Untitled Document
From the La Gomera Community Center, for the whole neighborhood and
under the slogan "Down With TV," Channel 5 is intercepted in order
to make a different transmission. Videos, music and parties made up part of
the experience that refreshed a sweltering Sunday.
A few Sundays ago, the 27th of November, at the corner of Quinquela
Martín and Hornos, the transmission of Barracas Community TV was broadcast
on Channel 5. On the hot asphalt nearly 20 young people stayed glued to the
old television set that organizers had placed on the street.
They watched coverage of the anti-Bush march done by the Mothers of
Plaza de Mayo video group, shorts made by children at various schools of the
barrio, independent documentaries and interviews with Barracas organizations.
At this same street corner stands the La Gomera Community Space, from which
the broadcast was transmitted for the whole barrio from 1 to 6 p.m. In addition
to the TV set outside the building, the signal could be seen in the screening
hall for La Gomera, which accommodates, between large pillows and chairs, another
20 people.
At the height of the festivities, the Barracas band, Semilla, played its complete
repertory of folksongs that blends with a resounding chorus by the minute. From,
"El Otro Yo" (The Other Me) to even a song with the music of the Rolling
Stones’ "Sympathy for the Devil," but converted into chacarera
(Argentinian folk dance) and sung by Semilla’s lead woman vocalist. Without
more, dancing got going. Everyone was celebrating -- more out of joy than in
defiance:
"We’re on the air!"
"The project of itinerant television began this year and grew from a group
of people who were collaborating with the Claypole community television project,"
Lorena Bossi explained to La Vaca. To date, the work crew that formed has made
three transmissions in Buenos Aires under the slogan Abajo la TV, or Down with
TV, although now they’re refloating the idea of changing names each time.
Lorena who also dedicates the same enthusiasm to various other media and communication
organizations like the GAC and Public Mothers, explained what they intend with
this new form of making television:
We started with the idea that occupying the signal is a possible utopia and
we began to work in the direction of being able to broadcast in a neighborhood;
to generate short productions with groups and people of the area that have
been working for some time and to produce the broadcast as an event in which
we all converge.
According to Pablo Lopez, representative of La Gomera, they never imagined
making a television broadcast. "We already had been working with information,
we made the magazine of the barrio and we also had a radio, but when we brought
this proposal to us, it appeared more interesting because it was an avenue that
we hadn’t thought of," said Pablo. The response of the neighbors
was immediate: they passed by there and they stuck their heads through the window
while the band was playing or they would come by to see the equipment with which
we were transmitting. Some, the more timid ones, looked out of the corner of
their eyes, without deciding to ask how it was that suddenly a television channel
had been installed in the barrio and why the doors were open.
"Some neighbors entered in the projection room. They congratulated all
of us," relayed Pablo, eyes shining with pride, "As a first experience,
was really nice and interesting. We take advantage of the fact that there are
people watching in order to show different things. What is broadcast are the
works of different people and groups and from the neighborhood, who obviously
don’t have another form to spread their works. This can help other people
find out about it and can bring them closer."
After hours of work, not even the mineral water that circulated in large quantities
could protect the group from the heat. However the arrival of Semilla brought
energy for all and the broadcast naturally evolved into a celebration. Forgetting
her tiredness and drowsiness, Lorena broadcast her synthesis:
The idea is that this day would be a celebration, a meeting of different
experiences that are known, that are seen, a calidescope that isn’t
subject to the management of the monopolies that today control information.
To conclude, she put into words what had been felt in the air in La Gomera
in the last hours of the broadcast:
What we do is also in this celebration is to feel ourselves taking and occupying
the signal, … and that appears to be a moment of freedom.
****
This article was originally published in LaVaca.org, and was translated
into English by Renate Lunn and Mark
Miller