1980s
documentary on contraceptives - birth control symposium - Betty Friedan speaks - author of The Feminine Mystique - founder of NOW (National Organization for Women) - talks about modern women's movement - progress in last 20 years -biological clock - feminism - women's rights - women's liberation - women's lib
Various Subjects
WOMEN'S LIBERATION MOVEMENT, FAT ELVIS PRESS CONFERENCE, BICENTENNIAL, US OLYMPIC HOCKEY TEAM WIN, FALL OF THE BERLIN WALL, NEIL ARMSTRONG MOONWALK, 1960S STYLE DANCING, THE BEATLES, PRINCESS DIANA AND PRINCE CHARLES MARRY, AEROBICS CRAZE, COMPUTER CRAZE, GULF WAR TICKER TAPE PARADE, CLINTON INAUGURATION, BUSH IN JAPAN, WOODSTOCK 1994, LAMBADA
Scenes of women in various roles and fashion during the late sixties
A stylist grooms a woman, wearing fashionable go-go boots and polka-dotted micro mini dress. An British women's rights and feminist organization, marching on the street holding signs and placards with messages like "Equal Pay NOW!" and "Free Contraception" during the first women's liberation march. The crowned Miss World 1966, Reita Faria, smiles. Women wrestlers. A female wrestler throws her opponent, a black woman, on the wrestling ring floor. A mass wedding inside a stadium in Japan. Miss World 1966, Reita Faria, smiles with Miss World 1966 runner-up contestants (Miss Brazil- Marlucci Rocha, Miss Greece- Efi Fontini Plumbi, Miss Yugoslavia- Nikica Marinovic, Miss Italy-Gigliola Carbonara). Two policewomen, patrolling the street together, salute at the camera. Opening sequence of "Echo Newsreel" featuring a scene of various topics, such as the Big Ben Tower. Location: London England United Kingdom. Date: 1969.
FEMALE VOTERS TALK FIRST YR OF TRUMP'S PRESIDENCY
--SUPERS--\nTuesday\nNew York\n\n:13 - :35\nTangela Wagner-Edmond\nVoted for Trump, regrets vote\n\n:36 - :53\nAsha Rampertaap\nVoted for Trump\n\n:54 - 1:05\nCarol Evans\nLiberal Resistance Movement Activist\n\n1:16 - 1:20\nAlice Butler Short\nVoted for Trump\n\n1:42 - 1:52\nDaphne Goggins\nVoted for Trump\n\n2:00 - 2:17\nAlice Butler Short\nVoted for Trump\n\n2:26 - 2:50\nTangela Wagner-Edmond\nVoted for Trump, regrets vote\n\n3:14 - 3:28\nCarol Evans\nLiberal Resistance Movement Activist\n\n3:29 - 3:41\nKim Drew Wright\nLiberal Resistance Movement Activist\n\n3:42 - 4:00\nCarol Evans\nLiberal Resistance Movement Activist\n\n4:03 - 4:28\nKim Drew Wright\nLiberal Resistance Movement Activist\n\n4:40 - 5:09\nKim Drew Wright\nLiberal Resistance Movement Activist\n\n --LEAD IN-- \nPRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP TOOK OFFICE ONE YEAR AGO SATURDAY.\nTHE YEAR SINCE TRUMP'S INAUGURATION HAS BEEN A TIME OF HEIGHTENED AWARENESS ON WOMEN'S ISSUES.\nTHERE WAS THE GLOBAL WOMEN'S MARCH THE DAY AFTER THE INAUGURATION, THE "ME TOO" MOVEMENT, AND THE RISE OF THE SO-CALLED RESISTANCE.\nC-N-N'S ALISYN CAMEROTA SAT DOWN WITH A GROUP OF WOMEN - SOME OF WHOM VOTED FOR TRUMP - TO GET THEIR REACTION TO HIS FIRST YEAR IN OFFICE.\n --INTERVIEW--\nTRT - 5:09\nOC: "...look at Virginia."\n -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----\n\n --KEYWORD TAGS--\nPOLITICS PRESIDENT TRUMP WOMEN'S ISSUES\n\n
