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Television Under the Swastika -- Broadcast Television in the Third Reich

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Orange County, CA
Michael Kloft's documentary on the history of Nazi television. Legend has it that the triumphal march of television began in the United States in the 'fifties. But in reality its origins hark back much further. As early as the 'thirties, a bitter rivalry raged for the world's first television broadcast. Nazi Germany wanted to beat the competition from Great Britain and the U.S. - at all costs. Reich Broadcast Director Hadamovsky christened the new-born "Greater German Television" in March 1935. And it was only in September 1944 that the last program flickered across the TV screens.

For a long time the belief persisted that only very few Nazi programs had survived, but SPIEGEL TV has now succeeded in tracking down a stock of television films and reports which have remained intact since the end of the Third Reich. These include extensive coverage of the 1936 National Socialist Party Convention in Nuremberg which recalls today's live broadcasts, and of a 1937 visit Benito Mussolini paid to Berlin. Interviews with high-ranking Nazis such as Albert Speer, Robert Ley and the actor Heinrich George are among the finds, along with numerous special reports (i.e. on the Reich Labor Service), a cooking show and the lottery drawing. Television anchorwomen greet their tiny audiences in specially installed television parlors in Berlin, Munich and Hamburg with "Heil Hitler."

The entertainment programs are particularly curious. Cabaret artists are featured - alongside singers extolling the virtues of the "brown columns of the SA and SS." This documentary by Michael Kloft will reveal a rare and intriguing view of the Third Reich, one far removed from the propagandistic presentations of Leni Riefenstahl & Co. and the weekly cinema newsreel, yet no less ideologically slanted. This is Nazi Germany expressed in an aesthetic medium that we ourselves have only really known since the 'fifties.

[video=youtube;A3VnBt7bo1A]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3VnBt7bo1A[/video]

[video=youtube;LymLm6NllI4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LymLm6NllI4[/video]

[video=youtube;ilRzFJyWyCA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ilRzFJyWyCA[/video]

[video=youtube;839oGoOPJnE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=839oGoOPJnE[/video]
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
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33,732
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
These programs were preserved by an interesting process -- the programs were actually filmed on conventional motion picture film, and then run thru a machine which developed the negative and ran it thru a video scanner, which reversed the polarity of the image for television transmission. The program as transmitted wasn't live -- there was a delay of several minutes, and theoretically it was possible to edit out parts that the authorities would rather you not see. A best-of-both-worlds system from the Nazi point of view, and from a preservationist's standpoint it's pretty much the only way 1930s television programming, aside from random, imperfect snippets preserved by shooting off a monitor, could survive to the present day.
 

Treetopflyer

Practically Family
Messages
674
Location
Patuxent River, MD
That was very interesting. Thank you for posting. I knew that Germany was using televisions in the 1930's, but I did not know that the technology was as advanced as it was. I had thought that the Televisions that were used were very crude and only a hand full existed and were in use.
 

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