French talk show resorts to iPhones to continue shooting after power outage
Following a sudden power outage in the studio, part of the Saturday episode of a popular French talk show was reportedly shot on Apple's iPhone.

Power to France 2's equipment shut off around an hour and 45 minutes into the taping of On n'est pas couch? ("We're Still Awake"), according to iPhon.fr. After three hours the crew eventually decided to make use of limited lighting and several Plus-model iPhones to continue shooting, the results of which were edited and broadcast, as well as uploaded to YouTube.
The incident may represent one of the first times a major TV show has been shot on iPhones without it being an intentional gimmick.
Apple often touts the quality of video recording on iPhones, particulary on the iPhone 6s Plus, which can shoot in 4K resolution with optical image stabilization. It's not clear though whether France 2 made use of that phone or the older 6 Plus, which records in 1080p and limits optical stabilization to photos.
Camera technology is expected to be a major emphasis of the new iPhones shipping this fall. The "7 Plus" should in fact come with a dual-lens camera, although Apple's standard 4.7-inch model should have camera upgrades as well.

Power to France 2's equipment shut off around an hour and 45 minutes into the taping of On n'est pas couch? ("We're Still Awake"), according to iPhon.fr. After three hours the crew eventually decided to make use of limited lighting and several Plus-model iPhones to continue shooting, the results of which were edited and broadcast, as well as uploaded to YouTube.
The incident may represent one of the first times a major TV show has been shot on iPhones without it being an intentional gimmick.
Apple often touts the quality of video recording on iPhones, particulary on the iPhone 6s Plus, which can shoot in 4K resolution with optical image stabilization. It's not clear though whether France 2 made use of that phone or the older 6 Plus, which records in 1080p and limits optical stabilization to photos.
Camera technology is expected to be a major emphasis of the new iPhones shipping this fall. The "7 Plus" should in fact come with a dual-lens camera, although Apple's standard 4.7-inch model should have camera upgrades as well.
Comments
Especially since they had enough power for the lights, but not the cameras... cameras take a lot less power than lights do and usually have a place to attach big batteries (which are always on set in case you have to go mobile with a camera).
They could have switched to batteries for the cameras and edited that footage instead of transferring all the iPhone footage, then editing.
Watching it renewed my dislike for that show.
I can see the level of light post-blackout being a bit of a "trick of the camera's eye" as the built in light on some of the phones seem extremely bright, blooming quite noticeably.
I do find it interesting that the mics/audio didn't miss a beat. That would be the part of filming on phones that would really suffer. Yes, the body packs would be battery powered, but the receivers and recording device (or any other hardware part of that) probably wouldn't be battery/backup powered and the cameras not, unless they were using a laptop for audio...
My vote is for staged power outage.
I clicked on the one youtube video, and you can see the lights go out at 3 seconds into the video.
At 8 seconds into the video, there is already some French Text scrolling at the bottom, telling people about some "incident electrique"!
I call BS on that. That seems real suspicious. They're not that quick! They seemed real prepared, almost as if they knew what was going to happen.
But no point in getting into a discussion over this crap. I totally agree it looks like a scam, due to the low quality. But I don't know french. Looks like the ones who do, based on this little thread, don't like the show at all..
But I agree with others... don't they have backup power in that big studio? How did some lights work? How did the audio get captured?
newsflash: things are complicated. who knows how their studio has its power systems designed and which part failed. the presence of overhead shop lights may very well have no bearing on the production equipment's power source.