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Hearst Metrotone Newsreels
To learn more about this resource, download our HEARST METROTONE NEWS COLLECTION STUDY GUIDE which
includes a history of the collection at UCLA, extensive sample listings of available
holdings, and a reference bibliography.
UCLA's Hearst Metrotone News Collection is one of the largest newsreel
collections in the world. It contains over 27 million feet of distributed
newsreels, unreleased stories and outtakes. The Hearst newsreel went
through a series of incarnations. Begun in the teens, these newsreels
were first envisioned as a way to boost Hearst-owned newspaper readership.
The tabloid style of Hearst papers would heavily influence the style
and content of the newsreels, and arguably television news forms as
well. The silent Hearst reels covered topics such as the First World
War, the Mexican American War, the Black Sox Scandal, adventurous aviators,
and North Pole explorers. European royalty were given special attention
in the newsreels. The attraction of celebrity served the reel further
when it became half-owned by MGM. Distributed with MGM features throughout
the 1930s and 1940s, the reel could promote the studio's stars in the
guise of news items.
Although the reels were fashioned for the most part to be entertaining,
they uniquely document the events of their time. During their heyday,
the newsreels presented everything from the battle for recovery from
the Depression to the battles of World War Two. The onset of television
news ended the golden age of the newsreel, but it nonetheless continued
to be distributed theatrically well into the 1960s. In addition to providing
on-site viewing at the Archive Research and Study Center, the Archive's
Commercial
Services department licenses the footage to clients including the
producers of EYES ON THE PRIZE, NOVA, AMERICAN MASTERS, INFINITE VOYAGE,
and AMERICAN EXPERIENCE.
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