Pressure Project 3: Expanded Television
Posted: December 18, 2025 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a comment »I had a lot of ideas for this pressure project but ended up going with an expanded version of my first pressure project. I thought it would be really fun to use a Makey Makey to an actual TV remote into something that can control my Isadora TV. If I used sticky notes and conductive pencil drawings, I could fake pressable buttons to change the channel and turn it on and off.
To me, the hardest part of using a Makey Makey is always finding a way to ground it all. But I had the perfect idea of how to do this on the remote: because people usually have to hold a remote in their hand when they use it, I can try to hide the ground connection on the back! See below.

This worked somewhat well but because not everyone holds a TV remote with their hand flat against the back, it may not work for all people. You could use more paper and pencil to get more possible contact points, but this got the job done.
For the front buttons, I originally also wanted the alligator clips to be on the back on the remote, but I was struggling to get a consistent connection when I tried it. I think the creases at the paper bends around to the back of the remote cause issues. I’m pretty happy with the end result, however. See below.

For Isadora, I created a new scene that was the TV turning on so that people could have the experience of both turning on and off the TV using the remote. The channel buttons also work as you would expect. The one odd behavior is that turning on the TV always starts at the same channel, unlike a real TV which remembers the last channel that it was on.
I also added several new channels, including better static, a trans pride channel 🏳️⚧️, and a channel with a secret, a warning channel, and a weird filter glitchy channel. Unfortunately, I cannot get Isadora to open on my laptop anymore! I had to downgrade my drivers to get it to work and at some point the drivers updated again. I cannot find the old drivers I used anymore! It’s a shame cause I liked the new channels I added… 🙁
The static channel just moves between 4 or so images to achieve a much better static effect than before and the trans pride channel just replaces the colors of the color bar channel with the colors of the trans flag.
The main “secret revealed” I had was a channel that started as regular static but actually had a webcam on and showed the viewers back on the TV! The picture very slowly faded in and it was almost missed, which is exactly what I wanted! I even covered the light on my laptop so that nobody would have any warning that the webcam was on.
There was also a weird glitchy filter channel that I added. This was inconsistently displayed and was very flashy sometimes but other times it looked really cool. Because of this, I added a warning channel before this channel so that anyone that can’t look at intense things could look away. When I did the presentation, it was not very glitch at all and gave a very cool effect that even used the webcam a little bit (even though the webcam wasn’t used anywhere in that scene…)
The class loved the progression of the TV for this project. One person immediate became excited when they saw the TV was back. They also like the secret being revealed as a webcam and appreciated the extra effort I put in to covering the webcam light as well. In the end, I was very satisfied with how this project turned out, I just wish I could show it…