Marion Stokes believed television news would one day be edited, erased, or rewritten. So in 1979, she started recording TV broadcasts and never stopped for 35 years.

    by not_a_profession

    17 Comments

    1. not_a_profession on

      She captured over 800,000 hours of broadcasts and stored more than 70,000 VHS tapes in her Philadelphia home. Her goal was to preserve an unedited record of television news, fearing that media narratives could later be altered or rewritten.

      After her death, her entire collection was donated to the Internet Archive, where it has been digitized for historical research and public access.

      [Source](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marion_Stokes)

      [The Marion Stokes Project: Recorder](https://vimeo.com/584416381)

    2. MedicalComposer2 on

      She basically built a time machine out of VHS tapes. Future historians are probably grateful someone thought this far ahead.

    3. DumpsterFireCEO723 on

      News networks couldn’t even be bothered to keep their own recordings and she did it all on her own. She was on a mission!

    4. All of her recordings should be transferred to digital and distributed\saved to archive.org.

      Note: I see it already has been. GOOD!

    5. Agreeable_Pizza93 on

      I would honestly love to sit and watch all of that! The news would be cool but I also want to see the commercials!

    6. Bob Monkhouse, household name when I was growing up, did the same over many years here in the UK

    7. She’s got to have a fruit of the loom commercial in there with the fucking cornucopia 

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