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                    <text>Ph_ IE rn. : _1~

-...i:

9_

d.

· J

To: lesbian , Bi-sexual and Queer Women of NYC
From: DYKE TV
Date: July&amp;, 1995

K TV wants you to be a part of our THIRD SEASON! He e is
your chanc• .to get involved with DYKE TV! Noexp~rlenced
necassaey, just the love of Women ind televi,Si~n is r 8quir8d t e
'

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Please come to ~e DYJETV Producer's '91eeting to present JO&amp;II' ideas for the
upcoming season. Join other ,esbian ~roduceri as they discuss what they
want on DYKETV. Find ~u~ how you can become involved!
DYKETV encourages atl dykes
pick up a videooaenara
and Al~'
. ,, . . . . .
.

to

,.. •

'•

\

WHERE: The ;O~j &amp;lesbian 'Community Center
208 ~~ 13th.:St;(at 7th Ave.)
WHEN: 'Thursday, July 13, 1995
@,7:00phl
WHY: It's fun! You can meet lotsa cute girls! A chance to be on t.v .! A way to
change the world! We cover dykes like no one else can!

Call Joanne at 212.343.9335 for more information.

IH

"f

uOX 'i r;' I' •..,"' C [ s l ', rA r, 0 N. N 'r ·' -'" l OO 1
PHONr ll l./s 4 j q 3 35 rAX 21 2/ ] 4 "! YsJ7

TV, f&gt;. 0.

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                  <text>&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: 400;"&gt;Dyke TV was a groundbreaking public access program founded in 1993 by Mary Patierno, Ana Marie Simo and Linda Chapman. An offshoot of the Lesbian Avengers, the mission of Dyke TV was to incite, provoke, and organize to create tangible change. The program sought to increase lesbian visibility and change people's attitudes towards lesbians, gay rights and women's rights. Dyke TV comprehensively documented a critical time in gay and lesbian history and shared stories important to lesbian communities that were ignored by other media outlets. Dyke TV documented many LGBTQ political actions of the early 1990s including the activities of ACT UP and the Lesbian Avengers. The Dyke TV collection at the Lesbian Herstory Archives consists largely of unedited footage that documents marches and demonstrations in New York City. Other tapes include incomplete episodes and compilations of show segments.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: 400;"&gt;The program first aired in June 1993 on the Manhattan Neighborhood Network public access channel. It started off as a weekly 30-minute program created by a core of producers with help from members of the community. Following a magazine format, each program consisted of various segments such as I Was a Lesbian Child, the Arts, From the Archives, News, and Eyewitness. Areas of interest included lesbian history, daily life, activism, and international LGBTQ issues. The producers aimed to create a well-rounded program that could highlight lesbian life from as many angles as possible. According to one of the program’s co-founders and executive producer, Mary Patierno: “if anybody wanted to do a story we let them do it. We were there to let people voice whatever they wanted to, whatever issues or topics that were of interest to them.” At its peak, Dyke TV was distributed to 78 public access channels throughout the United States.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
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                    <text>SPRING 1998

ate
•

SCREENING
DTV proudly presents a screening of the award-winning viJeo documentary. The Disappearance
of TiSoeur: Haiti after Duvalier by Board Member Harriel Hirshorn on Tuesday. April 28., al
8:00 pm al Millennium. 66 E. 4th St. in Manhattan. Also being shown: a work in progress by
Kara Lynch, Black Russians. A reception follows with the filmmakers. Call the office for info.

•

S'l'H

ANNIVERSARY PARTY!
FIVE YEARS OF BRTNGl NG LESBIA NS INTO YOUR LIVINGROOM! Join us Wednesday.
June 10th for Barbara Starrett's 50+ birthday party/Dyke TV's 5th Anniversary! Call the offi&lt;:t'
for info or to become a host. It'll be a blast!

•

HOUSEPARTIES!
Watch for a bonanza of houseparlies this Spring &amp; Summer! If you want Lo throw your own benefit for OTV jus t call the office!

