[arg_discuss] ARGs for children?

tina glengary t.glengary at bigspaceship.com
Fri Jun 29 13:12:43 EDT 2007


disney does it better than most. their dedication to authenticity (to the disney authenicity, not REAL authenticity) creates an alternate reality.

dee, we should discuss disney some time. as you can see, i'm not anti-disney.

thanks,
tina


----- Original Message -----
From: "D. Cook" <me at addlepated.net>
To: "Discussion list of the IGDA ARG SIG" <arg_discuss at igda.org>
Sent: Friday, June 29, 2007 12:19:01 PM (GMT-0500) America/New_York
Subject: Re: [arg_discuss] ARGs for children?

I'm sure I'll get shouted down by the anti-Disnites ;) , but I've
spent quite a bit of time pondering lately about the nature of Disney
World. They treat all the characters as absolutely real, to the
degree that the person in the Mickey Mouse suit doesn't say later, "I
was in the Mickey Mouse suit," but rather, "I was _working with_
MIckey Mouse."

Everything that's not roped off at Disney World is available to touch
and play with. When the sign at the Muppet Show 3D says "Key's under
the mat," the key is really under the mat. If there's an old-timey
phone in a store, you should pick it up and hear an old-timey
conversation.

Those who take behind the scenes tours are warned not to say anything
about the characters not being real while "on stage," or in view of
other guests. If they do, their guide will play absolutely dumb.

So while there's not really a game (although they do have different
scavenger hunts), it's definitely an alternate reality. Obviously
the curtain is hair-thin, but within the milieu of Disney World
itself, the TINAG principle stands tall.

-Dee

At 8:59 AM -0700 6/29/07, despain at quantumcontent.com wrote:

>Speaking of curtains and magic circles, have any of you done an ARG

>intended for an audience under 14 years old?

>

>In education circles, they stress the importance of clearly delineating

>fact from fiction for children. Yet when children play together reality is

>a very malleable space. Fiction and reality stand side by side.

>

>Do you suppose a thick or thin curtain would be better for this audience?



--
If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you.
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Tina Glengary / Creative Strategy / Big Spaceship
45 Main Street Suite 716 / Brooklyn, NY 11201 / 718 222 0281 x220

www.bigspaceship.com / www.motherboard.nu / http://cs.bigspaceship.com



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