Parry Teasdale | |
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Nationality | American |
Education | Colgate University (dropped out) |
Known for | Video Art |
Parry Teasdale is an American video artist and a founding member of the early video collective Videofreex. He was also involved with Lanesville TV, one of the first unlicensed TV stations, throughout the 1970s.
Teasdale attended the Woodstock music festival during the summer of 1969 where he met and became friends with future Videofreex co-founder David Cort. Both having brought video equipment, the pair collaborated in filming the festival, placing emphasis on the crowds rather than the musical performers in their footage. After an unsuccessful attempt to sell the Woodstock tapes to the CBS news program 60 Minutes, Teasdale moved to Manhattan to found Videofreex along with Cort and Cort's then-girlfriend Curtis Ratcliff (Boyle 1997, p. 15). CBS executive Don West quickly became interested in the newly formed group's work, particularly their portrayals of youth and 1960s counterculture. He funded the shooting of the pilot of a new program that might replace the The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, which had recently been cancelled. The network declined to pick up the finished project, titled Subject to Change, deeming it too radical for network television. Due to the high cost of rent in SoHo, several members of Videofreex including Teasdale decided to leave the city but remain part of the collective.
Having received a grant of $40,000 from the Rochester Museum and Science Center, several Videofreex moved to a large house in Lanesville, a rural village located in the southern part of Hunter, New York in the Catskill Mountains. Here, they began to produce live "narrowcasts" (Boyle 1997, p. 88) for the local community every Saturday night, and the Lanesville TV project became the first unauthorized television program. After the collective dissolved in 1978, Teasdale worked as a U.S. Federal Communications Commission consultant in its investigation of the legality of low power television.