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Conan O'Brien will return to TV with shows shot on iPhone and over video chat

Apple's promise of high-quality video "shot on iPhone" is getting another real-world stress test, as late-night TV host Conan O'Brien announced on Wednesday he will return to doing full shows that will be shot using Apple's mobile device. On Monday, March 30, new episodes of O'Brien's show "Conan" will air on TBS, with production staff working from home, video that's shot on iPhone and interviews filmed over video chat.

The news was first reported by Variety and confirmed by O'Brien in the form of a tweet, where he jokes the experience "will not be pretty."

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The move to shoot shows remotely is an interesting attempt at restarting daily TV production at a time when everyone's been ordered to work from home.

Typically, late-night shows are put on with a sizable crew of writers and producers and filmed in front of a live audience. With the CDC advising people to stay at home and gather in groups of no more than 10 due to the threat of the coronavirus outbreak, TV production industry-wide is being shut down.

Until now, that also included all major late-night productions, like Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel and James Corden .

O'Brien's team consists of 75 people and, like others, it went on hiatus in order to protect staff safety. But during the shut down, O'Brien continued to film short videos, which led the team to this idea of doing a full show, but in a different format.

"Conan" isn't the only show trying to work around the shutdown. Jimmy Fallon has been filming YouTube videos that are incorporated into the evening's rerun of the "Tonight Show." Colbert has been filming a new monologue for "The Late Show" reruns. And Kimmel has been sharing his own "#minilogue" on social media.

However, "Conan" is promising full episodes, not just new segments.

"The quality of my work will not go down because technically that’s not possible," O’Brien said in a statement shared by Variety.

Image credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for WarnerMedia