1981 | United States | Experimental

Prime Time

  • English - 5 mins
  • Director | Laurie McDonald
  • Writer | -
  • Producer | -

STATUS: Released

This film is currently not available.   

Prime Time is a video collage of violent imagery appropriated from American commercial network television. The work features rapid-fire editing (i.e., for analog 3/4" video technology) often used by network producers to create a sense of action or tension, and violence from all genres of television programming – cartoons, news broadcasts, commercials, made-for-TV movies – is juxtaposed to create humorous effects and absurd situations. Prime Time was inspired by the AC Nielsen Company, best known for their titular Nielsen ratings, which is a system devised to measure audiences for television, radio, and newspaper in their respective markets. The Nielsen Company sent Laurie a diary in which to record her television viewing selections and a packet with two quarters ($1.74 in 2024) as an incentive to complete the diary and mail it back to the company. After about age ten, Laurie had not been much of a television watcher, so she saw this as an opportunity to familiarize herself with the current television landscape. What she saw was so much violence that it inspired Prime Time. As in her later work Surveillance, Prime Time the installation makes use of the familiar ​to explicate the unexpected, a technique she calls "visual decoy." Although the installation resembles a TV display in an electronics showroom, the viewer encounters content that is out of context and completely unanticipated.

Television Collage Experimental Violence Satire
Film Organizations
Video Data Bank
DISTRIBUTION