![]() Hannah was her name, and he spends large swaths of his time watching her on video cassettes and mooning over what might have been. Like, as in, his wife died… or went missing a couple of years prior, and he hasn’t been able to move on. – Glee anyone? Man I loved Glee… please don’t tell a soul.) and he has a problem. And it does it by diving into the weird underworld of betamaxes, camcorders, walkman tape players, and answering machines. The film is set in 1999… you know, party like its 1999? And it actually does a pretty decent job of making 1999 fairly convincing. So, if you aren’t afraid – then click one of the links above, and watch the film, then join us as we head down this rabbit trail of a movie. And we watch as this guy does his best to stay this side of sane as he follows this ultra-tenuous road. And by any random evidence… I mean, literally anything. And he is desperate to find her, so desperate that he clings to pretty much any random evidence he can find that falls his way. BBS’s, hacking, phreaking, and the like… I definitely enjoyed those bits for sure.īut it tells the story of a man looking for closure – his missing wife… an empty coffin, etc. But, it did do some really cool flashback cafe things for me. Funny how that works out.Ĭoincidentally, Captain Midnight and the Max Headroom Broadcast Intrusions is the name of my new Reggae fusion band, and our first album is set to release this August.If you are still curious whether you should watch this particular film? I got nothing for you. Here are some more of those news reports covering the incident, where everyone seemed fairly confident they’d catch whoever responsible. To this day, no one knows the identity of the Max Headroom broadcast intruder, or what it was really all about. And then, someone dressed up in a French maid outfit spanks him with a flyswatter. He sings, he laughs, he complains about his hemorrhoids. ![]() He sarcastically says “Catch the wave,” Coca-Cola’s slogan for New Coke, while tossing a Pepsi can. So many random things happen in this video. But this time, there was sound, and it went on for about 90 seconds. The station’s signal was interrupted by the same video that had appeared on WGN-TV. It happened at about 11:15 pm CST on the station WTTW, during an episode of Doctor Who. In fact, the second incident is still with us, thanks to the Doctor Who fans who taped the show during the intrusion. This lasted about 25 seconds, but to be honest, it’s the second incident that most people remember. It appeared out of nowhere around 9:14 pm CST, the silent (well, buzzing) image of a man wearing a Max Headroom mask dancing around. The first was just a brief interruption of WGN-TV’s The Nine O’Clock News. He hosted The Max Headroom Show, was the spokesman for New Coke, and he even recently showed up in a PSA for that digital switchover a few years ago.Īnyway, on November 22, 1987, two broadcasts on two separate Chicago-based networks were disrupted by an imposter wearing a Max Headroom costume. He was meant to be “the world’s first computer generated TV host,” although it was all prosthetic and weird audio/video distortions. Max Headroom, if you don’t know, was a character portrayed by Matt Frewer (who you may remember from Honey, I Shrunk the Kids or, more recently, Syfy’s Eureka). But another broadcast signal intrusion, which occurred on November 22, 1987, was a bit more avant garde. Enter Max HeadroomĬaptain Midnight’s jamming of HBO was out of protest. However, his broadcast intrusion was tame (and sensible) compared to the one that occurred the next year. MacDougall was ultimately charged, fined, and put on probation for a year, but it’s cool he still runs a satellite dish dealership in Ocala, Florida, and he doesn’t regret what he did. He simply aimed it at Galaxy 1, the satellite that carried HBO, and half the country saw his digital protest for a full four and a half minutes. MacDougall, working at Central Florida Teleport at the time, took advantage of one of the facility’s satellite dishes. It was a protest against HBO’s scrambling of their signal (which forced home dish viewers to buy expensive descrambling equipment) and their monthly subscription fee of $12.95. Captain Midnight, interrupted the HBO broadcast of The Falcon and the Snowman with a color test pattern and a simple message : In the early morning of April 27, 1986, John R.
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