DIGITAL

MEDI A

WORKSHOPS

We are offering Digital Media Workshops starting in May. See the enclosed brochure for detail:-.
and caJI the office for more info! Costs are competiti ve and courses include hands-on instruction. We just receivP.d a grant from the North Star Fund th at will help provide some scholarships. particularly for members of progressive lesbian/gay organizations.

VIDEO

WORKSHOPS

The next cyc le of Video Workshops begins in early May. Dyke TV has trai ned hundreds of students in all phas&lt;'S of video production. Many of these students have gone on Lo make their own
independent videos and have produced segments fo r our nationally broadcasted s how.

NEW

CO-DIRECTOR

In January Dyke TV hired Lucretia Knapp as our new Education and Programming Director.
Lu(~retia i:i a multimed ia artist and instructor who moved to New York in August. She manageg
programming. workshops and the Artists-in-Residence program. If you're interested in pro&lt;lu&lt;·ing for the show the next meeting is Tuesd ay, ApriJ 30, 6 :30pm.

GROWING

BOARD

OF

DIRECTORS

Our most recent additions are Ma&gt;.ine Blake. Teresa Cooper. Kori Galloway, Mari Keiko
Gonzalez, and Paula Pressley. At 14 members. our Board is the larges t it's ever been.

•
,.....

8.....

�NEW YORK
CITY
AIRTIMES

Bronx
Brooklvn
Manhattan
Queens

Channel 70
Channel 34.67
Channel 34
Channel 57

v; e d &amp; Thur:, 10pm
~ -ed. 11:30pm &amp; Thur:-. 3:30pm
Thurs 9:30pm 5/7, 5/21. 6/4, 6/18. 7/2, 7/16
Thur:; 10pm-12am with Free Speech*

•fwt' :-pet"dl T\" ,... J !Jlod, uf pmi:n·"l\t' prnpamn11n!! am·d t11l lJl1lt' Jt'lC:" !cit&gt;, ,,um hair-.

11,

!apt-, in hrn-hnur hlot'k,.

Cill ,uur l11t·Jl I hanr1d ht find uul "lwn D~ kt T\' .ur, in lhJI l,l11t·I...

K e air naliom, ide-- call the offiC'e for airtime~ in ) our area!

••••• • •• •• •••••••••••• •••

sU\1

LEVELS OF SUPPORT AND
THE COOL STUFF YOU CET

Dyke TV ne" sletter

Dyke TV ne\, sletter and hat

Dyke TV newsletter a nd Best of Dyke TV tape
Dyke TV newsletter, hat and Best of Dyke TV tape, plus
a listing in the show credits as a sponsor
\\'p ( .m·1

/!"on,, 1llwu1 \t)U. It\ a, ,1111plt· .,... 1h.11. Plt'a~t' mah• ,uur L,c-.. J.-,l,11111 l hc:•·I..
p.1,• dJ
·',It• ltl OT\ Prtit IUt'IIUfl, ·r1 I.tilt.I
,

~'V'V"J!!"

D)ke TY
p: 212-:34~-9315
P.O. Bo'\ 55
f: 212-3..i.3-9:337
Prince St. ~lotion ~ e: d)kt-&gt;l\@echon~c-.C'Om
~t'" York.. N\ 10012
w: hLtp:/hrnw.d~ket,.org

'1tll ftJr

w

\ 011 I

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&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: 400;"&gt;The program first aired in June 1993 on the Manhattan Neighborhood Network public access channel. It started off as a weekly 30-minute program created by a core of producers with help from members of the community. Following a magazine format, each program consisted of various segments such as I Was a Lesbian Child, the Arts, From the Archives, News, and Eyewitness. Areas of interest included lesbian history, daily life, activism, and international LGBTQ issues. The producers aimed to create a well-rounded program that could highlight lesbian life from as many angles as possible. According to one of the program’s co-founders and executive producer, Mary Patierno: “if anybody wanted to do a story we let them do it. We were there to let people voice whatever they wanted to, whatever issues or topics that were of interest to them.” At its peak, Dyke TV was distributed to 78 public access channels throughout the United States.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
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                    <text>Contact: Phyllis Lutsky

