Media Burn Independent Video Archive

Media Burn Independent Video Archive Media Burn is dedicated to video’s overlooked histories and its most fiercely independent voices. In the words of “Artist-President John F.

Media Burn is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization based in Chicago. Media Burn collects, preserves, and distributes documentary and experimental media produced by artists, activists, and community groups. Our mission is to create positive social change by amplifying underheard voices, both in contemporary dialogue and the historical record. Since its founding in 2003, Media Burn has saved more than 1

0,000 videos, which are available to watch and share for free on our website. Media Burn was created by longtime independent videomaker Tom Weinberg to reflect the ideals of the “Guerrilla Television” movement of the 1970s, when portable video cameras mobilized a new generation of documentarians, artists, activists, and journalists to bypass the film and TV industries in order to tell their own stories and the stories of their community. In 1975, Weinberg was executive producer for artist collective Ant Farm’s now-legendary Media Burn performance and video. An act of hilarious absurdism, the performance consisted of a Cadillac, elaborately modified to give it a retro-futuristic look, crashing through a flaming pyramid of television monitors. Kennedy” (Ant Farm member Doug Hall), who introduced the event: “Let me say this finally about Media Burn, the world may never understand what was done here today, but the image created here shall never be forgotten.”

Media Burn – the archive – was founded in that same spirit of irreverence toward the media industry. It provides a home for the videomakers who provide an alternative to the mainstream of commercial media – fiercely independent voices, outsiders, and ordinary people. Media Burn features the extraordinary work of globally renowned artists and videomakers but also that of community members, students, and activists taking cameras into the streets to chronicle the people and the places most important to them. The videos in the collection have been watched by people around the world more than 20 million times. They have been written about in dozens of books and articles. Our footage has been featured in Oscar-nominated films and Emmy-nominated TV shows. It’s been taught in hundreds of classrooms and cited by researchers in a huge range of fields: film, TV, and art, but also sociology, architecture, urban studies, political science, medical history, technological history, ethnography, and more.

When critics and scholars refer to the “History of Television,” they typically focus on a relatively small handful of la...
02/24/2026

When critics and scholars refer to the “History of Television,” they typically focus on a relatively small handful of landmark TV shows and the writers and performers who became famous making them. But there’s another way to tell that history, focusing on the efforts of ordinary people to play a role in the media being beamed into their living rooms every day through Public Access. And that history of community participation is far more diverse and provocative than its mainstream counterpart.

In this post, Media Burn Board member Prof. Antoine Haywood reflects on the impact of Michael Zinzun and the rich, varied, and woefully under appreciated history of Black creators of Public Access Television.

Media Burn Board member Prof. Antoine Haywood reflects on the history of Black creators of Public Access Television and the vital contributions of Michael Zinzun and other Black journalists, artists,...

Be part of our team! Media Burn is hiring our first ever development staff person. Read on if you'd like to work with ou...
02/06/2026

Be part of our team! Media Burn is hiring our first ever development staff person. Read on if you'd like to work with our growing nonprofit and this is your skill set! https://loom.ly/MDof9X0

We've been thrilled to be a sponsor of the Al Larvick Conservation Fund  for the past few years by providing pro bono di...
01/27/2026

We've been thrilled to be a sponsor of the Al Larvick Conservation Fund for the past few years by providing pro bono digitization services to their grant recipients.

Join us at the Music Box Theatre on Sunday Feb 1 to screen some of their recently digitized collections, as part of a program called "In Another Light: Cinema of Memory." The program is in additionally in partnership with Chicago Film Archives and curated by Agata Zborowska.

More info and tickets: https://loom.ly/IS5DsLQ

Join us at the Music Box for a screening of home movies!

We are so excited to be the newest member of the The Black Metropolis Research Consortium (BMRC)! This group of 29 Chica...
01/08/2026

We are so excited to be the newest member of the The Black Metropolis Research Consortium (BMRC)! This group of 29 Chicago-based archives, libraries, and museums connects all who seek to document, share, understand and preserve Black experiences. Read the announcement at: https://loom.ly/2WYYySA

New year, New BMRC member! 🎉
The Black Metropolis Research Consortium is thrilled to welcome Media Burn as its newest member.

📼Media Burn is an archives of more than 10,000 videos that are free to access via its website. https://ow.ly/HUFf50XTtTE

As its collection has grown to contain significant documentation of diverse Black experiences in Chicago, joining the BMRC to bring more attention to and use of those collections seemed to be a natural progression.

