315 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
315 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
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Pirate TV in Eastern Europe.
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By Evelyn Messinger
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TELEVISION HAS PLAYED an increasingly significant role in the downfall of
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Eastern Europe's one-party states. In Poland underground pirate video
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transmissions kept Solidarity alive for nearly 10 years. Last fall, East
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Germans judged the effects of their anti-government demonstrations by
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watching the coverage they received on West German news programs. In
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Romania, control of the television station is tantamount to control of the
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government.
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Now another aspect of the newly flexible television medium has come into
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play. Independent broadcasters using jerry-rigged transmitters and home
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video equipment have sprung up in Poland, Hungary, Romania and East Germany,
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intermittently broadcasting programs ranging from rock videos to local news
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reports. Even in the USSR, unofficial pirate broadcasts have taken place,
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and are credited with aiding the election of radical candidates to
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government posts in a number of cities.
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In late March, I visited the city of Leipzig to investigate Kanal X, East
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Germany's first and only pirate TV station. Kanal X is a lever stuck into
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the ironclad media armor of Europe. The lever is slender and fragile, but
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with the right amount of pressure it could open a large hole, allowing
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independent broadcasting into the future of Europe, both East and West.
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PIRATE TV
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To Americans, pirate TV means the guy whose face appeared illegally on a
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cable TV channel a few years ago. Acts like this are rare in the US, because
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they're not necessary. Independent producers and activists here have
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historically agitated for, and often won, access to the spectrum of
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channels. There are allowances and avenues for all types of broadcasting.
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The mighty Network is balanced by the lowly low-power station, and virtually
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all cable systems have some form of public-access programming.
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Access to European television, on the other hand, has largely been
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constrained by government controls. The recent emergence of new technologies
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in the West has loosened things up somewhat, increasing the number of
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channels transmitted by satellite, cable and broadcasting. In the face of
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inevitable change, some countries foresaw the need for independently
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produced programming and for guaranteeing independent voices some access to
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the airwaves. In the UK, a new channel (Channel 41 was established in the
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early eighties. Although commercial, its government-dictated mandate was to
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have programming which was produced almost entirely by new, small production
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companies. This single channel became an outlet for all manner of unusual
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viewpoints, and although Channel 4 has since grown more conservative, the
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independent companies established by it still flourish, providing a limited
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counterpart to US diversity.
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In Italy, a Supreme Court order guaranteed media proliferation as an aspect
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of free speech in the seventies. Italy has since fostered what is probably
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the most diverse television landscape in the world. Every sort of television
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program imaginable exists there, from nude game shows to coverage of
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community meetings. Inspired by the Italians, France has recently allowed
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greater access to TV outlets for independent producers, although channel
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ownership is more tightly controlled than in Italy or the US.
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But the proliferation of new cable and satellite outlets in Western Europe
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has generally been given over to large media conglomerates which are
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pan-European, and often global, in scope. These include established
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publishers like the German Springer Group and the Australian-based News
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Corp. of Rupert Murdoch. These satellite- and cablecasters have helped to
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shut out small independent voices in favor of endless American re-runs,
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locally produced Wheel of Fortune clones, and slick rock videos produced by
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megabuck record companies.
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The medium's development in Eastern Europe has taken a different turn.
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Pirates here are often dedicated idealists broadcasting a message not to the
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liking of governments in power. Technology is everything in this context. As
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equipment has gotten cheaper and smaller, the success of clandestine
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transmissions has improved.
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Before the advent of miniaturization, not only could tyrants terrorize with
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abandon, but they controlled the spin on news reports of their deeds. No one
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outside of the USSR, for example, knew what Stalin was doing, because there
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was no way for an activist to videotape the mass graves, let alone transmit
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the images to the world. Consequently there were few activists, and no
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repercussions. But as early as the 1960s, TV technology had progressed to a
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point where it could begin to change things. The earliest example I've found
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of Eastern European pirate TV is a series of clandestine broadcasts in 1968
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in Prague, Czechoslovakia. After Soviet troops took over the city, a remote
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TV van, designed to transmit signals from soccer matches and the like, was
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diverted and secretly dismantled. The equipment was set up in a sealed room
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and anti-government transmissions took place for many months. The Soviet
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tanks, which could be seen circling the block below the station's secret
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headquarters, never found the transmitter. Poland's Solidarity movement had
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a similar system of clandestine broadcasting through the political
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repression of the eighties, but by this time the necessary equipment could
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be carried from rooftop to rooftop in a set of suitcases. By the time these
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repressive governments collapsed (partly from the weight of sins that were
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no longer hideable), the videos of their undoing could not only be made by
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anybody with a home video camera, but could be transmitted to local
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audiences by anybody with a VHS player and a rudimentary understanding of
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how to do it.
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So, today:
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* In Lithuania, the much-suffering USSR rebel state, a daring and unusual
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pirate broadcast took place in autumn 1989. The Moscow city channel is
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rebroadcast there on UHF channel 22. After it signed off one evening, a
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"test transmission" was beamed from the Experimental Youth Studio of
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Siauliai in northern Lithuania. The transmission included a tour of the
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regional prison and army base, and local celebrity interviews.
