marthwmaster wrote:What if the video starts in immediately, but has song info in the corner akin to a typical music video? Does that count as a bumper and thus, make it ineligible for the competition?
>Entries may not contain bumpers, title screens, or credits. ACen staff will add uniform credits to all entries. Under some circumstances creator generated credits will be allowed if they are built into the video, a required part of it, and cannot be removed. This creative use of entrant embedded credits will be judged at our discretion.
That's the exact rule. Basically by creative use of entrant embedded credits I am talking about a situation something like this:
A rocket fires and is zoomed in on. A creator has added text with their stuio name to the rocket and it is tracking across the screen with it. In this case someone has gone to extreme measures to embed something in the video creatively. This situation is a bit different from taking your master copy of your AMV after you edit it and then adding an overlay titlecard over some part of the video. The more complex addition may have been done with specialized software during editing or in pre-production and would probably take extreme effort for them to remove it. We have seen more videos with this type of work and do not wish to penalize these folks. It's not quite the same as someone adding credits or a studio bumper before the video.
In your case it sounds like you just have some text in the corner of the video like something that used to be played on MTV (when they actually played music videos =p). You should remove this. If for some reason you cannot because you no longer have your master copy of the video then submit what you have and note this in the comment field. Be aware like technical faults it is viewed as an objective point that is used in scoring so your video will take a hit for it.
Summary:
Is it necessary to the video? Is it easily removed?
As we need to add consistent title cards to help the audience and judges with identification purposes the extra credits generally add confusion and the viewers tend to ignore part of your video. This tends to be why so few use the MTV style credits these days. While it may not seem so at first this rule is actually to your benefit. Plus it allows me to do some blind focus testing before con to some people who may be familiar with creator's names.