Vertical video won the user-generated content wars long ago. If you see someone filming with their phone in landscape, they probably have a hotmail email address, too. Snapchat and Instagram may have ...
Editor's Note: The following is a guest post from Jeff Hackett, the senior vice president for U.S. brand sales at AdColony. When was the last time you used your phone horizontally outside of watching ...
Whether it’s a serialized drama like ReelShort’s “Fated to My Forbidden Alpha,” a viral advertisement like Duolingo’s “Living With Lily,” or simply the latest post by your favorite TikToker, vertical ...
Snapchat is credited with jumpstarting the vertical video trend earlier this year, but now the format is really starting to hit its stride. That’s out of necessity, said Ari Brandt, CEO and co-founder ...
Disney+ will soon be home not just to the Disney, Hulu, and ESPN content libraries—vertical video is being added too. Here are the details from Disney’s announcement. Vertical video in Disney+ app ...
Video on social has historically been horizontal, with dimensions longer than they are tall so you get that wide, TV-like view, even though you’re watching it on a computer screen, tablet, or phone.
Vertical video is bad, or so we’re told, and you shouldn’t shoot a video with your phone in a vertical position. Why? Because all monitors are wider than they are tall. This conventional wisdom is ...
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