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* In suburban Moscow, Leningrad, and Kiev, village-sized apartment complexes
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are equipped with master antennas and complex-wide cable systems. They often
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have their own "local" channel, broadcasting exclusively to the 20,000 or so
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residents of the complex.
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* In Romania, Free Timosoara Television (FTT) began transmitting with
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home-built equipment shortly after the uprising that ended Ceausescu's rule.
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The station is now protected by soldiers who were assigned to the task by
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the provisional government.
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* In Hungary and Poland, a number of small-scale independent broadcasters,
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born during their respective revolutions, have achieved legitimization in
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their countries as exceptions to obsolete broadcasting rules.
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* And in Leipzig, East Germany, the tiny Kanal X covers local news and
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rebroadcasts reports from around the world pulled off the Western
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satellites.
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Ironically, these tentative forays into small-scale broadcasting have the
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potential to enhance the diversity of television all over Europe. But if the
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Eastern European countries simply adopt Western European patterns, they will
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inherit a system which is top-heavy with state-run bureaucracies and the
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increasingly powerful Pan-European commercial broadcasters.
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East Germany, which can simply "plug in" to the existing West German
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television system, will integrate more easily than most. The experience of
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Kanal X may foreshadow the future of all the new Eastern European
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broadcasters.
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LEIPZIG
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The city center of Leipzig, East Germany, is a press of shoppers and their
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children. Under grey skies and Gothic facades, they crowd around tables
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heaped with vegetables, tall stacks of West German beer cases, and brightly
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painted mobile trailers selling french fries or cream-filled waffle
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sandwiches. The most popular items for sale are West German magazines. At
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the heart of the largest clusters of people one finds a small cardboard box
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with two stacks, one of Der Spiegel and one of Stem, West German equivalents
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of Time and Newsweek. They are expensive by East German standards, yet they
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have been selling so well that many local East German papers, born during
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the revolution, have been forced out of business.
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I get a strange feeling of deja vu in the streets of Leipzig, but I can't
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place it - certain buildings, and even rooms inside buildings, seem out of
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place, yet familiar. Finally I realize that the city is dotted with
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Soviet-style architecture, incongruously grafted onto this European
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landscape. A "people's restaurant," massive and 1950s-style on one comer; a
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dimly lit coat room, with hundreds of empty hooks and hangers designed for a
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colder climate. I marvel that the Russians could have dominated this foreign
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territory for so long.
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In a run-down section of Leipzig stands Democracy House, the headquarters of
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the home-grown political parties, rights groups and activist organizations
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that lead the famous Monday night demonstrations which toppled the
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government of the city (and the nation). These are the ones who didn't leave
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for the West, the sort of people who would lead a peaceful revolution, and
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who would now be buzzing around the door of Kanal X.
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"ARE YOU INTERESTED IN MAKING TV?"
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If you live in Leipzig you might have had your TV antenna tuned southward,
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to pick up West German signals from Bavaria (East Germans are world-renowned
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for their expertise with TV antennas). On March 17, 1990, you would have
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received the first signals of Kanal X. The first show: an East German video
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artist's work, as rare as the East Germans with access to video gear. Then,
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a home-made "news" story with street interviews about the upcoming election,
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then a nightly news report, in English, from CNN.
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Perhaps it's more accurate to say that this is what you were supposed to
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see. Many who watched saw lots of static, faint video signals coming as if
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from Mars, and that's all. The station was beaming out 8 watts in a tenuous
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link to the world, obstructed by insufficient power and a tall building next
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door.
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Over the last four months, Kanal X has only been on the air a total of four
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nights. Although the transmitter has been improved, reception is still
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marginal. But the effectiveness Kanal X lacks in broadcast power is made up
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for in the power of its idea to set off deep legal speculation, bureaucratic
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opposition, heavy media coverage locally and internationally, and even
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debate in Berlin, where new laws are being considered.
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Kanal X began in the mind of West German video artist Ingo Gunther, whose
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works often suggest bridges between journalism and art. Gunther has sold
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Earth imagery made by satellites to the world's news organizations (see WER
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#50, p. 62) and to museums in Europe. He has used worldwide news reports as
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both the content and the form of his sculptures. The Kanal X transmitter, in
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fact, is officially a sculpture, being displayed in Democracy House.
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Working with Joerge Seyde of Leipzig's New Forum Party, Gunther enlisted two
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other West Germans, a professional who installed the transmitter and a video
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buff who donated his own home equipment. Joerge, who works at the local art
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museum, took nominal charge of the station. He enlisted his younger brother
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Thomas and other activists from the various parties located in Democracy
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House, with the question, Are you interested in making TV?"
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Thomas Seyde, at 33, is the oldest of these young guys (they are almost all
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males). They have long hair by current Western standards, wear tee-shirts,
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jeans and denim jackets. They might be heavy-metal aficionados in another
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world. Only months ago, they began demonstrating in the streets each Monday
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night. Now, Thomas is the cameraman, and a teen-age Green Party worker
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conducts interviews, although he's never been on TV before. On the afternoon
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of March 17, they are frantically editing their first videos for broadcast.
