never going away and it still draws |
| has primarily been an anti-social, one-way device, | | | | enormous worldwide audiences; the most popular |
| without an outlet for social interactivity. Well, now | | | | shows in the US drive over 30MM viewers per |
| that's changed. Meet BuddyTV. | | | | show. As the world becomes smaller and the |
| As more and more people get broadband | | | | global community continues to effortlessly reach |
| Internet connections and put computers in their | | | | across borders and oceans, television must adapt |
| TV rooms (or laptops on their, well, laps) the | | | | and become a community hub whose |
| notion of television as a one-way street is no | | | | programming brings people closer together. It is |
| longer reasonable. While you watch your favorite | | | | happening today and it's exciting, with BuddyTV |
| show, celebrities, experts, friends, family or | | | | leading the charge. |