RAF FERRY COMMAND
Titles read: "RAF FERRY COMMAND". <br/> <br/>Somewhere on the west coast of Britain. <br/> <br/>Aerial views as we cross over the sea in a Liberator aircraft that is on its way from Montreal in Canada to a reception terminal in west Britain. Brief shots of pilots in the cockpit. <br/> <br/>In a Transatlantic Air Control Room at the terminal we see wireless operators and WAAF cypher officers receiving and decoding messages relating to the types of aircraft on their way over. A movement board keeps track of planes arriving from Canada. In the observation tower men give landing instructions to the approaching Liberator and it lands on the airfield. <br/> <br/>M/S of Chief of Ferry Command Sir Frederick Bohill arrives at the airfield after a transatlantic crossing to inspect the European end of his organisation. WAAF ground staff unload kit from the plane. Government sponsored passengers step off a plane. A Fortress arrives with war supplies. Newly trained airmen from Canada step off a plane; one man has brought a banana with him that he hands to a WAAF. <br/> <br/>In the mess airmen write their reports and have a hot drink. WAAF mechanics refuel and check the aircraft. Freight is brought into the freight store. Airmen change American and Canadian money into British currency. Instruction on using oxygen masks is given to passengers including Commander Anthony Kimmins who is going to Canada. In the Met Office ferry pilots check on the weather; they are going back to fetch more bombers. <br/> <br/>In the kitchen, flasks of hot drinks and packets of sandwiches are prepared. In the mess lounge pilots put on flying kit for an other journey. M/S of a plane outside called 'Hitler's Hearse'. Dark shots at night as an Aldis lamp flashes a signal and a Liberator takes off.
WOMEN'S LIBERATION
CR:10 FILM TRANSFER. VS WOMEN MARCH DOWN FIFTH AVE IN NEW YORK IN SUPPORT OF WOMEN'S LIBERATION. CR:85 FEMINIST GLORIA STEINEM MAKES A STATEMENT TO THE PRESS CONCERNING A PROPOSED ALLIANCE FOR WOMEN. CR:114 VS FILE FOOTAGE, WOMEN MARCH IN SUPPORT OF SUFFRAGE. CR:122 Not for license MS INTERVIEW WITH GLORIA STEINEM WHO TALKS ABOUT THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT AS A "PRO HUMAN" MOVEMENT. CR:150 SU. CR:164 NO PICTURE. CR:158 MS INTV/W GLORIA STEINEM WHO TALKS ABOUT THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT. CR:200 FILE FOOTAGE. WOMEN MARCH FOR EQUALITY. CR:268 CUTS. BYSTANDERS WATCH THE MARCH. CR:298 VS FEMINIST BETTY FRIEDAN ADDRESSES AN AUDIENCE AT THE CENTRAL PARK BAND SHELL. CR:311 FILE FOOTAGE. CU BETTY FRIEDAN SITS WITH HER HUSBAND AND EXPLAINS WHAT SHE WANTS TO ACCOMPLISH WITH THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT. CI: DEMONSTRATIONS: WOMENS LIBERATION. PERSONALITIES: STEINEM, GLORIA. PERSONALITIES: FRIEDAN, BETTY. CIVIL RIGHTS: WOMEN.