212-343-9335
March 25, 1994
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

DYKE TV EXPANDS OPERATIONS TO 18 CITIES
WlLL REACH OVER 6.S MILLION HOUSEHOLDS
New Yorl. March 25. 1994 - DYKE TV announced today that it will begin airing soon in
San Franci co and seven other cities. This m~s that the trailblazing weekly half-hour cable
tele,·ision program will reach over 6.5 million households in 18 cities - making it the second
most widely distributed gay or lesbian television program in the country.
The announcement was made by Executive Producers Mary Patierno and Linda Chapman at a
press conference in DYKE TV's new downtown Manhattan studio. ·we have experienced
phenomenal growth in only 9-1 /2 months since we started airing in June 1993," said
Patierno, · and we' re getting better and better at what we do.•
Associate Producer Julie Clo.r~ who heads distribution, sai'1 that DYKE 1V will air on San
Francisco's cable channel 53 every Friday at 6 P.M., starting April 1st. It will kick off
within weeks in Ne"' Orleans, Seattle, Chicago, Yellow Springs (Ohio), San Antonio, 2!ld
1 - &amp;-

..n ..
...-..o1"'"¥

(LoWSI
' ·ana) .

Clark said the program is currently cablecast every week in Atlanta, Austin, Cambridge,
Dallas, Denver, Madison (Wisconsin), New York City, Northampton(~.), Philadelphia
and Washington, DC. Twice a month it is carried nationally by "The 90's at Nite" on seven
cable systems.

Executive Producers Chapman and Patierno also unveiled DYKE TV's spring programming.
·it's fresher, funnier, harder hitting, more national in scope,• said Chapman. •viewer
f~ack tells~ that DYKE TV is the smart television that they've been dreaming about,•
qwp~ ~ t e Producer Harriet Hirsbom. Each program mixes news, arts, sports,
gossip, political commentary, health coverage, music videos and more.
U~ming shows~~ include investigative reports on Mississippi's embattled Camp Sister
S~mt and on the killing of a Nebraska lesbian who passed as a man, an exclusive interview
with author Dorothy Allison, portraits of the girls in the Gay Games and up to the minute
c~verage of ~vents leading to the International Dyke March and the Stonewall 25 Celebration
this summer m New York City.

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&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: 400;"&gt;The program first aired in June 1993 on the Manhattan Neighborhood Network public access channel. It started off as a weekly 30-minute program created by a core of producers with help from members of the community. Following a magazine format, each program consisted of various segments such as I Was a Lesbian Child, the Arts, From the Archives, News, and Eyewitness. Areas of interest included lesbian history, daily life, activism, and international LGBTQ issues. The producers aimed to create a well-rounded program that could highlight lesbian life from as many angles as possible. According to one of the program’s co-founders and executive producer, Mary Patierno: “if anybody wanted to do a story we let them do it. We were there to let people voice whatever they wanted to, whatever issues or topics that were of interest to them.” At its peak, Dyke TV was distributed to 78 public access channels throughout the United States.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: 400;"&gt;Additionally, Dyke TV had a mission to provide video production training and conducted regular workshops to enable women to tell their stories through their own means. This community oriented attitude fomented widespread contributions about lesbian issues across the United States and abroad.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</text>
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                    <text>NU~

V:

58 8 B 'Wo y
su ite 504
N e w Yor k , NY
1
0
0
~
2

el : 2 1 2 - 343 - 93 3 5
x : 212 - 3 4 3 - 8337

" the lesbian hut in the global village."
•·•

--Village Voice

05

DYKE TV

Because If We Don't Put Ourselves On The Air
Nobody Else Will
News and Features You Won't See Anywhere Else!
20,000 dykes march through the streets ofWashington...Ocean Springs, Mississippi holds
it first ever gay pride march... Dykes from across the country converge on Tampa when the home
of a lesbian with AIDS is firebombed ... Lesbian rugby players take you up-close and behind-thescen.as ... Lexa's Lesbian Leve Si~ reYeal th2 fa:ue passion cf cr_istals.

