Emmett Shear: What streaming means for the future of entertainment
Emmett Shear is the CEO and cofounder of Twitch and its predecessor justin.tv. Full bio
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healthy communities,
play video games on the internet.
truly are quite related.
together in small tribes.
was both shared and interactive.
on the grand scale of human history
into our vehicles, into our homes.
into our living rooms.
was unprecedented.
around the globe.
for millions of people.
or listen to Mozart,
expensive ticket and find an orchestra.
with people around the world.
between creator and consumer,
became much more one-way.
a smaller class of professional creators
for us to enjoy that content alone.
was famous for its café culture.
of that café culture
that were hard to get,
and read the shared copy there.
also reading the same newspaper,
the game at home.
your fellow sports fans there.
to fall over time thanks to technology,
our communities together falls away.
for our entertainment,
to wind up consuming those options alone.
are bearing the consequences.
having at least two close friends
contributing causes to this
allows us to be separate.
this atomization of our society:
may have beautiful animations,
of 20 years ago.
they're intrinsically social.
exemplifying this change
in a last-man-standing competition.
kind of like "American Idol,"
and a lot less Simon Cowell.
of the battle royale genre,
than 250 million people around the world.
in your neighborhood
play video games.
may have been simple puzzles or quests,
and then internet play,
of huge, thriving online communities,
as the one form of entertainment
human connection.
playing video games?
of people around the world
there's a giant green rectangle.
sphere between two posts
of people watching from home anyway,
and engaged right along with them.
is entertaining and engaging.
"Dancing with the Stars"
that you really enjoy,
watching other people do it
is a human universal.
this live, interactive entertainment,
just doesn't feel as fulfilling.
has taken off with video games.
that same kind of interactive feeling.
what's happening on Twitch,
of a million livestreams of video games.
is millions of campfires.
of thousands of people around them.
more intimate community gatherings
by one of those campfires right now.
with about 1,000 of my closest friends,
and join you guys for a little stream.
to hear from you guys.
with the TED audience here --
about your community on Twitch?
for over five years now,
cease to impress me on the daily,
this whole thing is for communication.
for 20 years of my life,
where there's very few places in life
so many people with similar interests.
I actually use a similar one.
on a big couch
a "Pass the snack!" situation, you know?
in chat right now?
but I see a lot of emotes.
this is the Cohhilition.
a 2,000-day challenge,
a pretty incredible community
about 6200 people with us.
of "Hello, TED" good-vibe emotes,
collection of people --
a positive event together.
can we poll chat?
that chat would like the world,
here with me at TED right now,
out of playing video games
a lot of answers here.
the rough patches in life."
I definitely see a lot on Twitch,
to my TED talk,
get back to doing at some point --
that you want to share with me
to get out there before an audience?
what you're doing right now.
of the future in entertainment,
everything you're doing up there.
about what you do, the better --
to giving this talk now,
what happened on the stream,
the experience along with him,
with chat and with Cohh.
to watching a live interactive stream
going from playing a single-player game
of exploration in new technology.
were used early on for video games,
mass-market devices weren't cell phones,
of what the future might hold
sandbox of video games
as to what the future is going to hold
we're already seeing on Twitch
coming to sports.
to offer livestreaming football,
in suits streaming the game,
on their own channel
look out into the future --
get to be sports announcers.
who have that opportunity.
who wants to around the world
to become a sports announcer,
incredible amounts of new talent
"Did you catch the game?"
with cooking, with singing --
around the metaphorical campfire.
of these campfires lit
with your people around the world.
in the town square in person,
turned into a one-way transmission.
could connect us instead of isolating us.
over our shared interests
they encourage,
to turn the wheel back
multiplayer past.
this experience here with me,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Emmett Shear - Entrepreneur, investorEmmett Shear is the CEO and cofounder of Twitch and its predecessor justin.tv.
Why you should listen
Emmett Shear has lead Twitch -- a service that's helping to change the way people create, consume and participate in their entertainment -- since its founding in 2011. While it's known for gaming live-streams and esports, Twitch creators and communities have expanded to include music, traditional sports, cooking, the creative arts and more. Today, more than a million people, on average, are tuning in to Twitch at any given time to watch, chat and connect with people who share their passions.
Shear's unique perspective combines his experience as both an entrepreneur and part-time partner at venture capital firm Y Combinator, where he advises startups on product and strategy. He graduated from Yale University in 2005 with a degree in computer science.
Emmett Shear | Speaker | TED.com