INTERNEWS TIMELINE 1982-1989 |
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1982 |
July 26, 1982. "Order Internews letterhead." This datebook entry by Evelyn Messinger, who co-founded Internews Network along with Kim Spencer and David Hoffman, marks the birth of Internews in San Francisco, California. August 1982. The first Internews project, funded by the Kendall Foundation, is to compile archives of films, TV shows, and documentaries about nuclear war, for use by independent producers and networks. 1982. Kim Spencer and Evelyn Messinger produce the award-winning PBS documentary, "Thinking Twice About Nuclear War."
September 1982. Internews helps produce
the first "spacebridge," a
two-way satellite link-up between Soviet youth in Moscow and Americans
at the US Festival in San Bernadino, California, a high-tech rock concert
sponsored by Apple Computer co-founder |
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1983 |
October 1983. Internews produces the ground-breaking "Moscow Link," which joins top physicists and biologists in the Soviet Union and the US to discuss the risk of nuclear winter in a conference headed by Carl Sagan and Paul Ehrlich. This marks the first time that senior scientists of the USSR publicly acknowledge the risk of nuclear war to their own people. 1983. Kim Spencer produces "The First Fifty Years: Reflections on US-Soviet Relations," which won the DuPont-Columbia Silver Baton Award for Excellence in Broadcast Journalism. |
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1984 |
1984. In San Francisco and Moscow, the founders of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War are connected via satellite for the presentation of the Beyond War Award. Produced by Internews and broadcast on PBS and Soviet State Television, the program concludes with children’s choirs and audiences in both cities singing together. (IPPNW won the Nobel Peace Prize the following year.) | ||
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1985 |
1985. Internews produces a teleconference on global warming and the greenhouse effect linking 60 universities in the US, Mexico and Canada. 1985. In a complex technological feat, the Beyond War spacebridge facilitated
by Internews links leaders of six nations across five continents. |
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1986 |
1986. Internews helps produce the US-Soviet "Citizen’s Summit" spacebridge moderated by Phil Donahue and Vladimir Posner with audiences in Seattle and Leningrad. 1986. Internews produces "Chernobyl and Three Mile Island" for PBS, also aired on Soviet TV, in which US and Soviet scientists discuss the implications of nuclear power accidents. Altogether Internews produced or contributed to the production of more than a dozen spacebridges. |
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1987 |
1987. Evelyn Messinger produces a pilot with the BBC for Planet 3, a weekly news magazine with a global perspective, which is the precursor for Link TV, twelve years later.
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1989 |
July 1989. Internews moves its headquarters from San Francisco to Arcata, California when David Hoffman becomes president. 1989. When a devastating earthquake strikes Armenia, Kim Spencer and French producer Patrice Barrat arrange the only live satellite transmission of the disaster and rescue efforts. Major commercial networks broadcast over 20 hours of this footage.
December 1989. The fall of the Berlin Wall is the most tangible sign that the Cold War is ending. |
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