The Found Footage Festival has been around for well over a decade, touring the country with an analog aficionadoโs selection of pan-and-scan VHS ephemera. Unlike a lot of underground/bootleg/nostalgia-based shows, which typically depend on raw enthusiasm and audience discomfort, FFFโs productions are clever, tightly edited montages without any distortion or remixingโthink of them as a very ADD-friendly approach to surveying the especially goofy bits in your momโs old workout videos. And even after numerous iterations, this yearโs slate of videos is a fun mix of โ80s and โ90s time capsules ranging from satanic panic interviews to ineffective cat training techniquesโseasoned with some considerably more upsetting subjects that include, but are not limited to, ferret placentas, pee drinking, and problematic police training videos.
I got a chance to speak with Nick Prueher, who, along with co-host Joe Pickett, has been running FFF since its inception. The duo serves as engaging, excited narrators during FFFโs live shows, which helps leaven some of the more distressing, placenta-centric material. Here are Prueherโs thoughts on what makes FFF so consistently fun and so consistently strange.
On the Found Footage Festivalโs curatorial philosophy:
โOur approach is to present these in the way that weโve always done since we were in high school: have friends over and take them through a guided tour through our video collection. And just from a comedic standpoint, these videos are so weird that you kinda need a straight man. So weโre happy to provide the incredulous straight men to this very weird world of videos weโve discovered.โ
On how the festival has evolved:
โWe just take it way too far now. In the first years of doing it, weโd be like, โI wonder if we could track down the guy in a Speedo dancing for elderly people,โ and we do a little Google search and, โWelp, canโt find them!โ Now we hire a private investigator to help us find them. Weโll hire a detective and weโll go fly and meet that person. Weโll just go as far as we can to get the backstory, and to get videos that weโve never seen before. We… have nothing better to do. This is our full-time job.โ
On the 200-plus tapes they inherited from The Late Show With David Lettermanโs โDaveโs Video Collectionโ archives:
โ[Letterman writer] Steve Young said, โWould you be interested in Daveโs entire video collection?โ They were literally gonna throw [them all] in a dumpster. If nothing else, weโre rescuing videos from landfills, so we jumped at the chance. And even betterโwhich shows you what kind of a guy Steve isโI showed him the montage of all the videos weโve cut from what heโd given us. And he said, โIโve just remembered, one thing we did in the โ90s was solicit all our local CBS affiliates to send us their worst local commercials. Would you be interested in that as well?โ And we were like, โBring it on!โโ
On the challenges of keeping the flame of VHS alive…
โFor a long time, we were sort of social pariahs. If youโre dating someone and they come over and youโve got thousands of VHS tapes in your apartment… it doesnโt really bode well.โ
…and on VHSโ current vogue status:
โI love the fact that VHS has had a resurgence. I donโt think itโll ever be as sexy as like, collecting vinyl. Music is always cooler than movies, right? Thereโs not going to be VHS groupies any time soon. But it is cool that people are appreciating the bad tracking and the production value of VHS now, and appreciating those imperfections in the same way that people like to hear the hisses and pops in a record collection.โ
