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Net Veteran Seeks Interactive Bridge

TV: Game Show Network appoints John Roberts to take on the challenge of turning technology into viable business.

Company Town

June 06, 2001|JON HEALEY, TIMES STAFF WRITER

A veteran developer of television-oriented Web sites will lead Game Show Network's interactive-TV and Internet efforts, network officials said Tuesday.

John P. Roberts, 35, was named senior vice president for interactive and online entertainment at the network, which is owned by Sony Pictures Entertainment and Liberty Digital Inc.


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The appointment is the first by Rich Cronin, who became the network's president and chief executive last month. Roberts worked for Cronin at Fox Family Channel and Fox Kids Network, where Cronin was chief executive and Roberts was vice president for new media.

In his new assignment, Roberts faces a challenge that has confounded TV and cable executives for years: how to transform interactivity from an intriguing technology into a viable business. That's no mean feat, given how few homes have the equipment needed to turn a TV set into a two-way device.

Beyond that, the equipment makers are divided into several competing camps, each imposing different requirements on TV programmers. An interactive show designed to work with Microsoft Corp.'s WebTV Plus boxes, for example, probably won't work for viewers with AOL Time Warner Inc.'s AOLTV or a digital cable TV box that uses software from Liberate Technologies.

"This is what this whole interactive-TV thing is: It's a big puzzle," Roberts said. "We've got to keep playing until we figure it out."

The advantage for Culver City-based Game Show Network is that most viewers already are interacting with its lineup of new and vintage TV game shows, albeit in an extremely low-tech way. They yell answers at their TV sets.

The network has been using a variety of technologies to let viewers play along with the contestants on screen. These include letting viewers use their touch-tone phones to call in answers. Although hardly state of the art, that technique has one significant advantage: Just about every viewer has a phone. The same can't be said for any other approach to interactive TV.

Roberts comes to the network from former Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen's Vulcan Ventures, where he was a top interactive-TV and Internet executive at Vulcan Programming II.

Roberts' first assignments in his new job include bringing interactive games to more viewers and working with technology companies to expand the reach of the interactive TV programs. One possibility, Roberts said, is to develop an online version of an interactive show that works only with a set-top box today.

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