![]() WNET Reintroduces Its Massive Film & Video Archives at the ACSIL FOOTAGE EXPO 2015Public TV’s Premiere Producer Making a New Push to License Imagery from Its Historical Holdings, Including Rare Footage on the African American Story
By: ACSIL, Inc. “We consider the ACSIL FOOTAGE EXPO to be our coming-out party,” remarked Joe Basile, Director of Rights and Clearances for WNET. “In the past, we handled our business reactively, waiting in some cases for prospective licensees to tell us what we had in our own collection. But we decided to become more proactive and begin showcasing the many content areas in which we are strong. The ACSIL FOOTAGE EXPO is the first venue for our new approach,” which includes a re-tooled web page (licensing.wnet.org) The archival holdings of WNET include critically acclaimed television series such as American Masters, Nature and Great Performances, as well as exhaustive footage on Art and Artists, Dance, Music, Drama and Natural History. Of special note is the deep inventory of footage documenting American history, with an exceptional holding of content related to African American history and culture and the Civil Rights movement. “We prioritized African American content in our recent digitization process relating to CPB’s American Archive project, and we now have what we consider to be the deepest digital offering of the African American story, much of it not seen since it was originally broadcast on public TV forty or fifty years ago,” said Basile. “For example, we sent documentary filmmakers to chronicle major events of the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s, including extensive coverage of Martin Luther King’s Poor People’s Campaign. The moments immediately after Dr. King’s assassination in Memphis on April 4, 1968 were captured by a young NET employee named Joseph Louw, including the iconic photo of a mortally wounded MLK on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel.” Other remarkable items include: Truman Capote discussing his new book, In Cold Blood; the Doors performing songs from the new album, The Soft Parade, in color; Ansel Adams showing viewers his photographic technique at Yosemite; Margaret Mead’s groundbreaking anthropological work in New Guinea; Eleanor Roosevelt hosting a chat show on public affairs; Muhammad Ali being interviewed about black-white relations and the Vietnam War shortly after his banishment from boxing; and Chevy Chase and Carly Simon making their TV debuts in the edgy and influential variety series The Great American Dream Machine. WNET will be represented at the ACSIL FOOTAGE EXPO 2015 by Mr. Basile and his Rights and Clearance colleagues, Jennifer Bertani and Carmen Fernandez. Mr. Basile can be reached in advance of the Expo at Basile@wnet.org or 212-560-2944. ### ABOUT ACSIL FOOTAGE EXPO 2015 The ACSIL FOOTAGE EXPO is a global marketplace and conference that attracts buyers and sellers of stock and archival footage. Organized by the nonprofit trade association, ACSIL, which represents the collective interests of stock and archival footage sources, the EXPO will be held on April 29, 2015 at NY’s Midtown Loft and Terrace (267 Fifth Avenue, NY). A full slate of conferences has been scheduled with speakers from production, legal, digital media, research, financial and footage organizations. More information about the EXPO is available at: http://www.acsil.org/ ABOUT WNET As New York’s flagship public media provider and the parent company of THIRTEEN and WLIW21 and operator of NJTV, WNET brings quality arts, education and public affairs programming to more than 5 million viewers each week. WNET produces and presents such acclaimed PBS series as Nature, Great Performances, American Masters, PBS NewsHour Weekend, Charlie Rose and a range of documentaries, children’s programs, and local news and cultural offerings available on air and online. Pioneers in educational programming, WNET has created such groundbreaking series as Get the Math (http://www.thirteen.org/ End
Page Updated Last on: Apr 17, 2015
|