Sun.Star Cebu

LEAKS COULD NOT SPOIL GOT FOR FANS

- / AP

For many Game of Thrones (GOT) fans, the routine spoilers are bad enough: You miss an episode, then stumble on an unsought plot twist before you've had a chance to catch up.

Worse than that is the threat of leaked details, or even a whole episode, by hackers currently targeting HBO and its most doted-on series.

"It's the worst news since the Red Wedding," says Camden Wicker, a self-professed GOT superfan in San Diego.

But the news isn't all bad. Despite recent script leaks and an episode prematurel­y put online by Indian pay-TV, Sunday's GOT airing was the series' most-watched ever, seen by 10.2 million viewers.

Wicker was one of them. When GOT-time arrives each Sunday, "the phones are off," he says, as he and his flatmates huddle in the front of the screen. Afterward, they talk about the episode. Maybe watch it all over again.

"It's a camaraderi­e," says Wicker. Hacks and leaks can undermine that camaraderi­e.

The phone isn't off for Adiya Taylor of New York.

For her, a big part of watching GOT is the collective experience, which for her includes livetweeti­ng during the hour, then checking Twitter afterward for a group post-mortem.

"Between tweets, the messages in my work Slack group and the articles online the next day, watching at 9 p.m. on Sunday is a lot more fun than watching early for the sake of getting it first," she says.

Ben Storey is a GOT fan who, with his wife, makes Sunday night an appointmen­t for viewing of each GOT episode. But he's also a teacher who has modeled a college course on the mythic world of Westeros.

A lecturer at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business, Storey teaches an alternate-reality Game of Thrones as a way of creating rival business strategies.

"My students learn real-world business lessons from taking part in imaginary scenarios," he says. "They'll try negotiatio­ns with each other. They'll try to assassinat­e each other."

He acknowledg­es that many of his students would avail themselves of every scrap of ill-gained informatio­n they could. But then, "they would be sad about it," he says. "Leaks are a major threat to appointmen­t viewing and to the fan community."

"I look so forward to Sunday nights," says fan Mike Onorato. "Cheating to learn what's going to happen is akin to snooping to find the Christmas gifts before Christmas morning.

"Having to wait is part of the fun," he says, "and then debating with your friends what it all meant and trying to predict what will happen next."

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 ??  ?? HOW SOME PEOPLE IN CEBU AVOID “GOT” SPOILERS: I'm not really affected with series spoilers but with Game of Thrones, it's different. I keep it simple. I stay away from toxic people in social media, I avoid opening posts with "spoiler alert" tags and I...
HOW SOME PEOPLE IN CEBU AVOID “GOT” SPOILERS: I'm not really affected with series spoilers but with Game of Thrones, it's different. I keep it simple. I stay away from toxic people in social media, I avoid opening posts with "spoiler alert" tags and I...

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