These are just a few of the segments that have aired on DYKE TY. Upcoming shows will feature
an interview with writer Dorothy Allison, reports from The Gay Games and Stonewall 25,
n ational anti-gay ballot measures, plus Notes from the Lesbian Herstory Archives, late-breaking
news, the hottest gossip and much more.

This is TV That's Way Overdue...

DYKE TV is the only all-lesbian show of its kind in the history of television. Think about that.
It's 1994. Television is over 50 years old. We've endured decades of TV invisibility, stereotypes,
and distorted news coverage. Our realities, our expressions, our images have been systematically shut out. Because TV has become such a powerful medium, our TV invisibility contributes to
our invisibility in society.

This can change, but only if we work together to make it change.
DYKE TV is already making it change, working as activists and setting up a network that puts
us on the air--across the nation. Dyke cameras are everywhere! Correspondents are in place in

D.enver, New Orleans, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, London and Moscow. And this is just the begin·
rung-more correspondents are anticipated and many areas are working to get DYKE TV on thei
local cable.
(mon
Denver PBS, Manh~n, Brooklyn, Can'ibrldge, Northampton, Auatln, Dalla, Atlanta, W•hlngton, DC. , Fay.nevHle, AR
nd
a
San Francisco AND COMING SOON TO New Orleana, Yellow Springe. OH. Chicago, Seattle and• tv near you/

�-- page 2--

Grassroots Power and Lesbian 1·a lent Galore!
DYKE TV exists because of volunteers, because scores of lesbians have given enormously of their time and talent.
· DYKE TV is sharpening the edge, expanding the form of TV
programming, committed to reinv en ting television for the
lesbian nation.
Subversive, informative, and entertaining, DYKE TV is a
IIPQ~ ~ - - fluid, exciting process, tapping into r esources and building

the foundation for a responsive and responsible forum for
the entire community. How about some specials, some spinoffs? Hey, how about a DYKE TV Network? The possibilities are endless, but...

WITHOUT YOUR HELP, DYKE TV
WILL BE OFF TIIE AIR SOON!
Fi.,1,r.rl.s are ri.1.n.n.i~g 011.t!
iliiiiioii_ _ _ _ ___.

miiiini~-:..-:..-~-"1-1!1____.

Not surprisingly, DYKE TV has not been the recipient of
large, prestigious grants. If not for the power of the community, DYKE TV would not be on the air in the first place,
and it won't stay on much longer without your help. We can
do it the way we've done so many other things-by a lot of
dykes giving what they can, whether it's a little or a lot.
The medium of television is exploding - information highways, interactive TY, 560 channels of non-stop images. Our
images won't be among them, if we don't put them there. If
we're going to have a ''hut in the global village," we'll have
to build it ourselves, maintain it ourselves, and expand it
ourselves.

Now's the time-the possibilities are too exciting
to let slip away.
Help make it ht1ppen. Give what you can.
Support DYKE TV any way you can.
Please make checks payable to

DYKE TV/ SANG FROID at 588 B'way, Ste. 504 NY NY 10012
Tel:212-343-9335;Fax:212-343-9337

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                    <text>l)YKE TV
P.O. Uo.1 88--128 East Broadway--NYC 10002-9998
(2 12) 343-9335,9336 FAX: (2 12) 343-9337
1./10/13

bVKE TVW~NTS Voul

DYKE TV, the trailblazing weekly public access cable
telev,~ion program, wants YOU to Join Its production team
If you a) are creative, b) know how to get things done;
and c) are ready to incite, subvert, organize and provoke
wtth the power of dyke vision and anger. You will be expected
to produce brilliant work for no salary. In exchange, you will
make history and flourish. Positions include:

1. FUND-RAISER You must be a born networker with
contacts in the lesbian/gay community and, at leas1, some
fund-raising experience. You will create a short and long
tenn fund-raising s1rategy and execute it. This is a
phone &amp; schmooze Job, guaranteed to get you Invites to
great parties and tum your social life into a delightful
whirlwind Fee on a commission basis.
2 P R./AUDIENCE DEVELOPMENT: You mus1 be able to write
snappy copy, talk to the press and Imagine and execute
all kinds or ingenious schemes to make every lesbian
citizen watch DYKE TV as If her life depended on it.
You'll be deluged by party invites. That wtll be your
reward.
3. CALENDAR PRODUCER: You will create a 80-90 second
weekly segment-the absolutely best-ever dyke calendar of
events in history. You must know everything or want to
and have an eclectic heart, equally at home in the Cllt
Club and in the Harlem Ballet. Video experience
desirable. If not, have a strong visual sense. Reward:
free tiekets to everything.