WINNIE MANDELA / CONGRESSIONAL WIVES (1990)
WINNIE MANDELA MEETS WITH CONGRESSIONAL WIVES, AND GETS A PRESENTATION FOR HER WORK
Action of 100 FEMEN against violence against women in the world - 24/11/2024
Women's Liberation movement early circa 1970s, banners, Women marching, women training to fight, Womans' liberation images
Stokely Carmichael speaking at Dialectics of Liberation
Footage of Stokely Carmichael speaking at The Congress on the Dialectics of Liberation which took place at The Roundhouse in London during the summer of 1967 against a background of rising student agitation. This two week long event was a unique gathering to demystify human violence in all its forms, the social systems from which it emanates and to explore new forms of action. This is an excerpt from the documentary Anatomy of Violence, which covers the Congress and its significance. Sitting at the dais at far left is Emmet Grogan founder of The Diggers, poet Alan Ginsberg, black power advocate Stokely Carmichael and famous psychoanalyst and writer, Ronald Laing) Carmichael addresses the congress about the cultural imposition of the west, the relationship of white liberals and hippies to blacks. He also talks about violence and protest. Audience is mostly comprised of young white men and women. TRANSCRIPT BELOW: 00:00 – Stokely talks about cultural imposition and white liberals and how they view themselves vs how black people sees them. Makes comments about violence. …cultural imposition is because west thinks it is superior and forced everyone else in countries to adopt their culture and language…and various countries around the world are fighting for recapturing of their country – a fight for cultural integrity and to shed the western ways – because the west imposed but force their culture on the third world. We as African Americans were inside one of the most imperialistic countries …were stripped most brutally of our own culture. Secondly talk about apathy…says blacks are not apathetic – just look at Newark and what happened there. But what has happened is that certain levels of the culture have resisted the cultural imposition and that form of resistance was to completely reject what the west had to say and that is what the west calls apathy …our job is to incorporate that resistance and give it a political ideology and move onwards to our liberation. 5:44 – Thirdly about the white liberal – what most white liberals do is to avoid the issue of institutionalized racism or white supremacy or imperialism so that each of them look at themselves as an individual…first thing they say is that I don’t treat you like other white people and they remind me of Pontius Pilot washing his hands while Jesus Christ was getting crucified. (applause) and I am not sure I hold Pontius Pilot guiltless…but I am still getting oppressed, and if I am being oppressed by a society in which they are a part, and I am fighting that society, then obviously I am fighting them. What is happening is that white liberals are incapable of taking a stand one way or the other and their job is to stand on the fence as long as they can because they cannot make a decision to ideologically fight the west 7:00 biggest group you have are the hippies who are unable to fight their own culture so they drop out (cut to Ginsberg) and they become a neutral factor. We see them as neutrals and not friends who are helping us in our struggle. (cut to Grogan and audience). White liberals cannot define friendship…friendship means that the people you want for friends must decide if they want you as friends and the very fact that white liberals say you are my friend without black people saying yes you are my friend just shows again the imposition of institutionalized superiority…. 8:00 to touch briefly on violence to give you a clear picture of where black people are – I want to use Vietnam as an example. It is clear to me that all the pacifists in the world are not going to stop the United States in their brutal aggression in Vietnam…only way is when the people in southeast asia come together to defeat the united states. For blacks within the united states, the only way we can aid them since they are being oppressed by the same people oppressing us, is to refuse to fight in the army – to build a black resistance movement inside the united states…if I resist to fight I get sent to jail – who is the draft board to make that decision for me – either I go to Vietnam or to jail. The only other solution is to take up a gun so that when the army, police force etc come to get me, I shoot it out with them. But I don’t believe in suffering to bring about my redemption and I have been suffering too long and still not redeemed. 10:00 Finally if my words seem harsh I would like to quote from Berthold Brecht in a poem he called Posterity – the last line he says to the world – Please do not judge us harshly but those of us who wanted to lay a foundation for kindness could not ourselves be kind”. The footage continues with questions from audience and incredible interchanges between audience and Carmichael and amongst those on the podium as well. Fascinating and unique. 35:00 Second seminar - Address to the black community
Interview with NOW Activist Jacqueline Ceballos
Excerpt from an interview with feminist activist Jacqueline Ceballos, president of the NYC chapter of the National Organization for Women (NOW). She reflects on the success of the previous years Womens Strike for Equality protest march and what the movement wants to achieve for the future of the women's liberation movement.
News Clip: Anti-ERA I
Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story.
CLINTON/AFRICA/NIGER
00:00:00:00 - master 12. [Clinton in Nigeria, includes Clinton speaking on AIDS at women&apos;s c enter &amp; Clinton speaking to Nigerian business leaders.]--- 12:44 Clinton sot 1: Clinton/Women&apos ...
Russian troops liberate Russian towns that had been previously taken over by German forces (WW2)
The flag of the Soviet Union during World War II. A Soviet officer gives the command to fire. Russian soldiers fire artillery in the battlefield. Russian troops cross rivers. Map of Russia showing movement of Russian forces in 1943 from Stalingrad westward, crossing many rivers as they approached the Carpathian Mountains. Closeup of young German soldier holding his head in his hands in despair and defeat. View of German soldiers surrendering at gunpoint to Russian soldiers, including a Soviet PPSh-41 sub machine gun with drum magazine, and emerging from bunkers. Russian tanks in a recaptured Russian city. Russian women in the streets crying for joy and celebrating their liberation victory. The Soviet women wave to passing tanks to express their gratitude. Russian Marshal Georgy Zhukov with other officials on the street greeting joyful Russian citizens. Russian Guerrilla fighters are seen greeting each other, regular Russian Army soldiers, and their families as they can return to their homes. A Russian woman soldier holding a machine gun also holds a young girl in her arms. A Russian soldier walks joyfully and smiling down the street while holding a young child. Location: Russia. Date: June 1943.
