'Modern Family' episode set online.

AuthorElber, Lynn
PositionLiving

Byline: Lynn Elber

LOS ANGELES -- How to keep the "modern'' in "Modern Family'' in its sixth season? Create an episode that plays out completely on a computer and in the realm of social media.

That's what's in store Feb. 25 on the ABC comedy's "Connection Lost,'' a half-hour that revolves around Claire Dunphy's (Julie Bowen) frantic effort to locate daughter Haley (Sarah Hyland) after they squabble.

Other than a few scenes shot with the MacBook Pro, the episode was captured entirely with iPhone 6s and iPads, series co-creator and executive producer Steve Levitan said.

ABC and producer Twentieth Century Fox Television announced the project Tuesday.

This isn't Apple's first starring role on "Modern Family.'' On the brink of the iPad's retail debut in 2010, the tablet was portrayed as a sought-after birthday gift.

Levitan said the upcoming episode involved no product-placement compensation to Apple and resulted from an epiphany he had during an online experience involving one of his college-age daughters.

"I had emails open, some websites ... then my daughter showed up'' on FaceTime, he recounted. "I could not only see her, but I could see me, and there was something going on behind me, my wife or somebody.

"I realized on that screen, you could tell so much about my life,'' Levitan said. It occurred to him that format would be fitting for "Modern Family,'' he told reporters after a sneak peek at the episode.

All the comedy's households represent a contemporary family in some way, he said, including that of gay couple Mitch and Cam, who are adoptive parents, and Jay and Gloria, a cross-cultural, cross-generational pair. With Claire, Phil and their children, the marker is how they communicate.

In the comedy's debut episode in 2009, the parents summoned Haley to dinner by calling out to her, Levitan recalled. Her response: "Why are you yelling, why don't you just text me?''

The in-progress "Connection Lost'' looked very much like Levitan's account of his own experience, with a "Modern Family'' overlay.

Claire, about to board a flight, must rely on her laptop to get in touch with her immediate and extended family -- who pop up via...

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