4. · 1WAS A LESBIAN CHILO• PRODUCER: You will produce,
every other week, a 90-second segment using old home
movies, videos or photographs, which you will have to
find yourself In lesbian attics, closets and basements
all over the city, the nation and the wortct. Video
experience preferred. Your reward will bl boCh cnatlve
and senUmental.

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&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-weight: 400;"&gt;The program first aired in June 1993 on the Manhattan Neighborhood Network public access channel. It started off as a weekly 30-minute program created by a core of producers with help from members of the community. Following a magazine format, each program consisted of various segments such as I Was a Lesbian Child, the Arts, From the Archives, News, and Eyewitness. Areas of interest included lesbian history, daily life, activism, and international LGBTQ issues. The producers aimed to create a well-rounded program that could highlight lesbian life from as many angles as possible. According to one of the program’s co-founders and executive producer, Mary Patierno: “if anybody wanted to do a story we let them do it. We were there to let people voice whatever they wanted to, whatever issues or topics that were of interest to them.” At its peak, Dyke TV was distributed to 78 public access channels throughout the United States.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
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                    <text>Digital Vld

,

I

'

Macromed1·a o·irector/ Instructor: Jane Pirone

Director was 1nltlally developed for matmg
.
Interactive com•

NEW DIGITAL MEDIA
AT Dvke TV
Internet Courses
Intro to the Internet/In structor: Tina LaPorta
This class will focus In on specif,c women's web projects,
media organizations and how these groups converge A
discussion of email hsts as a communication tool and other
experimental programs, such as video and audio streaming
technologies, will be covered The basics of how to make a
connection onto the internet will be covered m class
6 to 10 peoplt
Ftt: mtmbtrs: $150.00
non· mt mbtrs: $170.00
Wednesday May 13
Wednesday May 20

7pm • 9. 3opm
1pm - 93opm

O.Slgning &amp; Web Page/ Instructor: Audrey Kuenstler
This course 1s an Introduction to the world of web design,
where you'll learn basic HTML, web graphics and other tips
for creating dynamic web pages. There will be an intensive one day workshop. This course requires basic famlhar1ty with the World Wide Web and how to get there, but no
prior knowledge of Web design ,s required. Prior knowl·
edge of Adobe Photoshop 1s helpful.
4 to 6 people
Fff: memlNn:
$140,00
non· mtmlNn:
S16o.oo

Saturday

lune 6

d ·

1nstructo,· eoME lting .on the Media·100/
ary Pa herno
·

puter games but today Director 1s used m the Industry for
creating animation and interactive CD-ROM programs. This
class Is a case study of the computer authoring program
Macromedia Director. You will learn the basic elements of
the program, I e stage, cast and score and discuss animation
techniques and the interactive computer language lingo.
You will view CD·ROM's that have been created with
Director, discuss design elements and learn how certain
effects were created
4 to 6 ptoplt
Ftt: members: Sz75.oo
non-membtrs: h95.oo
Wednesday June ,7
6:30-9:oopm
Friday
June19
6:30-9·oopm
Sunday
lune 21
1oam·5:oopm

Intro to A~er Effects/ Instructor: Lynn Shelton
This class will introduce you to the wonders of a powerful
software that 1s used in the industry for creating special
effects and 2-0 animation for film, video and telev,slon
commercials. You w,11 learn to composite multiple layers,
animate an unlimited number of elements and apply special
effects. After Effects provides the tools you need to affordably create dynamic designs for CD ROM or video. The f,rst
two class meetings will be demonstration and lecture and
tht second two hands·on experience

