What 3D TV’s Hype Cycle Can Tell Us About Our Current Tech Trends

Betting it all on a big tech trend can lead to a humbling experience

Jamie Cohen
Debugger

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A photo of Panasonic’s 3D video camera
Panasonic’s “affordable” 3D Camera 2010

“3D is here to stay. HD is here to stay. Film is dwindling,” award winning director of photography Gary Baum told our seminar. Baum, who’d won Emmy’s for his work on Mike & Molly and Will & Grace knows the tv industry very well and believed that 3D TV, the kind you need to watch with a special TV set and powered glasses, was going to be the future.

At the time, I was all in as well. I’d seen the tech with my own eyes and planned on investing in a 3D camera. I was one of those annoying posters pushing the 3D TV trend. Best to be on the ground floor! My confidence was boosted by Gary during my fellowship at the Television Academy of Arts and Sciences Faculty Seminar in 2011.

The seminar took place during an incredible transition in television. This was back when web television had started its own awards show, streaming and OTT were becoming more commonplace, and big bets were being placed on new technologies like 3D TV.

At the Las Vegas National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) Convention a year previous, over a dozen manufactures featured 3D cameras. I snapped a photo of Panasonic’s “affordable” 3D camera priced at $20k. When I posted it on…

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Jamie Cohen
Debugger

Digital culture expert and meme scholar. Cultural and Media Studies PhD. Internet studies educator: social good, civic engagement and digital literacies