Books+ Search Results

The Light Bulb Conspiracy

Title
The Light Bulb Conspiracy / a film by Cosima Dannoritzer ; an Article Z, Media 3.14 production ; Arte France, Televisión Española, Televisió de Catalunya present ; written and directed by Cosima Dannoritzer.
Publication
San Francisco, CA : The Video Project, 2011.
Physical Description
1 online resource (75 minutes)
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Title from resource description page (viewed October 02, 2017).
In English.
Original language in Catalan.
Original language in Spanish.
Original language in German.
Original language in French.
Original language in English.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
<P><b>The Light Bulb Conspiracy</b> uncovers how planned obsolescence has shaped our lives and economy since the 1920's, when manufacturers deliberately started shortening the life of consumer products to increase demand. The film also profiles a new generation of consumers, designers and business people who have started challenging planned obsolescence as an unsustainable economic driver.</p> <p>The documentary begins by visiting the longest running light bulb in the world, which has burned continuously for over 110 years in Livermore, California. Initially, light bulbs were built to last. But the film finds historical evidence revealing how a cartel in the 1920's decided to produce bulbs limited to a maximum life of 1000 hours, making the humble light bulb one of the first examples of planned obsolescence and a model for increasing profits on other products.</p> <p>Shot over three years in Europe, the U.S. and Ghana, <b>The Light Bulb Conspiracy</b> investigates the evolution and impact of planned obsolescence through interviews with historians, economists, designers and manufacturers, along with archival footage and internal company documents. The film profiles several well-known historical advocates -- Bernard London, who famously proposed ending the Great Depression by mandating planned obsolescence, and Brook Stevens, whose post-war ideas became the gospel of the 1950's and helped shape the throwaway consumer society of today.</p> <p><b>The Light Bulb Conspiracy</b> also looks at modern examples of planned obsolescence, including computer printers and the controversy over the inability to replace iPod batteries. Environmental consequences are seen most dramatically in the massive amounts of electronic waste that end up in uncontrolled dump sites in Third World countries such as Ghana. The film concludes with examples of consumers and businesses moving towards more sustainable practices and products, including Warner Philips, great grandson of the founder of Philips Electronics, who is producing an LED bulb designed to last 25 years.</b>
Variant and related titles
ASP-AVON OCLC KB.
Format
Images / Online / Video & Film
Language
English
Added to Catalog
May 01, 2023
Genre/Form
Documentaries and Factual Films
Documentary films.
Nonfiction films.
Documentary films.
Nonfiction films.
Citation

Available from:

Loading holdings.
Unable to load. Retry?
Loading holdings...
Unable to load. Retry?