1pm • 9:30pm
7pm • 9:30pm
10am • 5:00pm
1oam • 5:00pm

10am - 5:00pm

centact: Lucntla Knapp, Director of Ed

Learn the Joy5 0f
co b
non-linear computer editing through a
m 1nat1on of d emonstratlon, instruction and hands-on
e)(ereIses Th'
· ,s course covers each step of the editing
process· digit
ba
.
In
mng, sic edit techniques, graphics key5
g, peclal effects, outputting and media file management.
Prrrwqu/slt1: computer literacy and a basic knowledge
1traditional video editing
4 to 6 ptoplt
Ftt: membtrs: $335.00
non·mtmbtrs: $360.00

0

Wednesday
lhursday
Friday
Saturday

May 13
May 14
May 15
May 16

7pm - 9:30pm
7pm • 9·3opm
7pm • 9:30pm
10am - 5.00pm

· Graphic s Courses
Adobe Photoshop Overview/Instructor: o,ane
Bonder
This course will give you a solid foundation m creating,
rrtouchmg and compositing d,g,tal images for prmt. You
will learn how to use the program's tools and advanced
features like channels, masking and layers. In addition,
you will learn how to create titles (In Illustrator) for video.
Come to class with: a proJect ,n mind, i.e. a poster or
postcard to advertise your latest video, two images to
scan and an extra 10 dollars to cover the cost of a service
buftau (Klnko's) for input or output of your d191tal creations. This course will meet three limes, the flrst two wlll
l,t dlfflolstratlons and lectures and the third wlll be broup Into Individual blocks for hands-on experience.
,...
flt : members: Sz15.oo
non·mtmbtn : $325.00
7pm • 9:30pm
7pm • 9:30pm
10am - 5:00pm

�Lynn Shelton

Leam basic camera, lighting, sound, and video editing
produc11on, counter media boredom; create music videos
or experimental narratives; and see your finished pro·
gram a11 on TV Mttt future guemllas, documentar1ans,
animators, storytellers, and st_arsl
Tht video classes are available Tuesday evening or
Sunday aftemoon. Your fin Ished video pro1ects will be
screened for the public at Manhattan Neighborhood
Network (Manhattan's pubhc access television station).
The course fee Is h oo.oo or less (shding scale). Partial
scholarships are also available through the generosity of
the Manhanan Neighborhood Network.
There ,s also a FREE studio workshop being offered the
first three Mondays In May at Manhattan Neighborhood
Network. Students will learn how to technical dtrect, use
a character generator, operate an audio board and set
studio lights. If you are interested in the video or studio
workshops or have any other questions call'

video classes meet:
Tuesdays (7pm· 9·30)
May 5,12,19,26
June 2,9
Sundays (1pm· 3 30)
May 3,10,17,24,31
lune 7
studio classet meet:
Mondays (6:30·9:3opm)
May 4,11,18

The studio class will make a televls1on p,ogram on a
Monday evening 1n 1une (TBA).

~J&lt;FNEWll1111
W
MEIII

w

11111111

1s a freelance photographer and graphic designer with a
Masters degree from Rutgers University. She teaches com·
puter graphics at Kean College in New Jersey as well as the
video workshops at DykeTV.

Audrey Kuenstler
has a Master's Degree in Cultural Theory from Carnegie
Mellon University and 1s currently finishing a Master's
degree in Interactive Telecommunications at NYU. She
teaches both media theory and multimedia production at
The New School.

received an MFA in Photography and Rel d
the School of Visual Aris and is an I d ated Media from
..
d
" epen ent video
ma ..er an non·hnear video editor H I
Sesame Street USI C
er c 1ents include

,
ommunications Croup Wh h
Productions and Reel Ar11sts, among other~ S~~e
teaches multi-media at the The School of V;sual ~rls and
Bard College.

a~:ie

Video In s tructor s
Mari Keiko Conzal11
Is a commercial editor and filmmaker. Her work Is d1stnb·
uted through Framehne and Naata. She has worked on
pro1ects for Sony, Sesame Street, Sheryl Crow, Sony Music
and Pepsi Cola.

