Jump to content

V-CAM

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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

[edit]

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

[edit]

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

[edit]
  1. ^ "Do consumers always know best?". brandchannel. Retrieved 2012-07-14.
  2. ^ "CURRENT TV AIRS FIRST VIEWER-CREATED AD, "TRANSFORMATION," FOR SONY" (PDF). Current TV. Retrieved 2012-07-14.