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Regards
Harish Kotian

Quoting:

Hello all,
May this information be helpful to some of us.

Coming soon to a TV near you... (Thinkstock)
W
e've all been there: you're hanging out with friends when the conversation 
suddenly turns to the latest episode of House of Cards or the recent Jennifer 
Lawrence blockbuster. You haven't seen this particular television show or film, 
so for the next fifteen minutes, while your friends dissect the plot and 
recount that hilarious moment, you're left finding creative ways to stir your 
coffee.
Television shows and movies constitute an enormous part of our culture, and not 
being in on the story can feel isolating. This is especially true for people 
with visual impairments. Sure, the blind and visually impaired can listen to a 
movie or television show, but so much of what happens in the story - from a 
character's subtle glance to a car exploding - is visual.
Crossway Media Solutions is an online entertainment service working to make 
films and television shows more accessible for people with disabilities. This 
year, the company will launch TalkingFlix, the first audio-described, on-demand 
entertainment service for those with visual impairments. "Our main goal," 
TalkingFlix head of content Ellen Pittleman tells The Week, "is accessibility. 
We want to help sighted and non-sighted populations have a shared social 
experience."
According to Pittleman, who was a Paramount executive before joining 
TalkingFlix, broadcast networks for years have been making audio tracks that 
describe programming visuals. In April 2002, the Federal Communications 
Commission (FCC) began requiring major networks to provide 50 hours of 
described programming per quarter. Disability advocates saw this new 
legislation as an opportunity to approach film studios and encourage them to 
provide this service as well.
They quickly realized that the cost of creating these tracks was difficult to 
justify. "We were just about to release Titanic when I was at Paramount and we 
were approached," Pittleman explains. "It was an important move for the studio 
to participate in providing this service because Titanic was to be our biggest 
DVD release ever. Unfortunately, in retrospect we found that the cost of 
creating these tracks was often not being recovered by the sales."
Most DVDs don't include an audio menu, and movie theaters and streaming 
services are often set up for audio-described content. As a result, it didn't 
make sense for studios to invest the time or money into making these tracks 
available.
Now, Pittleman is in the process of working with these production companies to 
recover some of those old tracks from studio libraries, while giving content 
providers a market for creating such tracks. By bridging the gap between 
studios and consumers, TalkingFlix aims to offer hundreds of popular titles 
that customers will be able to access on their televisions or mobile devices.
The idea behind TalkingFlix has a long backstory. The company's CEO, David 
Timar, is not blind, but is visually impaired and has close ties to the blind 
community. He built a career in the tech world, but he's no stranger to the 
film industry. His father, Peter Timar, is a well-known Hungarian director and 
tireless advocate for media accessibility. "Growing up," David Timar tells The 
Week, "I realized the problem my father was trying to solve was not a local 
problem, but a global one... My dad's work with [the visually impaired] 
community help me understand the need."
Timar came up with the idea to market audio-described tracks years ago, but the 
project only took off last year when an investor encouraged Timar to apply for 
seed funding.
Finding a consumer base should not be a problem. According to the FCC, there 
are approximately 25 million Americans and 289 million people worldwide with 
visual impairments. The bigger obstacle - and the reason many companies have 
failed to tap into this niche market - involves getting investors and the 
studios to sign up. "The biggest challenge," Timar says, "is telling investors 
we are going to get the content and being able to strike a deal with studios 
based on an unprecedented market. It's a back-and-forth game."
TalkingFlix is in the process of closing its first deal, and if it succeeds, it 
will be the first company to overcome this hurdle, gaining access to a pool of 
consumers that even bigger names like Netflix and Hulu haven't reached.
The program plans to launch later this year, but you can sign up for the 
service now. Gearing up for the launch, Timar and his team have several goals. 
In the first year, they hope to grow the library and make TalkingFlix available 
to the English-speaking world as soon as possible. Long term, Timar says he 
wants to make audio-described content available to Spanish-speaking countries, 
India, and China.
"Eventually," Timar says, "I would like TalkingFlix to be a household item 
worldwide."

Article source: 
http://theweek.com//article/index/259425/meet-the-company-that-wants-to-be-the-netflix-for-blind-people

Regards,
Swati M Sharma


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