Part of a cable TV series called Communications Update that aired on public access in New York City from 1979 through 1992, these tapes provide an early example of television made by artists. The series centered on the democraticization of the media. Birth Of An Industry covers a Miami satellite TV convention attended by thousands of backyard satellite TV enthusiaists, inventors, and entrepreneurs. Many of the attendees joined forces to track the orbital arc of foreign satellite signals, in particular the Russian "bird." Footage of this activity is intercut with interviews of some of the industry's pioneers, including inventors Bob Coleman, Taylor Howard, and Bob Cooper, one of the industry's chief promoters. The availability of this technology opened tremendous possibilities to rural America and to countries seeking to diversify and expand the programming available to them.
Satellite TV: Birth of an Industry (Parts 1 & 2)
Liza Béar
1980 00:56:00 United StatesEnglishColorStereo4:3VideoDescription
About Liza Béar
During the late 1970s Liza Béar created an intriguing body of work that focused on communications issues — specifically the use of media and the disempowered role of the public in communications policy. Central to Béar's early work was a desire to tie the means of production (technology) to the reasons for production (economic advantage, national ideology, etc.). While Béar's concerns have diversified, her approach is always personal and experimental — collapsing the norms of narrative and documentary, subjective authorship and objective document.