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Brit Row’s VLA platform brings back fan interaction

Virtual Live Audience represents the latest in interactional entertainment

Like video conferencing, music fans and TV audience members utilise a propriety browser-based video platform to experience a live performance or be part of a TV filming production – from the comfort of their home. However, Britannia Row Productions Ltd has developed its Virtual Live Audience (VLA) platform with real time engagement in mind.

The VLA system allows for the performance artist or TV host / panellists to both interact and reconnect with confidence during Covid-19 audience restrictions. Viewers at home also benefit from multi-camera broadcast feeds and can watch the entertainment remotely while feeling as if they have a front row ticket. In contrast, the talent on stage experience an immersive production, allowing for authentic fan engagement to finally make a return.


Productions to have utilised the VLA system to date include The Ellen Show, The Voice and Metallica’s recent live charity stream in the US for
their All Within My Hands FoundationWhile in the UK, The Graham Norton Show, Have I Got News For You and various sitcoms have come on board.

A key selling point of the VLA platform is that viewers log on instantly. With no need to download an app, the audience simply logs on via their laptop, tablet or phone browser, requiring an internet connection only. The system generates unique URLs that can only be used once.

The Moderator Panel, a feature built into the original software allows the moderator to view in Live Grid and Waiting Room Grid mode, assigning users to different locations and controlling their microphone for a smooth workflow. The VLA system can also be provided as an audio only system, allowing for real time laughter to be captured for pre-recorded productions.

“VLA is a propriety system born out of the need to reconnect artists with audiences,” explained Josh Lloyd, technical projects manager at Brit Row. “As a platform, it’s based around top-quality audio and video. Many companies are using video conferencing systems for this kind of technology; however, they aren’t designed for live event experiences, instead they’ve been manipulated to fit a need during the Coronavirus crisis. VLA is a product specifically designed by audio and comms specialists for as good a concert or TV show experience the available technology can facilitate while we’re still unable to have people in a venue.”

The VLA system has been built from the ground up, with the software platform written by the team at parent company Clair Global in Lititz, Pennsylvania – and it offers a bespoke and flexible approach in terms of how the group of companies can deliver video and audio to the client.

“The audio and picture quality is much higher than we’ve been used to hearing and seeing over the last few months,” said SurfHire’s Simon Hodge, whose comms company SurfHire was acquired by Britannia Row in 2019. “We can pull the audio out as an audience mix and take it out into different zones. If an artist wants to pick out a member of the crowd, we can solo their microphone and they can interact with the person calling in.

“Graham Norton’s Red Chair segment is a good example of how that can work. We singled out the audience member to tell their story, and Graham could talk to them just as he did pre-Covid. It was actually Graham’s first time back in the studio after he had been presenting from home. The idea was that he’d return to the studio with a socially distanced audience. However, lockdown 2.0 came into action and VLA was needed quickly. This really shows how fast everything is changing and how urgently technology is needed to adapt when creating new entertainment.”