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    • Movement that sought to democratize video production

      • Coined by early video author Michael Shamberg, who later became a Hollywood movie producer, the term “guerilla television” describes a movement that sought to democratize video production—blurring the lines between those who had the power to disseminate information and who could only receive it.
      humanities.uchicago.edu/articles/2021/05/hidden-history-guerrilla-television-uchicago-scholars-preserve-decades-old-videos
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  2. Guerrilla television is a term coined in 1971 by Michael Shamberg, [1][2] one of the founders of the Raindance Foundation; the Raindance Foundation has been one of the counter-culture video collectives that in the 1960s and 1970s extended the role of the underground press to new communication technologies.

  3. May 25, 2021 · Known as “guerrilla television,” this movement of the late 1960s to 1970s helped amplify the voices of groups such as women, Black, Indigenous and people of color, immigrants and Appalachian miners.

  4. May 25, 2021 · Known as “guerrilla television,” this movement of the late 1960s to 1970s helped amplify the voices of groups such as women, Black, Indigenous and people of color, immigrants and Appalachian miners.

  5. Guerrilla is a British drama television series set in early 1970s London, against the backdrop of the Immigration Act 1971 [2] and British black power movements [3][4] such as the British Black Panthers [3][4] and Race Today Collective. [5] .

  6. May 25, 2021 · Known as “guerrilla television,” this movement of the late 1960s to 1970s helped amplify the voices of groups such as women, Black, Indigenous and people of color, immigrants and Appalachian miners. A group of children interview their older sister Mary Ann in Chicago, c. 1979.

    • What is GuerrillaTV?1
    • What is GuerrillaTV?2
    • What is GuerrillaTV?3
    • What is GuerrillaTV?4
    • What is GuerrillaTV?5
  7. ESSAYS. We are proud to feature newly commissioned essays by historians, archivists, and scholars of video art and activist media. These essays give historical context for TVTVs works and activity, while making crucial links to the current political environment in which democratized media and citizen journalism are more important than ever.

  8. Guerrilla: Created by John Ridley. With Babou Ceesay, Nathaniel Martello-White, Daniel Mays, Denise Gough. A pair of activists in 1970s London set out to free a political prisoner and wage a resistance movement.

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