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Posted: Tuesday December 16, 2008 2:43PM; Updated: Tuesday December 16, 2008 4:32PM

BCS title game will be live in 3-D

Story Highlights

3Ality Digital will shoot the Jan. 8 BCS National Championship game in 3-D.

The Florida-OU game will be broadcast live in 3-D in 80-100 movie theaters

A test broadcast of a Raiders-Chargers game this month was mostly glitch free

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LOS ANGELES (AP) -- College football live in 3-D is coming soon -- possibly to a theater near you.

Thanks to an impressive -- though not glitch-free -- test broadcast of an NFL game two weeks ago, Burbank, Calif.-based 3ality Digital said Tuesday it had won the contract to shoot the Jan. 8 BCS National Championship game in 3-D.

The game between Florida and Oklahoma will be broadcast live in 3-D to 80 to 100 movie theaters in about 30 U.S. cities, said 3ality Chairman David Modell. Tickets are expected to cost $18 to $22, said Cinedigm Digital Cinema Corp., which is working with 3ality to deliver the broadcasts to theaters.

A startup named RealD is supplying the 3-D projector technology and polarized lenses for audience members.

"We will take what we learned from the NFL shoot and apply it to this so this broadcast gets better," said Modell, 47, former president of the Baltimore Ravens.

This month's test 3-D broadcast of an NFL game between the Oakland Raiders and the San Diego Chargers went black twice before the half as the satellite signal went down. And some camera moves had people in the audience crossing their eyes and removing their polarized lenses.

But audiences -- test runs were done in Boston, New York and Los Angeles -- generally approved of the technology, which adds depth to the field and gives a sense of being there in person. Shots of cheerleaders were a big hit.

"There's been lots of post-morteming," Modell said. "Mostly it's been warm handshakes, hugs and backslaps for having done a good job."

Modell said the format will be roughly the same as it was during the test screening, which had eight 3-D camera crews beside their 2-D counterparts, and a separate set of commentators.

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

 
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