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At 10 PM that night, Kanal X goes on the air for two hours. It seems to
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work, although there's no way to know for sure.
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Over the next few days, people call in to say they have been watching the
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station with varying degrees of success. Young people show up, asking if
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they can work there in their spare time.
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On the second night of broadcasting, Joerge receives a visit from a
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representative of the Leipzig state post office, the PTT. This is the
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organization officially responsible for East German television reception and
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transmission. The man informs him that, since Kanal X hasn't a license, it
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must shut down. Surprisingly, the official rattles off every single program
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broadcast so far. Everyone is worried about this development, but also a bit
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proud that somebody got a good signal. After three nights on the air, Ingo
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and Joerge begin the bewildering process of attempting to gain legitimacy
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for Kanal X in a country with no laws. The station ceases to broadcast.
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During this period, Thomas and the other KXers continue to "make TV." They
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shoot the opening night of Leipzig's first independent cafe, where young
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people have fixed their hair into a local approximation of punk. In the
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crowded cafe, as it appears on the video screen, everyone is smiling. Thomas
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gets a phone tip alleging that voters in an old-age home were forced to vote
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for a certain party in the recent election. He begins to check out the
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story. The KX kids are busy shooting and editing, building a library of
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stories against the day that they will broadcast again.
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Meanwhile in East Berlin, the prestigious, newly formed Media Control
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Commission is debating the future broadcast landscape of East Germany.
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Rumblings of Kanal X reach their ears. The press continues to cover the now
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silent Kanal X, which was always more powerful than its transmitter.
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X, LAWS AND VIDEOTAPE
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The stacks of expensive West German magazines selling in downtown Leipzig
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can serve as a metaphor for the possible fate of Eastern European
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independent TV. When the West German news publications became available,
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everyone simply stopped buying local papers. Recently, East German
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Television (the only one) announced that it would soon merge into the West
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German national broadcasting system, a system with virtually no provision
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for independent outlets. As West German TV takes over, what will happen to
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Kanal X?
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The signs aren't good. In May, Kanal X returned to the air for one night. By
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now, the station's story has been featured in East and West German
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newspapers, on the two West German TV networks and on East German
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Television's popular Youth Program. The PTT representative again appeared at
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the door of Kanal X, demanding that the station cease broadcasting
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instantly. He finally relented, allowing the program to finish, on the
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promise that it would be the last.
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In the quiet streets of Leipzig, one senses the fragility of a lame-duck
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reality. The Kanal Xers are the people who stood in the streets and brought
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down the old world. Political entrepreneurs, they are being eased out of the
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leadership of the new enterprise in favor of cooler heads. In the final
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analysis, they are too idealistic.
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Perhaps this is the fate of a truly successful revolutionary. A less
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successful one loses the Revolution but becomes a martyr. The spectacularly
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unsuccessful ones are those that end up in power.
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Many Westerners, including a number of US foundations wishing to help
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enhance democracy, are beginning to pour money and expertise into Eastern
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European broadcasting. In my telephone polling of these groups, few were
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concerned that, by allowing mega-stations but not tiny broadcasters, these
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countries may be simply trading one form of broadcast tyranny for another.
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In light of the US public-access broadcasting battles of the 1970s, which
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assured a wide range of options here, are we really ready to tell these
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small broadcasters to either pack up their hard-won transmitters or begin
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broadcasting re-runs of Mr. Ed? Ingo Gunther fears that, with their lack of
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technical training, East Germans will not even be eligible for jobs when the
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Western media swallows up their broadcasting. As it was with the newspapers
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and magazines, the locals won't have a chance.
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But even if it never broadcasts again, Kanal X could change the future of
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German television. The fact that small independent stations already exist
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all over Eastern Europe gives them leverage to become institutionalized in a
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way that was never considered in Western Europe, and that could buck the
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ominous trend. Now that they have gained a foothold, these little guys are
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fighting to have themselves written into new broadcast laws. This is one
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area where American expertise can really help.
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But if American supporters assume that rampant commercialism is the same
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thing as freedom, then this is one battle that those who went to the
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barricades will surely lose.
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Back at Kanal X, two bleary-eyed young men learn to edit videotape. The
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transmitter sleeps, the satellite dish sits silent. Occasionally someone
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walks in and asks about the station. Come back next week, they say, maybe
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then. Thomas begins to fiddle with the camera. Tonight they have an
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appointment to shoot a squatter community, young people who are inhabiting a
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derelict building in the older part of Leipzig and making it new.
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Thomas picks up the camera, and throws it onto his shoulder. "I'm hot!" he
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grins, heading for the door.
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Evelyn Messinger is a television producer specializing in international
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news. She is a founding member of Internews, a non-profit consortium of
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independent video newscasters. Their most recent note-worthy -projects have
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been Space Bridge events - live TV hookups with Moscow citizens and
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officials.
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