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BRIC Brings the Sound of Brooklyn to the World Stage

5 min read
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Media.Monks

With most in-person, large-scale events struggling to go on given the pandemic, not all hope for summer fun is lost – or evaporated in the heat. We’ve been working with brands around the world to virtualize events for an online audience, so you can still get your groove on (comfortably at home, and hopefully with air conditioning).

We kicked things off with BRIC’s Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival, one of New York City’s oldest, and longest-running festivals, by transforming it into a digital destination that brought the spirit of Brooklyn to the global stage for the first time in more than 40 years. The weekend was infused with rhythm and good vibes, including performances from Questlove, Madison McFerrin, Common, The Tallest Man on Earth, Junglepussy and more, and was hosted by actor and comedian Michelle Buteau.

The show did more than translate the existing Celebrate Brooklyn! experience into a livestream; working with MediaMonks, BRIC redeveloped the festival to further break down barriers between audience and performers by bringing the show into artists’ homes and enabling unprecedented interactivity. While there’s no replacement for that IRL experience of being in Prospect Park surrounded by fans and feeling the vibrations of the music, we leveraged the unique opportunities that digital brings to rethink the festival from the ground up—making it bigger than the park itself—with an approach that all brands should take when virtualizing experiences.

In lieu of the traditional festival, the city looked excited in the lead-up to the virtual event: Buteau told the Daily News, “When I heard BRIC was still doing their music festival this year but on a virtual platform, I was so happy. And then they asked me to host? I was over the moon excited!” The digital festival also caught the attention of Variety, the Root and more, and was even covered in the Wall Street Journal, who noted that BRIC “did its best to remind viewers of what they love about live music,” highlighting the challenge and success of evoking the outdoor atmosphere with a livestreamed version enjoyed indoors.

Monk Thoughts BRIC is very much about discovering artists, and features like the Spotify Code deliver on that core tenet of the festival.

One of the interesting examples of how creative lower-thirds and overlays delivered on the spirit of Celebrate Brooklyn! is the Spotify Code that viewers saw on their screens during performances. Scanning a code lets viewers instantly find the track on Spotify, which they can collect in their library or save to a playlist. This turns the virtual festival into a space for discovery. “BRIC is very much about discovering artists—showcasing those who are established but may not be as well-known by the larger public,” says Brandao. “Features like the Spotify Code deliver on that core tenet of the festival.”

Together, these tech features aim to provide a sense of presence not intended to replace the feeling of watching a performance live; instead, it offers fans the ability to connect and engage with audiences in a new way. It’s in this sweet spot of understanding how virtual experiences can enhance and build off of the brand experience that brands will find success in a new era of virtualized events—so cool off and look forward to what else is in store this summer and beyond.

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The livestream mixed pre-recorded and live elements to retain a high production value.

Enable Accessibility by Breaking Barriers and Going Beyond Borders

BRIC is a longstanding pillar of the Brooklyn creative community, having supported local creativity, cultural programming, educational resources, advancing artist opportunity and more. The Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival—the one and only free summer-long outdoor concert series in the city—is one of its most popular initiatives.

“BRIC has been providing low-cost and free access to arts, culture and media for over 40 years,” says Anhelo Reyes, SVP, Marketing & Communications at BRIC. But this year, marked by a pandemic and intense protests in Brooklyn and around the country, was different: while social distancing wouldn’t allow it to happen in person, the show must go on. “It became especially important to showcase the spirit and resilience of this incredible community,” says Reyes.

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Artist Q&A's provided fans with unprecedented access.

Part of this meant reframing the community. The BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival uniquely captures the spirit of Brooklyn, but the virtualized event offered an opportunity to extend the festival’s focus beyond its typical local boundaries. (In fact, Madison McFerrin delivered a jazzy performance shot in the Arizona desert, showing that the Brooklyn mindset truly knows no bounds.)

Sure, you can do the same by televising an event. But virtualized experiences go further by becoming more interactive, giving fans the opportunity to engage one-on-one with their idols. “The audience can interact on a different level than before,” says Carolina Brandao, Sr. Film Producer at MediaMonks. “When you watch a traditional show, you have admiration for a performer, you want to meet them and get close but they’re intangible. Digital breaks that barrier: they’re following the performances with you.”

Miss the festival? You can still grab the best seat in the house.

Throughout the performances, users engage by answering trivia questions that appear on the screen, answering polls and (of course) participating in the live chat. After performances, Buteau served as a conduit between audience and performer, asking the artists questions from the chat. And with artists engaging from their own homes, viewers got a rare opportunity to intimately peer into their lives—not quite as cool as meeting face-to-face backstage, but pretty close.

Leverage the Best in Tech to Bring Events to Life

Putting on such a show requires creative and technical ingenuity. Latency—the delay in a transfer of data—can be a real concern in any virtualized event involving multiple people, but it’s a key challenge when you have to keep several artists in sync and on-tempo. To ensure a high production value in the performances, the Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival featured pre-recorded content followed by live segments–and because the event is enabled through a cloud-based control room, the show wouldn’t miss a beat regardless of any hardware, connectivity or power issues experienced that individual production team members may have experienced.

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Viewers were treated to a rare look inside musicians' homes.

Speaking of production tools, don’t forget that each livestreaming platform has its own set of features to help broadcasters bring their events to life: Facebook offers live reactions, Twitch provides interactivity through integrations and YouTube has Super Chats and stickers. These features are certainly useful to broadcasters, but brands might want to go a step further with bespoke tools if they’re hosting a multiplatform event like Celebrate Brooklyn!, which broadcasted to both Facebook and YouTube Live simultaneously.

To fill this need, we used our cloud-based LiveXP software suite, which allows us to scrape chat content and interactions across platforms. With a wide lens view of how viewers are engaging, we can then surface up highlights in a way that is consistent with the brand’s visual identity. This let us give shoutouts to viewers who donated to BRIC during the broadcast, as well as highlight messages from viewers no matter where they were watching. Because the software is cloud-based, our diverse team (spread across New York, São Paulo and Amsterdam) could coordinate in real time to ensure content ran smoothly from their workstations at home.

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The website has been translated to English with the help of Humans and AI

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