A free archive of streaming, U.S. News content. Searchable by closed captions from the major cable and broadcast television networks from 2009-present. Streaming videos are not available for download, but users are able to borrow DVDs of each show.
The American Archive of Public Broadcasting offers access to streaming audio and video collections of public television and radio stations from across the country. Dates of coverage run from the 1940s to present, and the archive is searchable by date, keyword, topic, geographic location, and more. A partnership between the Library of Congress and WGBH in Boston, the goal of the archive is to preserve and provide access to the most significant public television and radio programs of the 20th and 21st century.
The Vanderbilt Television News Archive is a searchable collection of the individual network evening news broadcasts from ABC, NBC, and CBS from 1968-present, CNN from 1995-present, and Fox from 2004-present. Broadcasts from CNN and NBC can be streamed; broadcasts from all sources, including ABC, CBS, and Fox, can be loaned and downloaded in MP4 format after creating an account and paying a nominal duplication fee ($12 per clip + a $10 processing fee).
The Internet Archive has a number of free, streaming radio and television collections. Highlights include the "Classic TV," "Community Audio," "Community Video," "78 RPMs" and more.
Access to thousands of streaming television advertisem*nts broadcast nationally and internationally, as well as some digital and print content. Coverage dates focus on the most recent decade but include some historical content from the 20th century. Searchable by keyword, ad agency, brand, industry, country, and people credits.
An archive of more than 800 oral history interviews (over 4,000 hours) with the legends of television, from Alex Trebek to John Hamm. The streaming video interviews chronicle the birth and growth of American TV history. The collection covers a variety of professions (writers, actors, directors, producers), genres, and topics.
The Living Room Candidate is a site maintained by the Museum of the Moving Image, and contains streaming videos of television advertisem*nts and campaign commercials of every presidential election from 1952-present.
The March of Time is a digitized archive of the newsreel series of the same name, which was broadcast to American theatergoers and television audiences from 1935 to 1967.
World Newsreels Online: 1929-1966, a streaming video product which captures full runs of many of the key international newsreels produced during the early twentieth century. These films, produced from 1929 right through to the early post-war period, provide a unique, and until now largely neglected, resource that will give scholars a real insight into how people learned about, and lived through the events that occurred during this period of history.
Housed at the University of Maryland, this collection includes a wide-range of audio and video recordings, books, pamphlets, periodicals, personal collections, oral histories, photographs, scripts and vertical files devoted to the history of broadcasting.
The National Public Broadcasting Archives, housed at the University of Maryland, documents the history of public and educational broadcasting in the United States. It includes the archives of WNET and WAMU and the papers of many early National Public Radio hosts and broadcasters.
Transcripts via LexisNexis. Includes radio and tv transcripts from ABC, CNN, NPR, CBS, NBC, Federal News Service, Newshour with Jim Lehrer, Charlie Rose, and more.
Transcripts via Factiva. Includes transcripts from CBS, NBC, ABC, CNBC, Fox, MSNBC, NPR, and more.
TV Broadcast Transcripts. Transcripts from selected recent television broadcasts can be found in several subscription databases such as Lexis Nexis or Factiva (see list in the next box below). One thing to keep in mind is that no one database will have every show from a particular network.
Contact Your Educational Institution: Begin by reaching out to your school, college, or university's registrar's office or academic affairs department. ...
Complete the Request Form: Many institutions have a designated request form for transcripts.
How Many Types of Transcription Are There? There are two primary transcription types: Verbatim and non-verbatim transcription. Each of these types of transcription serves a unique purpose and suits a specific kind of project.
A high school transcript is basically a record of your academic accomplishments in high school. It lists every class you took, when you took them, and the grade you received in each class, sometimes along with additional information such as standardized test scores and any honors you received.
Official Transcripts: An official document that provides a complete and permanent record of coursework, grades, units, program of study, enrollment history and degrees awarded, and is signed by the university Registrar.
Keep sentences to 20 words are fewer (easier for the narrator to read). Keep each sentence to one thought. Use simple subject-verb-object structure. Use descriptive, strong words.
Hello and welcome to the __________ News. My name is ___________ . Our story today is about ___________ . We are going to be investigating where ________ comes from, how it is grown and then how it gets here.
James Simon and Diane Ryan's analysis of academic news databases illuminates the extent to which news broadcast transcripts are covered in major databases l...
When looking for audio or video on a topic related to news or public affairs, begin with either a general source such as Nexis Uni or Westlaw, which provide sea...
Here are a few resources for finding broadcasts and video. Remember to check for copyright clearance and permission to post. For more information, see the UW Li...
Most colleges allow you to order copies of transcripts online, by mail, or in person via the office of admissions or registrar's office. You'll complete a transcript request form, pay a small fee, and may have to provide proof of identification. Sound simple? It is!
Typically a student will need to fill out an application form, receipt of payment of application fees, copies of marksheets and degree certificates, copies of photo id proof, a request letter of transcripts.
The Clearinghouse Transcript Center allows secure and convenient electronic exchange of high school transcripts for use in postsecondary admissions, school transfers, and state scholarship evaluations. The Transcript Center is FERPA-certified by iKeepSafe, a leading nonprofit privacy organization.
Introduction: My name is Stevie Stamm, I am a colorful, sparkling, splendid, vast, open, hilarious, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
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