On the floor of a very different Democratic National Conventionâthis one in the Miami Convention Center, packed with maskless people, glad-handing everywhereâTop Value Television (TVTV) trained its video cameras on the in-between moments of a political spectacle. It was 1972, and a scrappy group of âvideo freaksâ from San Francisco wanted to change the way television was made.
With 28 press passes in hand, the fledgling group shot hundreds of hours of footage at the DNC and RNC, which took place at the same venue just a month later. TVTV captured official votes and speeches, but also backroom discussions, Miami sightseeing, Newsweek interviewing them poolside, and, most notably, interactions with network television crews.
The official results of this new journalism endeavor were two hour-long, scrapbook-like documentaries, The Worldâs Largest TV Studio (about the DNC) and Four More Years (its RNC companion), initially screened on select cable channels and later available via video distribution services, or more recently, online.
Approximately half the TVTV crew from the 1972 Convention tapes with the TVTV media van in Miami. (Courtesy TVTV and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, University of California, Berkeley)
But now, for the first time, the whole of that raw footageâin-between the in-between momentsâwill be available to the public at âPreserving Guerrilla Televisionâ and soon, the Internet Archive, the result of a National Endowment for Humanities grant to the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. The newly digitized video captures what local archivist, filmmaker and educator Rick Prelinger calls âthe flavor of TVTVâs work.â The raw footage contains extended ârapsâ by protesters and delegates, casual interviews with people who would become political heavyweights (a young John Lewis!), and a very real sense of Americansâ thoughts and concerns during a pivotal year.
A grant of $220,537 allowed BAMPFA to digitize 437 analog videos related to three TVTV projects: the two convention docs and Gerald Fordâs America, which shows the videomakers embedded in another spectacle, the first hundred days of Fordâs presidency after Nixonâs 1974 resignation. The grant also paid for scanning and photographing thousands of pages of paperwork, press clippings, scrapbooks and other TVTV ephemera.
A TVTV poster promoting their 1972 convention documentaries. (Courtesy TVTV and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, University of California, Berkeley)
Itâs the culmination (in part) of a project that traces its roots back to a 2004 Ant Farm retrospective at BAMPFA, co-organized by then-video curator Steve Seid. (The Ant Farm and TVTV collectives shared members.) I specify âin partâ because according to Michael Campos-Quinn, director of library special projects at BAMPFAâs Film Library and Study Center, this digitization project is âjust the tip of the iceberg.â They actually have thousands of TVTV tapes, not to mention the work of other Bay Area video collectives.
âItâs so incredibly expensive to digitize the kind of tape that these are on,â Campos-Quinn explains. The videos are on half-inch open-reel tapes, one of the first portable videotape formats available to consumers in the late â60s. With (relatively light) equipment like the Sony Portapak, guerrilla video groups could move nimbly through crowds, and produce media for a fraction of what the major networks spent covering the same event.
âIt was basically a game changer in terms of how people were able to document themselves and document their own reality,â Campos-Quinn says. âBut the tape itself is a consumer product and itâs just fundamentally unstable. Weâre at the point now where the tapes are starting to degrade past the point of being able to play them.â
âLong story short, we have thousands of tapes that are in dire need of transfer,â he says. Even the equipment needed to play TVTVâs tapes is super rare; BAMPFA worked with a Pennsylvania company called The MediaPreserve to digitize this collection.
TVTV interviews a tired Walter Cronkite in the aftermath of the 1972 Democratic National Convention. (Courtesy TVTV and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, University of California, Berkeley)
Knowledge of this scarcityâand this precarityâmakes what is now digitized all the more engaging. When the collective disbanded in 1977, many of TVTVâs members went on to impressive careers in Hollywood, documentary filmmaking and the art world. But in the early 1970s, Michael Shamberg, Allen Rucker, Megan Williams, Chip Lord, Hudson Marquez and Doug Michels (among others) were eager 20-somethings, full of ideas about the potential of television and eager to put them to the test.
They believed the type of equipment they used determined, in part, the type of information theyâd be able to gather. They wanted to create âspecial purpose media,â not mass media, and provide a space for people express their own views. And they went about their project methodically, designing letterhead, raising funds from various foundations and commercial enterprises, and selling shares when that failed. In the 1974 report Prime Time Survey, TVTV laid out their philosophy about opening up television, emphasizing their desire to figure things out through making, not just theorizing. âProjects are the best prophecies,â they wrote.
Their countercultural approach becomes most visible in the scrapbooks compiled while making The Worldâs Largest TV Studio and Four More Years: the group parties in their Miami rental with nitrous oxide; the male members of TVTV are often shirtless; collages lampoon Nixon and then-California governor Ronald Reagan.
TVTV videomakers enjoy an ice cream. (Courtesy TVTV and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, University of California, Berkeley)
Breaking what were then the rules of nonfiction television, the artists of TVTV became characters in their own documentary, annotating scenes with both hand-written notes and staged commentary. After one particularly confusing speech at the DNC by delegate Willie Brown, a TVTV member leans into the frame to ask, âDid you understand that?â
The fact that they werenât part of the âstraightâ media certainly facilitated some interactions, even if it hindered them in others (in The Worldâs Largest TV Studio, the Secret Service is deeply skeptical of their press credentials). In raw footage from the RNC, a group of Vietnam Veterans Against the War joke they wonât let a TV crew through unless their cameraman has long hair. TVTVâs very unobtrusiveness means people just keep talkingâabout the Womenâs Movement, the Vietnam War, or the eeriness of organized groups of Young Republicans.
One of those candid conversations captures John Lewis (then executive director of the Voter Education Project) and civil rights activist Tom Houck (then associate director of the Youth Citizenship Fund) at the RNC. Lewis expresses sadness at the sight of young people with âno sense of independence or spontaneityâ supporting âsomething so out of date and obsoleteâ as the Republican platform.
In another clip, following a gathering of the National Womenâs Political Caucus (featuring Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan and Bella Abzug), Florynce Kennedy and Margaret Sloan-Hunter discuss the challenges facing Black feminists within the feminist movement and wider society. It sounds, unfortunately, very reminiscent of the conversations weâre still having in 2020.
Campos-Quinn says he experienced the same feeling. âItâs a really wild thing to look at the footage and see how completely relevant what happened then is to today,â he says.
Halfway through the 2020 DNC, looking ahead to the RNC, thereâs plenty to compare between our current political circumstances and those of 1972. The media landscape has changed greatly, and yet weâre still searching for approaches to mediamaking that might achieve TVTVâs ultimate goal: entertainment that enhances awareness instead of numbing it.
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