Forum Discussion
Hi. Thank for your suggestion. I tried what you said...playing content on Max, Paramount+, Hallmark+, and Peacock. When pressing the * it brings up turn CC on or off, volume mode, and accessibility & language. Accessibility then has options to select the CC track, audio track, screen reader, speech rate, and screen reader volume. There is no option in any of them to modify the position of CC. Do you have any other suggestions? I will try whatever you think might help.
Hey there! Thanks for keeping us in the loop.
Do you have any sample of content inside the mentioned channel where this is happening? This will help us take a closer look and investigate further.
Looking forward to your prompt response!
Best,
The Roku Community Team
- clearsky18 months agoBinge Watcher
I keep trying to reply to this thread with a specific CC example and pictures of my screen, but I keep getting error messages like "maximum flood limit reached" and "this reply was marked as spam and has been removed". I don't know how to get you the information, if this website keeps preventing me from posting.
- clearsky18 months agoBinge Watcher
Sure, I'm happy to provide an example. In Max on my Roku Express 4K+ I was watching an episode of Friends (S10E5: The One Where Rachel's Sister Babysits) and at 13min 25sec into the show, you can see how the closed captions jump around the screen so quickly. Sometimes even without the scene or person changing. This CC fiasco happens on all the episodes of Friends on Max, but in this example it's very noticeable. The images below are a sequence that only takes 2 seconds in the show, but the closed caption box moved to 3 DIFFERENT locations in that short period of time. The CC box went from the very top center of the screen to the lower left, and then shifted to the right towards the bottom middle. It is very hard to follow and anticipate where the CC will appear next, before jumping somewhere else when the next dialog occurs.
- clearsky18 months agoBinge Watcher
When the CC box moves so much, it really fatigues my eyes unnecessarily and makes me not want to watch TV anymore. It feels more like work than entertainment. If you can imagine a 20 minute TV shows, which equals 1200 seconds and the extreme real world example I provided of closed captions changing 3 times every 2 seconds, that equals 1800 potential movements of the closed captions in that single episode. That doesn't even include the work my eyes have to do to watch what's actually going on in the show itself. I hope this example helps. I have other examples from content on other channels and shows if you need more.