Tina LaPorta
,s currently an art,st·in·res,dence w1tn Ars Electronica
Future Lab on the World Wide Web. Her work is also included in the d1gltal studies exhibition on the Alt·X Web site.
Last year she produced a telev1S1on sertes on Manhattan
Cable Network and her videos have been screened at The
Kitchen, P.S 122, and Art in General. She holds an MfA from
the School of Visual Arts in Computer Art

Lucretia Knapp
combines video, film, photography and computemed
Imagery In her single channel and multl·med1a Installation
work. She has taught film theory, photography and video
art at Ohio State un,vemty and Macromed,a Director at the
University of Michigan. She Is the D11ector of Education and
Programming at Dyke TV

Mary Patierno
is an independent video and f1lmmaker and co-founded
DYKETV in 1993. She 1s a partner of Damas D1g1tal. a non·
linear video production fac,hty ,n Manhattan and teaches
video at the MFA Photography Department at the School of
Visual Arts.

.... Membership 1n1or•1t1on1

lane Pifone
Is the founder of Happy Mana Media, LLC, a small, cutting
edge design flTm located in New York City. Clients include
Memo11al Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Modem Medta,
and Nickelodeon. Happy Mazza Media also produces the
popular web site Drummerg11I. Jane received a BfA from
the university of Michigan, and has done extensive post·
graduate study in everything from Optical Enginnring to
Film Music. She 1s currently on the faculty of Pratt Institute,
!he New School, and the College of Aeronautics, whtfe she
eaches multlmed1a technology and desl9n.

Members receive a discount on the
Digital Media Workshops
$25 basic mmtbershl,rreceive Dyke TV newsletter, notice

of upcoming events, discounts on workshop fees
$5o priority mcm.benhl,rall of above plus special inv1t•·
t1ons to events

$ioo-all of above plus Dyke TV hat
bsc,-all of above plus 8est of Dyke TV tape
Ssoo-all of above plus a listing in the show t1ed1ts as•
sponsor
For More Information Contact:

Lucretia Knapp,
Director of lduca1lon and Programml119
(111) ,~, 9315
Some partial SCholanhipa for 1hl Olgltal Media clams are
available lhlMs to h Norta Star fund.

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                    <text>�roDYKE TV AT
Ann Northropts

NEW DIGS

Ann Northrop, Vivian Shapiro, Irene Sullivan and Joy Tomchin

Invite you to join them at a cocktail party
for DYKE TV.

Wednesday. May 25. 1994
6:30 - 9:00 pm
465 West 23rd Street
Apartment 17B
New York City
Please RSVP with the enclosed card
DYKE TV's goal is to create a blueprint for lesbiiln progumming,
broadcast throughout the country to enhance lesbian visiblity and empoweTment.

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Ml ET RODUCERS DIRECTORS &amp;
dyke ctra a

9-ueer

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Nl SPONSORS 4

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KATHERINE ACEY, BETH GILSON,

ANN NORTHROP, MILO PRINTING, IRENE SULLIVAN

PERFORMANCES BY :

LYN N lAVNER
THE JAMI DAUBER / VIRGIN IA MAYHEW QUINTET

5PtCIAL THANKS TO THE HOST COMMITIEE* !

CHAIR

IRENE SULLIVAN

MINDY BARANSKY. JANET BAUS, CAROLINE CLONE ,
LAURA COTTINGHAM. MARY DORMAN. NANCY GALLAGHER , SHERI HOLDERMAN ,

MAITE: JUNCO , PHYLLIS LUTSKY, KAREN MOULDING, SUSAN MUSKA,
DOROTHY SANDER , VIVIAN SHAPIRO, JOCELYN TAYLOR . JOYCE WARSHOW,
SHELLY WEISS, LISA WINTERS

• LISTS IN FORMATION

JOY T OMCH I N

&amp;

BABY EVAN INV I TE YOU TO THEIR H O M E

FO R A CELEBRATION

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TV DOES 100 !

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