The New York Times will distribute Google Cardboard virtual reality (VR) viewers to its home-delivery newspaper customers in the U.S. as part of a new campaign.
The media giant has partnered with Google for the initiative, and will deliver more than one million of the units to readers’ homes over the weekend of November 7-8. Some digital subscribers, as well as Times Insider readers, will also be given promo codes to receive a free Google Cardboard viewer, (which can cost around $25 for the basic models).
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":1824830,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"business,media,","session":"A"}']For the uninitiated, Google Cardboard is a simple fold-out contraption that you can slip your smartphone inside, enabling you to use it as a VR screen. Google Cardboard is compatible with a number of third-party apps, letting you experience virtual reality in your own home without laying down a ton of cash for the privilege.
The first NYT VR film is called “The Displaced,” and “captures the resilience of three extraordinary children uprooted by war, all through the lens of virtual reality,” according to a press release issued by the NYT.
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The New York Times Magazine, in collaboration with Chris Milk and his virtual reality company Vrse, created the film to enable readers to experience what it means to be a child caught in the global refugee crisis. There are now more than 30 million children around the world who have been driven from their homes by war and persecution — more than at any time since World War II. The film brings viewers into daily lives of three children from South Sudan, eastern Ukraine and Syria.
To accompany the Google Cardboard viewer, the NYT has also developed the NYT VR app, for Android and iOS, in collaboration with virtual reality studio IM360. The app will be available the week beginning November 5.
The first series of VR films will also feature a behind-the-scenes skit that delves into the making of the publisher’s Walking New York cover image from last year. A third title will land before the end of the year, with more in the works for 2016.
For those without a Google Cardboard viewer, the NYT VR app will also offer “an enhanced video experience that opens a window into the virtual reality environment,” and versions of the films will be made available online in good ol’ fashioned 2D.
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