The Peterborough Examiner

Choose your own adventure with new Netflix programs

- DAVID FRIEND THE CANADIAN PRESS Puss in Book: Trapped in an Epic Tale Thunderstr­uck Armstrong Buddy Stretch The Abominable Snowman Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay

TORONTO — Netflix is taking a page from a retro children’s book format to experiment with interactiv­e programmin­g.

launched Tuesday on the streaming service with a format that will remind some parents of the so-called gamebook genre, more commonly called Choose Your Own Adventure.

For now, the interactiv­e experiment with the popular animated swashbuckl­er Puss in Boots is limited to only a few episodes.

Viewers can decide which characters he will encounter to determine the path of the storyline. Animated teen comedy

will debut an interactiv­e episode on July 14, while Netflix will also use the format for the upcoming series

sometime next year. Carla Engelbrech­t Fisher, director of Netflix’s product innovation, said executives specifical­ly focused on younger-skewing programs to test the waters with the adaptables­tory technology. More than half its members watch kids and family content every month, she said.

Netflix will be able to analyze which choices viewers are making to better understand what they enjoy in their programmin­g, she added.

Early advertisem­ents for the interactiv­e platform show two children sitting together and trying to decide which choice to make on their tablet screen; not surprising­ly, they don’t agree. Some parents can probably imagine a similar scene playing out in their living room — just not quite as tranquil — if their kids disagreed on where to take the show.

Netflix discovered that problem when they were testing the technology with kids and decided to add an option to essentiall­y rewind the story and take a different pathway.

Interactiv­e films and TV series aren’t exactly a new idea.

Over a decade ago, the Choose YourOwnAdv­enturebran­dreleased an interactiv­e animated DVD called

with voice work by William H. Macy and Frankie Muniz.

revisited the concept a few years later on DVD with an entirely different version of the movie that weaved together multiple narratives from deleted scenes.

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