pwshub.com

Trouble Hearing Movie and TV Show Dialogue? Turn On This iPhone Setting on iOS 18

One of the most frequent complaints about watching movies and shows on your TV at home is that dialogue is muddied, faint or can't compete with the bombast coming from everything else on the screen. 

The problem has gotten so bad that companies are putting out products specifically to deal with it, such as soundbars that boost dialogue and TV audio settings that enhance audio frequencies where dialogue usually appears. It's now even common practice in many homes to turn on subtitles and leave them on.

Last year, Apple added a feature called Enhance Dialogue to Apple TV that works when paired with a second-generation HomePod. In iOS 18, iPadOS 18 and tvOS 18 coming this fall -- and available in beta right now -- the feature works more broadly, with your device's speakers or any connected Bluetooth buds and headsets.

Read more: How To Download iOS 18 Public Beta 3 on Your iPhone

One downside to this expansion of Enhance Dialogue is that so far in the betas, the feature appears only in Apple's TV app on iPhone, iPad and Apple TV. Hopefully developers such as Netflix, Disney, MAX and the other major streamers will be able to add support for it when the system updates launch in the fall. 

Also, for the Apple TV, the feature is limited to the Apple TV 4K (2nd generation) and later models. Here's everything you need to know.

black Apple 4K TV with silver remote control against green, yellow and orange-red background

Apple 4K TV

Apple/CNET

How does Enhance Dialogue work?

Plenty of factors contribute to dialogue becoming unintelligible. 

When audio engineers mix the sound for a movie, they're often targeting how it will play in a movie theater -- and even there the variety of audio hardware and acoustics is all over the place. Mixing for the home can be even more tricky, trying to accommodate setups pushing sound from mediocre television speakers as well as through elaborate home theater systems. Then take all that data and squeeze it through compressed streaming channels, and now you're far away from the engineers' intentions.

Enhance Dialogue uses machine learning to differentiate between spoken words and other sounds and has two modes. Enhance raises the levels of dialogue without affecting other audio as much. Boost dampens the background in a more aggressive way and also enhances the dialogue to make it stand out -- the effect is most apparent in scenes with a lot of competing noise.

This easily overlooked feature will help you discern what's being said on your device or TV so you don't miss any nuance that would otherwise be drowned out by other noise.

How to enhance dialogue on iPhone and iPad

Before we start, you do need to be running iOS 18, which is currently available to download as a developer beta and a public beta -- we suggest downloading the latter if you want a more stable version of iOS 18.

Now, on iOS 18 or iPadOS 18, open the TV app and start playing a movie or TV show.

To turn on Enhance Dialog, do the following:

  1. Tap the screen to reveal the playback controls.
  2. Tap the Audio Options button (which looks like a waveform inside a circle). If you're viewing the video in portrait orientation, tap the More (…) button and tap Audio.
  3. Expand the Enhance Dialogue menu and choose either Enhance or Boost.
Three iOS 18 screenshots showing how to turn on the Enhance Dialogue feature in the TV app.

Turn on Enhanced Dialogue in the TV app under iOS 18. (The video is blacked out when taking screenshots due to the iPhone's built-in copyright protection.)

Screenshot by Jeff Carlson/CNET

How to enhance dialogue on Apple TV 4K

The Apple TV interface for turning on Enhance Dialogue is almost identical to the iPhone and iPad interfaces.

  1. While a video is playing, tap the middle pad on the Apple TV remote to view the onscreen controls.
  2. Highlight the Audio Options button and press the middle button to view its options.
  3. Select Enhance Dialogue and choose Enhance or Boost.

The setting is retained for other videos you watch, not just the one currently playing. You can also set an Enhance Dialogue preference in the Apple TV settings. Go to Settings > Video and Audio > Enhance Dialogue and choose either Enhance or Boost.

Apple TV settings screen with Enhance Dialogue highlighted and set to Enhance.

On the Apple TV in tvOS 18, Enhance Dialogue is a system-wide setting, even if so far the feature appears to apply only to videos played in the TV app.

Screenshot by Jeff Carlson/CNET

Source: cnet.com

Related stories
2 days ago - Now that iOS 18 is here to everyone, you can install it on your iPhone today and start exploring what's new. (Don't forget to do a proper backup...
1 month ago - The iOS 18 beta gives you a chance to experience the latest iPhone OS before it arrives to the general public, but where to start? Try configuring these settings first.
1 month ago - With all the new features in iOS 18, it's hard to know where to start. If you've installed the beta, configure these settings first.
1 week ago - Is it hard to understand voices on your TV? Take a look at tweaking these settings.
1 month ago - Why You Can Trust CNET Our expert, award-winning staff selects the products we cover and rigorously researches and tests our top picks. If you buy...
Other stories
49 minutes ago - FBI Director hails successful action but calls it “just one round in a much longer fight.”
54 minutes ago - SocialAI takes the social media "filter bubble" to an extreme with 100% fake interactions.
55 minutes ago - No more randos — People have been playing WoW solo for years, so this was just the final step. ...
1 hour ago - Final Fantasy XVI is now available on Steam and the Epic Games store, with God of War Ragnarok following on Thursday, September 19. Sony released a final rundown of Ragnarok's PC feature set, and modders have already begun adding...
1 hour ago - Apple didn't announce absolutely every new feature of iOS 18. Learn about the more customizable flashlight, QR codes for sharing your Wi-Fi passwords and transcribable voice memos.