The Arcade Fire has released a new interactive video experience in conjunction with their Grammy Award winning album "The Suburbs" (2010). When users arrive at the site, they are prompted to provide the address of the house they grew up in. Press play, and the film begins with an hooded figure running down an unidentified street to the song "We Used to Wait." Soon, complimentary frames open with Google Maps images of the surrounding area of your childhood home moving to the music. The idea of making music videos personal to each audience member is revolutionary in its own rite, but the band isn't done yet. Part way through the song, a frame opens up that encourages users to write a postcard to themselves when they were a child living in that house. The interactivity gives fans a chance to contribute to "The Wilderness Downtown" by submitting these postcards to the online community. When the band goes on tour, they will use these cards that appeal to innocence and youth for concert promotion. Arcade Fire will use what they call "the wilderness machine" to create the cards out of materials that, when planted, will grow a new tree.
This initiative is progressive on so many levels. Not only are they promoting alternative forms of media production, but they are also encouraging an involved and invested community of fans. Anytime a media platform becomes interactive, users feel a heightened sense of connection to the brand they are following. In addition to these artistic and social considerations, the experience becomes environmental by promoting the planting of trees, and hopefully, the beautification of the neighborhood you used to call home. Needless to say, the Arcade Fire is contributing to the advancement of our creative networks, and the way that artists interact with their fans through digital media. The experience is free and certainly worth every minute.
Now, What do you see?