ANDREW YOUNG ON DUKAKIS CAMPAIGN (1988)
ANDREW YOUNG TALKS ABOUT THE DUKAKIS CAMPAIGN
ACL-3012 Digibeta; Beta SP
WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE AND LIBERATION - PART TWO
circa early 1970s women's liberation rally parade march protest march for women - Women's movement marches and protests
The 90s, pilot
2:33 ""Beijing Journal"" by Pat Keeton. Tiananmen Square 1989. Footage of a political uprising of students in China and a discussion of the process of revolt. 12:10 ""Iran-Contra Affair"" by Eddie Becker. Discussion of the impact of the Iran-Contra scandal on the American government and its attitude toward secrecy. Malcolm Byrne admits that ""there's been no significant legislation out of the Iran-Contra hearings... nothing to prevent similar disasters from happening again."" Peter Kornbluh warns, ""We need more documentation, more congressional scrutiny or the next decade will see deeper, darker covert operations."" 14:19 David Halberstam commentary by Tom Weinberg and Skip Blumberg. Halberstam talks about how young people today are going to compete with people from around the world for jobs that their parents were almost guaranteed. ""The new definition of national security is... 'How good is your high school graduate?' The easy affluence has gone; other nations have caught up... Americans are now competing with people their age from Osaka, Beijing, Singapore, Jakarta etc."" 16:30 ""Flying Morning Glory (on fire)"" by Skip Blumberg. At an outdoor restaurant in Phitsanulok, Thailand, a cook demonstrates how to make a stir-fried dish with morning glory leaves. ""Make sure the wok is very hot,"" he says, and then tosses the meal in the air behind him, which is caught on a plate by the server. probably. Just double check with us . 20:19 Bill Murray introduces ""Wired In."" 20:25 ""Wired In."" This segment from the early 1980s examines the generational gap present in attitudes towards computers. 23:12 Bill Murray does a monologue about technology. 23:44 1958 Edsel Commercial. The car features automatic gear shifting. ACCESS ONLY 24:40 ""Buckle Up Commercial"" by Paul Chen. PSA urging seat belt use. ACCESS ONLY 25:15 Tony Schwartz commentary. ""The most important role for the media in the future is to prevent disease, illness and accidents... it's better than medicine. If you stop 5% of people from smoking, you could prevent more cancer than medicine can cure."" 28:24 Nixon Resignation. White House pool feed of Nixon before his resignation broadcast on August 8, 1974. Nixon jokes with the photographers and reporters: ""My friend Ollie is always taking pictures. I'm afraid he'll catch me picking my nose... You wouldn't print that, now would you, Ollie?"" 28:53 Excerpt from ""Rostenkowski"" by Tom Weinberg. House Majority Leader Rep. Jim Wright (D-Texas) claims that influence is gained in government by earning a reputation as an honest person. 31:12 Chuck Olin introduces his piece on human rights abuses in Guatemala. ""When it comes to human rights around the world, the odds have always favored the abusers. They have the political power, they have the money, they have the land, and, as we saw in Beijing, they have the tanks. And yet despite those odds, there seems to be something in the world, something about the human rights movement, that's persistent, powerful, and growing. The human rights movement worldwide is made up of the thousands of stories, in countless small places, involving individuals fighting to get their rights back. Guatemala has one of the worst human rights records in the world, and the worst in this hemisphere. With 100,000 people killed and 40,000 disappeared in the last decade alone. We've been following one story, about the struggle for human rights, in the highlands of Guatemala."" 31:59 ""In Small Places"" by Chuck Olin. April, 1989. Over shots of rural farm life, a debate plays out between General Ortega, speaking for the Guatemalan government, and Amilcar Mendez, speaking on behalf of those suffering political repression. This segment focuses on the issue of men around the countryside being forced to join ""voluntary"" civil patrols under the threat of death, and the movement to stop this oppression. 38:02 Greater Yellowstone News by Phil Morton and Elizabeth Laden. Morton and Laden document the battle for survival for buffalo and newborn calves in Yellowstone National Park. 39:34 ""Root Beer Rags"" by Bill O'Neil, music by Billy Joel. Simple color animation. 