Showing posts with label sci fi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sci fi. Show all posts

Thursday, January 11, 2007

People Only Steal the Airwaves.



WTTV Chicago - Max Headroom Pirating Incident - November 22, 1987

NSFW : brief male nudity, butt smacking, Doctor Who footage.

I'm not exactly sure how the word piracy came to mean anything other than robbery committed at sea. That being said, in the modern world, there are two definitions of the word that are heard far more often. These days, I'm sure the most common use is to denote copyright infringement, but only just behind that, and only because it has become both harder and less rewarding to do, is the act of broadcasting without a license. There are plenty of resources on the net relating to pirate radio broadcasts, but actual acts of video piracy, particularly those overriding mainstream broadcasters' signals have only happened on a handful of occasions.

On November 22nd, 1987, during WGN TV's 9:00 news broadcast, one such event happened, the sportscast was interrupted for 20 seconds with the image of a man in a Max Headroom mask in front of a moving piece of corrugated metal. There was no sound. The station hurriedly switched transmitters, and sportscaster Dan Roan appeared flustered. If that was all that happened, this wouldn't have been such a big deal.

From Wikipedia:
Later that night around 11:15pm during a broadcast of the Doctor Who episode Horror of Fang Rock on WTTW, the signal was hijacked by the same person. It was the same video that was broadcast during the WGN hijack, but this time there was audio. The person in the Max Headroom mask interrupted the broadcast, saying "He's a frickin' nerd" before laughing and stating "Yeah, I think I'm better than Chuck Swirsky!". The person continued to utter strange phrases including a Coke advertising slogan (Max Headroom was a Coke spokesperson at the time), humming the theme song to Clutch Cargo (pausing midway to say "I stole CBS"), before finally undressing below the waist and was spanked by an unknown woman with a flyswatter before the masked person cut off his transmission. It was over in about 90 seconds. The pirate was never caught. WTTW, which maintains its transmitter atop the Sears Tower, found that its engineers were unable to stop the hijacker because at the time there were no engineers on duty at the Sears Tower. Also, the station's master control center was unable to contact its transmitting equipment remotely to switch the STL (Studio To Transmitter Link), unlike their counterparts at WGN-TV, who were able to thwart the intruder by switching their John Hancock Center transmitter STL remotely within seconds.

Who was this guy? No one knows. Why did he do it? No one know that either. Why did he want to be smacked on the heiny? It's all a mystery. He joins Captain Midnight (the man who hacked the HBO Sat uplink in '82) and Thomas M. Haynie (who jammed the Playboy channel just a few months prior to this incident) in a select group of people who've pulled this off. He's also the only major perpetrator who was never caught. There has not been a major pirate TV disruption recorded since.

Whoever you are, Max Headroom Guy, I salute you, for Sticking It To the Man. Maybe your actions did not destroy the broadcast TV paradigm. Maybe all you wanted was to dress funny and have your butt smacked on the air. Whatever the reason, your actions inspire others to dare to talk back to the Terrible Machines of Media Compliance. That and you gave me something to write about on a Friday.

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

Open Your Mind


Timebelt

Happy New Year!

...

Am I a bit late for that?

Okay well, now that the holidaze are out of the way, back to some serious vid posting.

Speaking of being late for things, time to switch on the wayback machine, at least in Internet time - back to the far off year of 2003. Before 2003 I was interested in online video in a fairly abstract sense. I thought that somehow, some way, eventually something interesting might happen and enable independent artists like me to magically Do Something On The Internet. I just didn't quite see how. Then somebody told me about a weird little festival-type-thingie out of Los Angeles called Channel 101 (self styled as "the unavoidable future of entertainment"). The idea was simple: Once a month a group of video makers would put on a screening of "TV Shows" - each under 5 minutes in length - and the audience at that screening would vote on which ones they liked the best. The top 5 would be "picked up" like any network show, and allowed to make more episodes for the next month. Any other show, whether "pilot" or "prime time" coming into that month's screening, would be ruthlessly cancelled. It all sounded brutally fun, but I never would have cared much if they hadn't put the shows up on the Internet. I discovered them about three screenings in, watched every show and was hooked. The show I liked best at that time was Timebelt. A quirky sci-fi series in the best tradition of bad 70's television, Timebelt was one of the top five shows from the first Channel 101 screening, and was the last of those original Prime Time shows to be cancelled. Over 8 episodes Dr. Daniel Bloom, who had lost the love of his life to a space shuttle accident, travelled through time looking for a way to save her, and righting wrongs along the way. Seemingly undefeatable at screenings, Timebelt creator Chris Tallman voluntarily ended the series a year later. At the time it was the longest running show in Channel 101 history.

Speaking of Channel 101, this weird little festival has attracted quite a following. Jack Black, and Drew Carey have both had shows in Prime Time, a pilot was produced for the F/X network, the creators of The 'Bu have gone on to Saturday Night Live (and were responsible for my Uncensored Christmas post), and there is now a sister festival in New York called Channel 102.

As for the show that got me hooked, for some reason the first episode is no longer available at the Channel 101 site. I found it at the official Timebelt site, along with the rest of the episodes in ipod format (most video players should handle this, and certainly Quicktime will).

So here it is. Timebelt Episode 1.

UPDATE 03/01/07 2:51 PM
The link to the video has been fixed. I wrote the first draft for this post in November, and the link had moved since then. It should work now.