:Arlington Independent Media
{{Short description|Nonprofit organization providing television production training}}
Arlington Independent Media (AIM), formerly Arlington Community Television, is a nonprofit membership organization providing television production training workshops and professional production facilities, as well as the public, educational, and government access (PEG) cable TV channel on Comcast channel 69, and Verizon FIOS channel 38 in Arlington County, Virginia, United States.
History
The station was established in 1984 as Arlington Community Television offering residents of the county the chance to train in producing material for broadcast and to produce shows.{{cite news|last1=Aguilar|first1=Luis|title=So You Want to Be a Big TV Star?: Arlingtonians Get Own Show on Cable Channel Arlington Residents Get Chance to Be on TV|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1984/09/13/so-you-want-to-be-a-big-tv-stararlingtonians-get-own-show-on-cable-channel/f2e93a64-5367-47b5-b391-a8b762a3c46a/|accessdate=26 March 2018|work=The Washington Post|date=13 September 1984}}{{cite news|last1=Lloyd|first1=Nancy|title=You; On the Screen; Fun and Fame on Public-Access Television|work=The Washington Post|date=20 May 1991|id={{ProQuest|307401341}}}} In 2004, prompted by the approaching 2004 expiration of its contract with Comcast (formerly AT&T Broadband), the station began preparations to become a not for profit corporation, renaming itself Arlington Independent Media, and enabling a major expansion of its budget and offerings.{{cite news|last1=Desjardins|first1=David|title=CABLE TV ACCESS UPGRADES PURSUED|work=The Boston Globe|date=23 February 2003|id={{ProQuest|405510696}}}}
Operation
The Arlington Independent Media production facility is equipped with a three-camera television studio, DV-Cam portable production equipment, the Final Cut Pro non-linear edit system, and a four-camera mobile production van. All equipment is available to members who have completed television production workshops and intend to create programming for the Public-access television channel, and is used in apprenticeship programs run by the station to train aspiring documentary filmmakers.{{cite news|last1=Bahrampour|first1=Tara|title=For Teens, Lessons Behind the Lens; Conceiving, Editing and Shooting Documentaries in a Program|work=The Washington Post|date=10 August 2006|id={{ProQuest|410019317}}}}{{cite news|last1=Moreno|first1=Sylvia|title=Students in the Studio; Access Channel Produces Shows, Experience|work=The Washington Post|date=23 July 1998|id={{ProQuest|408377216}}}}{{subscription required|date=March 2018}}
WERA-LP
In December 2015, Arlington Independent Media launched WERA-LP, a radio station.{{cite news|url=http://bandwidth.wamu.org/a-new-radio-station-gets-ready-to-launch-in-arlington/|title=A New Radio Station Gets Ready To Launch In Arlington|last1=Pauly|first1=Megan|date=24 November 2015|accessdate=26 March 2018|publisher=WAMU}} An event was held at Arlington Independent Media where members and others celebrated the first airing of WERA-LP.
References
{{reflist|30em}}
External links
- [https://www.arlingtonmedia.org/ AIM website]
{{Washington TV}}
Category:Television stations in Virginia