Marion Stokes, a woman who from 1977 to 2012 recorded thousands of hours of news and tv show footage. Her primary objective was to “protect the truth” from fake news and to let people assess the archived material objectively.
She stored the tapes in 9 apartments and 3 storage units. Family outings were planned around the 6 hour tapes, making sure they were home to switch them out. In her later years she hired someone to do the recordings for her. Her final recordings include coverage of the Sandy Hook massacre
This is amazing but I can’t imagine how much this cost. Let’s say during the 80s she was buying for $3 per tape. That’s roughly $9 in today’s dollars. If she made 20k tapes in the 80s, that’s 60k of 80s dollars and 180k of ours – or roughly 18k per year on tapes.
Tapes didn’t get significantly cheaper in the 90s and God knows where she even found VHS tapes towards the end of her run but she plowed some serious money into this adventure.
CasualObservationist
19 hours ago
I bet her friends and family called her crazy
lynivvinyl
18 hours ago
I wonder if she had video of a fruit of the loom cornucopia.
Low_Presentation8149
18 hours ago
What a unique and amazing legacy
UpTheRiffLad
18 hours ago
It’s really endearing to see people do quirky stuff that ends up having a huge impact later on. Like a real life Forrest Gump
TheLettre7
17 hours ago
A few years ago I digitized all of my family members VHS tapes going back to 1983, through them I was able to see and hear my great grandmother who died before I was born.
On YouTube check out the channel 5ninthavenueproject, one man’s vlogs of his life from 1983 to 1989.
RoadkillKoala
18 hours ago
I found a forgotten sitcom amongst her recordings that I remember watching with my grandparents in the early 80’s. Such great memories.
True_Grocery_3315
17 hours ago
They were talking about fake news in 1977?
celtbygod
17 hours ago
Awesome. I recorded tons of am radio in the sixties.
Suitepotatoe
17 hours ago
Damn. Do you know the impact this has on history! She she’s amazing. She needed a peace prize.
0thethethe0
18 hours ago
Needed her at the BBC!
ISeeGrotesque
18 hours ago
And we desperately need it today
tingle_d
18 hours ago
I was always wondering where people found old information from to compare to these new lies
Great job Marion
It’s like shrinkflation. I’m so glad when I see side by side pictures and happy people are calling out these greedy goblins of society
Keep making choices with your money
TechnologyFamiliar20
17 hours ago
Did she record all broadcast, or let’s two hours of main news a day? What machines did she use? Because consumers electronic VCR had problems..
pichael289
17 hours ago
>The organization (internet archive) agreed to digitize the volumes, a process expected to run fully on round-the-clock volunteers, costing $2 million and taking 20 digitizing machines several years to complete. As of April 2022, the project is still incomplete, partially due to lack of funding.
That’s fuckin bullshit. This is something that the government needs to fund, this is extremely important.
2Eyed
17 hours ago
Is any of her collection available for the public to view?
IIRC, last year I was hoping to explore it, but I don’t think much if any was available or even digitized yet.
roadtrip-ne
17 hours ago
I recorded the footage of the Russians amassing tanks on the Ukraine border and all the TV shows were they claimed they weren’t planning to invade. I did this for essentially the same reasons- document the actual news we had that day as it’s being reported.
Almost all clips from established (if not credible in cases) news outlets.
YouTube deleted them all as propaganda, when I appealed I got a response along the lines “this talk show said they weren’t going to invade, but they did so this is misinformation and propaganda”. I explained the whole point was to document the lies. No response
They deleted 3 of 10 half hour videos immediately, and I switched them to private so at least I had access to them- but over the last 3 years I’ll get a notice every few months they’ve deleted another.
rocketmn69_
18 hours ago
Damn, don’t let President F.elon Musk hear about it. He’ll burn them
radio_gaia
18 hours ago
Amazing. What a valuable asset.
Pisstoffo
18 hours ago
K-Mart had a blue light special on VHS tapes and she snagged ‘em all!
hotdiggitydog783
18 hours ago
She’s like a modern-day Pliney the Elder
Top-Telephone9013
18 hours ago
MVP hoarder
UpstairsPreference45
18 hours ago
Now that’s a fucking Accomplishment
waterfalls7654
18 hours ago
Legend
deepthoughtlessness
18 hours ago
Digitalized by who?
Sunbro_Smudge
18 hours ago
I feel like she’d be against digitization if her goal was unedited objectivity.
SlashRaven008
18 hours ago
Heroes. Thank you for sharing.
GlumFox9126
18 hours ago
Of course she’s from Philly
trashioli10
17 hours ago
That’s incredible. Genuine question: was this a compulsion to document everything, just in the form of broadcasts? Or was this just something she was dedicated to doing to preserve history?
A lot of history will only be preserved by people like this.
noscrubphilsfans
17 hours ago
It’s been 13 years and I still haven’t seen any of the tapes she recorded.
