I stumbled across an interesting sub-culture of the “Mad Men” phenomenon. Someone–actually, several someones–appear to be running Twitter accounts for all of the “Mad Men” characters. Yes, all of the characters. Even the vending machine has a Twitter account. The accounts interact with each other seamlessly, despite the fact that there are like ten Don Draper profiles.

A separate example:
My first thought is, “What the hell is going on here?” And then I see this:
So fans can interact with these characters (who I assume are being run by fellow fans) to create an interactive experience that goes beyond the 10p.m.-11p.m. time slot during which the show runs. Twitter gives these characters voices on an even playing field with fans.
This video by Ideo talks about the future of books. These folks believe that fiction literature will be interactive in much the same way as the “Mad Men” characters are living on Twitter. What’s the takeaway for entertainment marketers? Plan on making your content interactive in social spaces. If you don’t, your passionate fans will do it for you.
My question is do people always want to be active participants in everything? Is passive consumerism dead? Won’t there always be a small corner of humanity that just likes to curl up with a book and read? We’ll see.
Check out the rest of the “Mad Men” characters:
http://twitter.com/dondraperSCDP
http://twitter.com/Carla_Madmen
http://twitter.com/BethanyVanNuys
http://twitter.com/MisterDraper
http://twitter.com/HarryCraneSCDP
http://twitter.com/PeteCampbell_NY
http://twitter.com/_TrudyCampbell
http://twitter.com/The_Don_Draper
http://twitter.com/MsMeganSCDP
http://twitter.com/StanRizzo_SCDP
http://twitter.com/_BettyFrancis
…and I’m sure I’m missing a few.