Check out the full announcement on our website for a snapshot of some of the collections on Black Chicago that are held by Media Burn. https://ow.ly/aEeE50XTtTF

Image: Still image taken from video in the Community TV Network (CTVN) collection held by Media Burn

Dec 18, 7pm CT, online! In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Cook County Hospital House Staff Association (HSA) strik...
12/16/2025

Dec 18, 7pm CT, online! In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Cook County Hospital House Staff Association (HSA) strike, join Media Burn and Kartemquin Films for a virtual screening of Judy Hoffman’s documentary HSA Strike ’75, followed by a discussion with Hoffman and with doctor/activist Howard Ehrman.

In 1975, a union made up of interns and residents went on strike for 18 days – the longest hospital strike in United States history – for the staffing, equipment, tests, translators and facilities needed to provide patients with care. Cook County Hospital was the only hospital in Chicago that provided care to patients without insurance, making it the only source of health care for the city’s poor and working class residents, many of whom were African American and Latino. Judy Hoffman was there to document the protests, the fights, and the dedicated, idealistic HSA members who cared enough for their patients to put their jobs on the line.

Get your free tickets here: https://loom.ly/-i_CypU

12/05/2025

The story of Freedom Summer is a Mississippi story, but as filmmaker Judith McCray insisted, “there’s nothing aberrant or unusual about Mississippi. This is an American story.” Her documentary, "Mississippi, America," focused on the fearless lawyers who fought endless legal battles to support the movement. True change requires persistence on every front. For McCray, and people she profiled like John Lewis and William Kuntsler, this was a lifelong fight. And it continues. As voter suppression and discriminatory redistricting target minorities today, the legacy of Freedom Summer is a blueprint. Their lives serve as an inspiration for everyone committed to a just and equitable society. What does making lasting change require? Their answer: unwavering courage, day after day

More info: https://loom.ly/MDLnUp4

11/19/2025

SOLD OUT EVENT!!
November Siskel & Ebert at 50: Live Performance!
Saturday, November 22 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM | Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E. Washington St., Chicago
Pocket Guide to Hell is producing Opening Again…at a Theater Near You: 50 Years of Siskel & Ebert, a live event that explores the history of a Chicago television show that reshaped how the nation talked about movies. The event is being produced in partnership with the Chicago Film Office, Chicago History Museum, Media Burn, and Truth & Documentary. Featuring a post-show conversation moderated by WTTW’s Geoffrey Baer with Sneak Previews producer and Media Burn board member Thea Flaum, producer Michelle McKenzie-Voigt, and journalist Rick Kogan.
Event Info: https://loom.ly/v0TOhEI

HSA Strike '75 screening and discussion Nov 19, 2025 12-1:00 pm 📍 UIC College of Medicine East Tower, 808 S. Wood St., R...
11/18/2025

HSA Strike '75 screening and discussion
Nov 19, 2025 12-1:00 pm
📍 UIC College of Medicine East Tower, 808 S. Wood St., Room 585, Chicago, IL 60612

In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Cook County Hospital House Staff Union strike, Media Burn, in partnership with Cook County House Staff Union, Kartemquin Films, and the Peoples Response Network, presents a free screening of HSA Strike '75 (dir. Judy Hoffman, 20 minutes), followed by a panel discussion with Hoffman, Cook County House Staff Association, UIC Medical Residents Union, People’s Response Network, and Ujimaa Medics.

In October-November 1975, over 600 residents of Cook County Hospital held the longest doctors' strike in U.S. history over patient care demands. At this time, 60 patients were in one room without curtains, and patients regularly died due to a lack of medicine, equipment, x-rays, labs, and more.

What are the lessons of the 1975 Strike as health care workers across the U.S. are joining unions and striking over understaffing and dangerous working conditions, including here in Cook County?

Event info: https://loom.ly/IhTLmVI

Excited to announce we got an FY26 Illinois Arts Council grant! We are so grateful to the Illinois Arts Council for supp...
11/13/2025

Excited to announce we got an FY26 Illinois Arts Council grant! We are so grateful to the Illinois Arts Council for supporting arts across our state.

11/06/2025

Studs’ Place: The Lost Sitcom That Put Working-Class Life on TV.

In late 1949, Chicago debuted a one-of-a-kind sitcom, Studs’ Place. Like Kukla, Fran, and Ollie and other beloved shows of what was known as the Chicago School of Television, Studs’ Place was semi-improvised, focused on emotional realism and recognizable characters and situations. Its star, Studs Terkel, would go on to a 50 year career as a radio host, author, and oral historian – an interviewer who evolved into one of the great chroniclers of American life.

Our latest blog post by scholar and guest author Jason J. Nebergall offers an analysis of how Studs Terkel's radical, working-class ethos was translated into the emerging television medium. Read more at: https://loom.ly/JDD26kA

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