V-CAM
A V-CAM, or Viewer-Created Ad Message, is an advertisement provided by the consumer that is solicited by the company.
The V-CAM advertisement was one of the pieces the consumer could make and submit to Current TV. Current TV's sponsors, like Toyota, or Mountain Dew, had assignments so consumers could create a commercial for their given product. The creator had to adhere to the guidelines given. V-CAMS originated with Current TV.[1]
First V-CAM ad
The first V-CAM ad aired on Current TV on May 11, 2006, for Sony. The title of the ad was "Transformation" and was created by nineteen-year-old Tyson Ibele.[2]
Other definitions
A V-CAM is also a virtual camera for a program called Flash. It is moved around the stage during the editing process, and when the animation is exported anything underneath the V-Cam is shown rather than the whole stage as usual.
References
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- 50 Documentaries to See Before You Die
- Countdown with Keith Olbermann
- The Gavin Newsom Show
- Joy Behar: Say Anything!
- The Young Turks with Cenk Uygur
- Viewpoint
- The War Room
- Vanguard
- Full Court Press with Bill Press
- Talking Liberally
- Google Current
- V-CAM
- 2009 imprisonment of American journalists by North Korea
- Al Gore
- Al Jazeera America
- AJ+
- Newsworld International
- Free Speech TV
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