[The 90’s Election Specials raw: Braun Spiaggia Fundraiser #3]
Raw footage for The 90’s election specials. Carol Moseley Braun fundraiser in Chicago before the Democratic primaries. This tape features an interview with Braun.
Raw footage for The 90’s election specials. Carol Moseley Braun fundraiser in Chicago before the Democratic primaries. This tape features an interview with Braun.
Footage for The 90’s Election Specials. On primary election night, videomaker Andrew Jones visits a polling place, and a few election headquarters and celebrations for the South Side politicians he’s been covering.
Raw footage for The 90’s election specials. This tape features footage of the Pat Buchanan Illinois campaign and campaign adviser George Grey. In this tape, Buchanan chooses to skip the Chicago St. Patrick’s Day parade to campaign in Michigan and then fires Grey.
Footage for The 90’s election specials. Channel 2 & 7 news post-Democratic presidential debate.
Footage for The 90’s. This video contains raw footage of performer playing “I Want to Thank You,” an interview with bartender Peter Fogel, and Jesse Weinberg giving “the 90s” contact information. The raw footage of the Peter Fogel interview begins on tape 11137 and ends on tape 11147.
Raw footage for the award-winning series The 90’s. Videomaker Esti Marpet visits God’s Love We Deliver, a charity group that delivers meals to home-bound patients with AIDS and other debilitating diseases. Marpet spends most of the tape in the kitchen interviewing staff members about how the organization functions and about their connections to the cause. There is also a lengthy interview with a current client of the organization and one the co-founders, Ganga Stone, who talks about how she founded the organization.
Raw footage for the award-winning TV series The 90’s. National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) trade show in Atlanta. Shots of cameras and demonstration booths.
Raw footage for the award-winning series The 90’s. Inside the air traffic control tower at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago. The room is a constant flurry of activity, but no one stops specifically to talk to the camera or explain anything about his or her job.