43:07 Jimmy Piersall commentary. Former Major League baseball player Jimmy Piersall discusses the future of baseball. 45:19 90's Sports Quiz. Question: What's the best-known horticultural display in the U.S.? Answer: The outfield wall of Wrigley Field in Chicago, IL. Bill Veeck, in 1985, explains: ""The ivy happened because I inadvertently mentioned that the brick walls were so bare and so harsh."" 49:44 sociologist, scholar, community organizer, educator, and activist, Helen Lewis commentary by Appalshop. Lewis, a coal miner organizer, talks about what is to come in the '90s. 51:23 Paul Krassner commentary by Nancy Cain. Cain shows us garbage on Venice Beach, Krassner discusses the '90s. 53:23 ""People and the Land: Ending the Silence"" by Deep Dish TV. At farmer's rights rally in Iowa City, Iowa, a priest says, ""I'm gonna borrow me a pickup, and I'm gonna take a piece of equipment the FDIC wants and I'm gonna liberate it... I'm gonna give sanctuary to a manure-spreader."" 54:35 ""International Women's Day Festival"" by Deep Dish TV. Experimental piece about women's rights. Probably. Double check with us. 56:08 Grace Paley commentary by Skip Blumberg. ""So many people watch TV that it really has the obligation to be truthful on occasion."
08/00/70 C0012983 - COLOR ENGLAND: BRITISH WOMEN ASKED ABOUT WOMEN'S LIBERATION IN USA:
08/00/70 C0012983 - COLOR ENGLAND: BRITISH WOMEN ASKED ABOUT WOMEN'S LIBERATION IN USA: LN SPCL "BRITISH WOMEN" SHOWS: REPORTER INTERVIEWS WOMEN ON THE SUBJECT OF THE WOMEN'S LIBERATION MOVEMENT IN USA: (SHOT 8/00/70 57FT) WOMEN - LIBERATION DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN - US DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN - GREAT BRITAIN UPITN / 57 FT / 16 POS / COLOR / OPT S TRACK
1980s
documentary on contraceptives - birth control symposium - Betty Friedan speaks - author of The Feminine Mystique - founder of NOW (National Organization for Women) - talks about modern women's movement - progress in last 20 years -biological clock - feminism - women's rights - women's liberation - women's lib
WOMEN MARCH FOR EQUALITY - HD
Excellent footage showcasing the energy of the feminist movement. A group of women march through the streets of New York on Equality Day, chanting and challenging police as spectators watch. Mastered currently in DVC PRO HD 16 x 9 from film. Available in all HD formats and SD 43 formats.
E. Macron in New Caledonia, expectations in a tense climate
48864 WORLD WAR II SOVIET PARTISAN OPERATIONS BEHIND GERMAN LINES
This post-WWII Soviet propaganda film pays tribute to the role played by partisan groups in fighting the invading German Wehrmacht during the Great Patriotic War. The film includes rare footage and re-enactments depicting a variety of operations, from harassing German rear areas and supply lines, administering rough justice to persons who collaborated with the Germans (a firing squad is seen around 1:35), and working to re-assure Soviets in isolated and occupied areas that Stalin will liberate them. A Soviet newspaper is seen being published at 2:30. Field communications are seen at 2:57, and biplanes fly secret missions into German territory to support the partisans and deliver weapons at 3:20, as well as evacuate a wounded comrade. Women fighters are seen at 4:30 being decorated in the field, along with boys (one of them looks about age 10-12) who have joined the fighting forces.<p><p>The Soviet partisans were members of resistance movements that fought a guerrilla war against the Axis forces in the Soviet Union and the previously Soviet-occupied territories of interwar Poland in 1941–45. The activity emerged after the Nazi German Operation Barbarossa during World War II, and according to Great Soviet Encyclopedia it was coordinated and controlled by the Soviet government and modeled on that of the Red Army. The primary objective of the guerrilla warfare waged by the Soviet partisan units was the disruption of the Eastern Front's German rear, especially road and rail communications. There were also regular military formations called partisans, that were used to conduct long-range reconnaissance patrol missions behind Axis lines from the Soviet-held territory.<p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com