The Recovery Channels

The Recovery Channels, 2005. CRT television, hidden laptop, customized remote control, and fourteen hours of browsable footage transferred from found discarded videotape.
The Recovery Channels consists of footage from the loose video tape I collected off the streets of New York for eight years, starting in 1998. I found tape hanging in ribbons from trees, wrapped around lampposts, fire escapes, and fluttering around on traffic islands. Sometimes, they’d still be in their broken cassette shell on a street or sidewalk.
After being meticulously cleaned and restored, I digitized the footage. With the help of Eyebeam Atelier, each “find’ of tape was encoded to work with a remote control so that you could browse a TV that played only The Recovery Channels (a play on The Discovery Channel). My collection totaled fourteen hours of footage viewable on 38 different channels. The diverse material included a Chinese action movie, hip hop videos, a ballet, an educational video on geriatric depression, instructions for how to use the Netscape browser, an episode of Barney, and a lot of professional as well as amateur pornography. This piece was made at a time when VHS videotape was gradually disappearing in favor of digital technologies, and now, The Recovery Channels acts as an archive of locally sourced, cast-off media.