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CAMCORDER
The
"Camcorder" is the commercial name for professional and home video
cameras that combine a camera and video recorder in one unit. Since
the introduction of this technology in 1981, camcorders have become
the tool of choice for local and national Electronic News Gathering
(ENG). Consumer camcorders, introduced by Sony in 1985, have rendered
Super-8 film for home movies obsolete. Moreover, some critics and
academic media theorists claim the camcorder has democratized the
media, as well.
Professional
and consumer camcorders are based on several, non-compatible formats.
Ed Beta and MII are popular professional formats, while VHS, Compact
VHS, and ultra-compact 8mm dominate among consumers. The 8mm format
lead to significantly smaller cameras that can be operated with
one hand (Sony uses the trade name Handycam to describe their 8mm
models). Super VHS (S-VHS) and Hi-8, which are compatible with their
lower resolution counterparts, offer higher definition and color
control when used with high resolution playback equipment. S-VHS
and Hi-8 are used by high-end consumers, as well as academic and
industrial videographers. The camcorder has also lead to a growing
sophistication in ancillary equipment for the home video market,
with numerous titlers, editors, and mixers available to both average
and high-end users. Computer-based multimedia allows camcorder images
to be incorporated in computer presentations for business and instructional
use.
The
camcorder came into prominence in early 1991, when Hollywood plumbing
store manager George Holliday focused his camcorder on the beating
of Rodney King by members of the Los Angeles Police Department.
The tape, which Holliday submitted to KTLA, received international
attention, and showed the power amateur video can wield over the
national, indeed, world psyche. Previous to this, local stations,
as well as cable news giant CNN, had solicited and used newsworthy
amateur video. The popular ABC series America's Funniest Home
Videos and similar television programs throughout the world
are based on the existence of camcorders, as well.
The
camcorder has also become an icon of numerous dramas and sitcoms,
which commonly frame home and family scenes within the confines
of a camcorder viewfinder, replacing the very notion of "home movies"
as a form of expression.
-Michael
Kassel
FURTHER
READING
Aufderheide,
Pat. "Vernacular Video: For the Growing Genre of Camcorder Journalism,
Nothing Is Too Personal." Columbia Journalism Review (New
York), January-February 1995.
Berko,
Lili. "Video: In Search of a Discourse." Quarterly Review of
Film Studies (Chur, The Netherlands), April 1989.
Brodie,
John. "Hi8: Expanding The Role Of TV Reporter." Columbia Journalism
Review (New York), September-October 1991.
Dullea,
Georgia. "Camcorder! Action! Lives Become Roles." New York Times,
15 August 1991.
Hedgecoe,
John. John Hedgecoe's Complete Guide to Video. New York:
Sterling, 1992.
Luft,
Greg. "Camcorders: When Amateurs Go After the News." Columbia
Journalism Review (New York), September-October, 1991.
Metz,
Holly. "Camcorder Commandos." The Progressive (Madison, Wisconsin),
April 1991.
Mouzard,
Froncois. Camcorder = Camscope. Ottowa, Canada: Department
of the Secretary of State of Canada, 1991.
Oulette,
Laurie. "The (Video) Revolution Will Be Televised." Utne Reader
(Minneapolis, Minnesota), March-April 1992.
_______________. "Will The Revolution Be Televised? Camcorders,
Activism, And Alternative Television In The 1990s." In, d'Agostino,
Peter and David Tafler, editors. Transmission: Toward A Post-Television
Culture. Thousand Oaks, California: Sage, 1995.
Slouka,
Mark Z. "'Speak, Video': Life, Death, and Memory in the New Age."
The Georgia Review (Athens, Georgia), Summer 1993.
Talty,
Stephen. "Family Record." Film Comment (New York), May-June
1991.
Warren, George. "Big News: Little Cameras." Washington Journalism
Review (Washington, D.C.), December 1990.
Weiss,
Michael J. "Camcorder Consumers." American Demographics (Ithaca,
New York), September 1994.
See
also Experimental
Video; Home
Video; Public
Access Video; Videocassette;
Videotape
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