Follow in the Footsteps of the Suffragettes With the BBC’s VR Experience Make Noise

The BBC has helped to create quite a number of different virtual reality (VR) experiences over the past year, from wartime epic 1943 Berlin Blitz to exploring the ocean’s ecosystems in BBC Earth: Live in VR, its content library stretches far and wide. The latest project to be released by the broadcaster is Make Noise, which uses voice technology to put viewers in the shoes of the suffragettes.

Make Noise

Produced by BBC VR Hub and created by Anagram, Make Noise focuses on the suffragette movement which fought for women’s right to vote. Featuring a series of colourful and abstract worlds, the experience includes audio clips of real-life suffragettes, taken from the BBC Archive, as they explain how they found and used their voices to enact change.

This is carried over into the VR experience directly, with viewers encouraged to use their own voices, whether that’s just talking, humming, singing or shouting, any noise created will then change the virtual world around them.

Helen Pankhurst, great-granddaughter of Emmeline Pankhurst, saw the experience at Havering literary festival earlier this year and said: “Fabulous! You’re really brought into the story. You’re asked not just to look but to use your mind and your voice. I think that focus on the voice and your own engagement with it is incredible.”

Make Noise“We wanted to find a way to really connect the stories of the suffragettes to our lives – we didn’t want the aesthetics of Victorian England to get in the way of the fact that standing up for something when people are trying to shut you down is something we all can relate to,” said May Abdalla, co-founder and director of Anagram, who directed Make Noise. “By using bold abstracts shapes to make playful worlds that mess with scale, each chapter represents the emotional journey of their path to victory; from frustration though finding solidarity and resistance. In these strange visual universes the punk attitude of these inspirational women really stands out.”

Make Noise is available to download for free from the Oculus Store, compatible with Oculus Go and Samsung Gear VR. UK residents will also be able to view Make Noise at a selection of libraries across the country, including Taunton Library, Oldham Library and Lifelong Learning Centre, Skipton Library, Brecon Library, Longton Library, Salisbury Library, Crownhill Library, The Library at the Curve, Slough, Beckton Globe library in Newham and Southport Community Centre.

As the BBC continues to make more immersive content, VRFocus will keep you updated.

BBC Reveals Two New VR Experiences Celebrating The RAF And Suffragettes

BBC Reveals Two New VR Experiences Celebrating The RAF And Suffragettes

So far UK broadcasting group the BBC has delivered some of the most powerful VR experiences yet seen in headsets. From the fantastic underwater exploration of Life in VR to the storybook novelty of The Turning Forest, the organization has produced content that truly capitalizes on the format. Good news, then; it’s got more of that on the way.

The BBC today announced two new VR experiences set to release later this year. One, Make Noise, celebrates the centennial of the suffragette’s movement in which women campaigned to win the right to vote while the other, 1943: Berlin Blitz, does the same for the UK’s Royal Air Force (RAF).

Make Noise is a vibrant-looking piece that will employ the use of the viewer’s voice. Inspired by leading suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst’s call for people to “make more noise”, viewers will hum, sing and shout along to the experience, changing the world around them in the process. The journey will take you through various stages of the suffragette movement, narrated by actor Nikki Amuka-Bird. It features archive material from the BBC including the voices of real-life suffragettes. It’s developed by the BBC’s new VR Hub with the help of Anagram.

Berlin Blitz, meanwhile, recognizes the work of the RAF by recreating a bombing run over Berlin that was attended by BBC journalist Wynford Vaughan-Thomas on September 4th 1943. You’ll find yourself in the Lancaster bomber, the most successful heavy bomber used by the RAF in the Second World War. This piece was created by BBC Northern Ireland and Immersive VR Education and will be on display at the RAF’s International Royal Air Tattoo in Fairford from July 13th – 15th.

Look out for these experiences to release on a VR headset near you later this year.

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BBC VR Hub Celebrate the Suffragettes and the RAF With Make Noise and 1943: Berlin Blitz

When the BBC decides to create immersive content there always seems to be good reason behind it, with the company focused on highlighting important subject matter. Today is no different, with the BBC VR Hub announcing two new virtual reality (VR) experiences; Make Noise and 1943: Berlin Blitz.

Make Noise

Created by BBC VR Hub with Anagram, Make Noise has been inspired by the suffragettes and Emmeline Pankhurst’s advice to ‘make more noise’, using a combination of voice technology and VR. Viewers will need to hum, sing and shout along with narrator Nikki Amuka-Bird as they are transported through a series of colourful and abstract worlds that represent the stages of the suffragettes’ struggle.

“BBC VR Hub exists to excite audiences by creating the most enthralling experiences imaginable using the power of VR, and both of these do that, but in very different ways. Make Noise uses voice technology in an innovative way to put you in the shoes of the suffragettes, encouraging you to follow their example and use your voice to change your world. It’s empowering, profound and yet playful, and a great example of why we should follow Emmeline Pankhurst’s advice and ‘make more noise’”, said Zillah Watson, head of BBC VR Hub in a statement.

The second experience 1943: Berlin Blitz puts viewers in the shoes of BBC war correspondent Wynford Vaughan-Thomas. Using the original radio broadcast of Vaughan-Thomas’ report taken from the BBC Archive, the VR experience allows users to retrace his journey on a genuine bombing raid to Berlin at the height of the WWII.

Created by BBC Northern Ireland and Immersive VR Education (Titanic VR), 1943: Berlin Blitz celebrates the 100th  anniversary of the RAF.

Berlin Blitz

1943: Berlin Blitz on the other hand uses VR to breathe new life into the BBC Archive, using an extraordinary piece of journalism to transport you to Berlin at the height of the Second World War,” adds Watson. “It really gives a sense of just how brave the RAF and the BBC’s war correspondents were back then, and providing new context for the threats our colleagues face today when reporting from dangerous situations. For now they’re both available at a small number of select events and screenings, and we hope to launch them to the public later in the year.”

Both experiences are scheduled to be released later this year although no platforms have yet been specified. At the end of this week 1943: Berlin Blitz will be shown at a special preview during the RAF’s International Royal Air Tattoo in Fairford from the 13th – 15th July. For any further updates from the BBC on its VR projects, keep reading VRFocus.