How to Make Love to Your Television Set (1983)

ALL 01/01/1983 (en) 30 Min
  • Release
    01/01/1983
  • Production
  • Rotten tomato
    0%
  • Original title
    How to Make Love to Your Television Set
  • Original language
    en
  • Production Cost
  • 0.00
    -

Overview

Perhaps no artist and fellow media theorist worked so fastidiously in the vein of McLuhan as Douglas Davis, albeit directly contrary to what he described as McLuhan’s “apocalyptic” message when he proclaimed, “The medium is not the message. You and I, in all our obstinate, unpredictable glory and complexity, are the message. The ultimate power lies on this, the other side of the TV screen, in the eye and mind of the viewer who can increasingly become the actor.” This performative broadcast – which also functions somewhat as a mini-retrospective of other classic Davis pieces – features Davis’s self-described “investigation into a kind of denial of the physical reality of the medium…[putting] the control over the medium…back into the hands of the human imagination.” Likewise, it directly contradicts VIDEODROME’s association of television and sexuality with pain and control. Whether it does so effectively is up to the viewer…

  1. Douglas Davis

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Editor

  4. Producer



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Casts : 1 , Crews : 1

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How to Make Love to Your Television Set (1983) 30 Min

ALL 01/01/1983 (en)
  • Release 01/01/1983
  • Production
  • Original title How to Make Love to Your Television Set
  • en
  • Revenue0.00

Overview

Perhaps no artist and fellow media theorist worked so fastidiously in the vein of McLuhan as Douglas Davis, albeit directly contrary to what he described as McLuhan’s “apocalyptic” message when he proclaimed, “The medium is not the message. You and I, in all our obstinate, unpredictable glory and complexity, are the message. The ultimate power lies on this, the other side of the TV screen, in the eye and mind of the viewer who can increasingly become the actor.” This performative broadcast – which also functions somewhat as a mini-retrospective of other classic Davis pieces – features Davis’s self-described “investigation into a kind of denial of the physical reality of the medium…[putting] the control over the medium…back into the hands of the human imagination.” Likewise, it directly contradicts VIDEODROME’s association of television and sexuality with pain and control. Whether it does so effectively is up to the viewer…

  1. Douglas Davis

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Editor

  4. Producer