_Stank_McNasty_
17 hours ago
this is honestly one of the coolest things I’ve heard in a long time. Not only is it incredibly valuable, the commitment is amazing. She literally made a time capsule
She did humanity a big favor.
She stored the tapes in 9 apartments and 3 storage units. Family outings were planned around the 6 hour tapes, making sure they were home to switch them out. In her later years she hired someone to do the recordings for her. Her final recordings include coverage of the Sandy Hook massacre
[Source](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marion_Stokes)
At the same time, Bob Monkhouse, a British Comedian and game-show host was doing the same in the UK:
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Monkhouse#Film_and_television_archive](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Monkhouse#Film_and_television_archive)
This is amazing but I can’t imagine how much this cost. Let’s say during the 80s she was buying for $3 per tape. That’s roughly $9 in today’s dollars. If she made 20k tapes in the 80s, that’s 60k of 80s dollars and 180k of ours – or roughly 18k per year on tapes.
Tapes didn’t get significantly cheaper in the 90s and God knows where she even found VHS tapes towards the end of her run but she plowed some serious money into this adventure.
I bet her friends and family called her crazy
I wonder if she had video of a fruit of the loom cornucopia.
What a unique and amazing legacy
It’s really endearing to see people do quirky stuff that ends up having a huge impact later on. Like a real life Forrest Gump
A few years ago I digitized all of my family members VHS tapes going back to 1983, through them I was able to see and hear my great grandmother who died before I was born.
On YouTube check out the channel 5ninthavenueproject, one man’s vlogs of his life from 1983 to 1989.
I found a forgotten sitcom amongst her recordings that I remember watching with my grandparents in the early 80’s. Such great memories.
They were talking about fake news in 1977?
Awesome. I recorded tons of am radio in the sixties.
Damn. Do you know the impact this has on history! She she’s amazing. She needed a peace prize.
Needed her at the BBC!
And we desperately need it today
I was always wondering where people found old information from to compare to these new lies
Great job Marion
It’s like shrinkflation. I’m so glad when I see side by side pictures and happy people are calling out these greedy goblins of society
Keep making choices with your money
Did she record all broadcast, or let’s two hours of main news a day? What machines did she use? Because consumers electronic VCR had problems..
>The organization (internet archive) agreed to digitize the volumes, a process expected to run fully on round-the-clock volunteers, costing $2 million and taking 20 digitizing machines several years to complete. As of April 2022, the project is still incomplete, partially due to lack of funding.
That’s fuckin bullshit. This is something that the government needs to fund, this is extremely important.
Is any of her collection available for the public to view?
IIRC, last year I was hoping to explore it, but I don’t think much if any was available or even digitized yet.
I recorded the footage of the Russians amassing tanks on the Ukraine border and all the TV shows were they claimed they weren’t planning to invade. I did this for essentially the same reasons- document the actual news we had that day as it’s being reported.
Almost all clips from established (if not credible in cases) news outlets.
YouTube deleted them all as propaganda, when I appealed I got a response along the lines “this talk show said they weren’t going to invade, but they did so this is misinformation and propaganda”. I explained the whole point was to document the lies. No response
They deleted 3 of 10 half hour videos immediately, and I switched them to private so at least I had access to them- but over the last 3 years I’ll get a notice every few months they’ve deleted another.
Damn, don’t let President F.elon Musk hear about it. He’ll burn them
Amazing. What a valuable asset.
K-Mart had a blue light special on VHS tapes and she snagged ‘em all!
She’s like a modern-day Pliney the Elder
MVP hoarder
Now that’s a fucking Accomplishment
Legend
Digitalized by who?
I feel like she’d be against digitization if her goal was unedited objectivity.
Heroes. Thank you for sharing.
Of course she’s from Philly
That’s incredible. Genuine question: was this a compulsion to document everything, just in the form of broadcasts? Or was this just something she was dedicated to doing to preserve history?
she looks like she could watch two TVs at once
[Jacob Geller has a great video essay about media preservation that covers this](https://youtu.be/ukJ_UA-JS5o?si=vaV9tLFmUuUIEyyD)
A lot of history will only be preserved by people like this.
It’s been 13 years and I still haven’t seen any of the tapes she recorded.
this is honestly one of the coolest things I’ve heard in a long time. Not only is it incredibly valuable, the commitment is amazing. She literally made a time capsule
Also made a documentary: [https://recorderfilm.com/](https://recorderfilm.com/)
I found it on Hoopla
I saw the interesting documentary about her.
Because of this woman I can watch all the old SNL’s. Thank you so much Marion.
I’d love to see it but I’m scared how much it’s all changed….
In France we have the INA which stores everything that was broadcasted.
I suppose there isn’t such an institute in the US,
Making her work useful ?
Alright time to start recording the internet archive.
I somehow doubt it is the most complete