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Subject: Dead Media Working Note 10.4
Dead medium: The General Electric Show 'N Tell
From: barbix_AT_tiac.net (Eleanor J. Barnes)
Source: I own one.
GENERAL ELECTRIC SHOW 'N TELL (R)
Phono-Viewer and Phonograph
A hybrid medium aimed at children was the GE Show 'N Tell,
a device for simultaneously playing a phonograph record
and displaying a synchronized filmstrip. The record was
the size of a 45, but played at 33 1/3 rpm. The
filmstrip, with about 12 frames on what appeared to be
16mm film, was housed in a rigid cardboard or plastic
strip, with a tab at the top for easy removal from the
player.
The display resembled a television screen, but was
actually nothing more than a magnifier for a given frame
of the filmstrip. The phonograph was on the top of the
"TV" set. It could also be used to play 45-sized records
(at either 33 1/3 or 45rpm) without viewing a filmstrip.
Each topic consisted of a folder containing a
filmstrip and accompanying record. The "A" side of the
record was to be played synchronized with the filmstrip.
The "B" side was related audio (such as a song) on the
same topic, but was not intended to be played with the
filmstrip. A "light-saver" switch allowed the video
display (i.e. the lightbulb) to be turned off while
playing the "B" side, or any record not designed for
filmstrip synchronization.
To play a record with filmstrip, one started by
turning on the set, setting the turntable speed switch to
"N", and rotating the turntable by hand until an indicator
line appeared in a small window next to the turntable.
Otherwise synchronization could be off. One then set the
record "A" side up on the turntable, and set the tone arm
by hand at the beginning of the record.
The slot for the filmstrip was in the top of the
set, to the right of the turntable. One had to move the
tone arm to gain access to the slot, one reason why you
had to set the tone arm on the record before inserting the
filmstrip. One slid the filmstrip into the slot as far as
it would go, limited by the large tab at the top of the
filmstrip; then adjusted so that the first frame of the
film was properly centered on the screen. A lever in the
side of the set adjusted the focus.
Moving the turntable speed switch to "33" started
the record. Synchronization of the film to the audio was
then automatic.
Well over 100 filmstrip/record sets were available
for the GE Show 'N Tell. Categories included Disney
characters, Fairy Tales, Children's Classics (Heidi,
Robinson Crusoe, Treasure Island, etc.), Christmas, Fun
with Facts (Dinosaurs, Indians, Wright Bros., etc.), and
Captain Kangaroo. Some titles that surprised me were
"Hans Brinker and [sic] the Silver Skates" (properly
"Hans Brinker, or, the Silver Skates"), "Huckleberry
Finn," and, most surprising of all, "Jane Eyre." Needless
to say, longer and more complex stories such as "Jane
Eyre" suffered even greater oversimplification than
"Children's Classics" such as "Treasure Island."
Eleanor J. Barnes (barbix_AT_tiac.net)
Dead
Media | 0.01-02.0 | 02.1-04.0
| 04.1-06.0 | 06.1-08.0 |
08.1-10.0 | 10.1-12.0 |