CC Do You Use It?

Do you use CC

  • Yep

    Votes: 1 50.0%
  • Nope

    Votes: 1 50.0%
  • Sometimes

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    2

karmakid

RIP Cheems ❤️
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Sep 11, 2013
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in front of your screen

Closed captions are cool now. Just ask anyone under 40.

More viewers, especially younger ones, are using tools that transcribe dialogue in the content they're watching online, from Netflix movies to TikTok videos. This isn't just about watching "Squid Game" drama in Korean with English subtitles.

Closed captions—which display text in the same language as the original audio—have been crucial for a long time for many people with hearing loss. They're now a must-have for plenty of people without hearing loss, too, helping them better understand the audio or allowing them to multitask.

Recent surveys suggest that younger generations are viewing content with captions more than older generations, despite reporting fewer hearing problems.

In a May survey of about 1,200 Americans, 70% of adult Gen Z respondents (ages 18 to 25) and 53% of millennial respondents (up to age 41) said they watch content with text most of the time. That's compared with slightly more than a third of older respondents, according to the report commissioned by language-teaching app Preply.

"I can't think of a time in the past couple of months or years that I haven't had subtitles or captions on," says 23-year-old Ayem Kpenkaan, who also creates his own comedy videos. While he doesn't have any hearing issues, he says it helps him focus on what's happening on-screen, even with the sound on.

People turn on subtitles and captions for many reasons—to learn a language, perhaps, or decipher a heavy accent or muttered dialogue. A lot of people complain about background music making it harder to hear dialogue. Captions can also facilitate multitasking and allow people to watch content in shared spaces without disturbing others.

Rachael Knoth, a 23-year-old artist in Dothan, Ala., says she has used captions for as long as she can remember. She says she hasn't been diagnosed with hearing loss. Still, she finds it so hard to view anything without captions that if a video doesn't have them, she won't watch it.

"In class, when they play videos and they don't have the captions on, I have to pay really close attention," Ms. Knoth says. If she doesn't, it's common for her to misunderstand the speakers for a minute or two, she adds.

Initially, people had to manually transcribe a video's audio. More recently, artificial intelligence has helped put automatic captions in apps such as YouTube and Facebook. TikTok launched its auto-generated captions last year, while Instagram followed earlier this year.
 
I've been trying out watching shows while on treadmill. Walking or running causing the headphones to move or a kind of thump sound with earbuds. So I'll run the show just on speaker with CC on. If I'm walking on high incline I can still follow it.

Other content might be influencers or commentators on news / politics that have CC that is useful if there is an environmental distraction. You would think noise canceling earbuds or headphones would be ideal, but maybe the person is on a Subway Train or Bus Ride and needs to be available to be interrupted to not miss a stop, but they can still consume online content.

Also, a lot of restaurants run TVs for news or sports so I wonder if some run CC and contribute to the trend.
 
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