{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/presentation/3/context.json","id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/iiif/610vq2ts72/manifest","type":"Manifest","label":{"en":["Benjamin Hooks 3, circa 1987"]},"logo":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/organizations/logo_images/000/000/053/original/cropped-marmia-logo-copy1.png?1586173104","metadata":[{"label":{"en":["Source Metadata URI"]},"value":{"en":["https://marmia.libraryhost.com/repositories/2/archival_objects/15113"]}},{"label":{"en":["Date"]},"value":{"en":["circa 1987 (Creation)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Description"]},"value":{"en":["Be advised that this video may contain sensitive, triggering, and offensive language and content. (Content warning)","Digitized with funding provided by the Council on Library and Information Resources' \"Digitizing Hidden Special Collections and Archives: Amplifying Unheard Voices\" grant program. (Funding note)","Interview footage with Benjamin Hooks discussing his upbringing, career, and more. (Scope and Content Note)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Format"]},"value":{"en":["1 U-matic"]}},{"label":{"en":["Identifier"]},"value":{"en":["WJZ-UNKN-069-003 (Identifier)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Series Title"]},"value":{"en":["Get to Know"]}}],"summary":{"en":["Be advised that this video may contain sensitive, triggering, and offensive language and content.","Digitized with funding provided by the Council on Library and Information Resources' \"Digitizing Hidden Special Collections and Archives: Amplifying Unheard Voices\" grant program.","Interview footage with Benjamin Hooks discussing his upbringing, career, and more."]},"provider":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/aboutus","type":"Agent","label":{"en":["MARMIA"]},"homepage":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/","type":"Text","label":{"en":["MARMIA"]},"format":"text/html"}],"logo":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/organizations/logo_images/000/000/053/original/cropped-marmia-logo-copy1.png?1586173104","type":"Image"}]}],"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/collection_resource_files/thumbnails/000/267/644/small/open-uri20250314-1605153-dfyfpt_1741979882.jpg?1741979883","type":"Image","format":"image/jpeg"}],"items":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644","type":"Canvas","label":{"en":["Media File 1 of 2 - open-uri20250314-1605153-dfyfpt.mp4"]},"duration":1397.396,"width":640,"height":360,"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/collection_resource_files/thumbnails/000/267/644/small/open-uri20250314-1605153-dfyfpt_1741979882.jpg?1741979883","type":"Image","format":"image/jpeg"}],"items":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/content/1","type":"AnnotationPage","items":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/content/1/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"painting","body":{"id":"https://aviary-p-marmia.s3.wasabisys.com/collection_resource_files/resource_files/000/267/644/original/open-uri20250314-1605153-dfyfpt.mp4?1741979881","type":"Video","format":"video/mp4","duration":1397.396,"width":640,"height":360},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644","metadata":[]}]}],"annotations":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526","type":"AnnotationPage","label":{"en":["AUTO_TRINT_WJZ-UNKN-069-003_FFV1.ia.mp4 [Transcript]"]},"items":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 1:\u003c/strong\u003e Terrible. Okay. You were the first, there's quite a list of firsts that you were, first public defender, first black judge in Tennessee, first jurist, which I assume means you were the first black man to serve on a jury, is that correct? No, judge. Judge, uh-huh. Uh-huh. Those, how did you manage that? I mean, not sort of detail by detail, but I... Well, it was...","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=2.56,30.22"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/2","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 2:\u003c/strong\u003e Well, it was a fight. We were, as I said, when I came back from Chicago after my law school and started practicing law, Bar Association had a rule. The Shelby County Bar Association opened all white lawyers practice and I couldn't even belong to the Bar Association. I received all kinds of penetrating, but luckily, and I say this in all honesty, the four judges of the circuit court, even though they would never call me Mr. a lawyer, you know. I can never recall an instance where they ruled against me because I was black. They respected my knowledge of the law. And I made sure, like any lawyer ought to, but particularly a black lawyer, that I never walked in the courtroom that I was not completely prepared for whatever came up. And I won my cases because of that. Later on, when we began to become powerful politically, By that time, another group of young black lawyers had come to town and we started pestering the attorney general to hire assistants in his office and the public defender to hire blacks in the public defender's office. I could not take an assistant attorney general's job because I was doing too well in the private practice to give up my practice at that point. But I could take the public defender's job because it was part-time, only paid $200 a month and I did about $2,000 worth of work. I represented 30, 45 people on one day, and I tried cases of all kinds in that capacity. But the major point was that I then ran for juvenile court judge in law, and I ran for city court judge, and Wonder of Wonder was endorsed by the leading paper of town, Commercial Appeal, which was the outstanding, and the most conservative. I lost that election out of 100,000 votes by less than two or three thousand. And that brought me directly to the attention of the governor, Frank Clement at that time, whom I had supported politically. And he wanted to appoint a black judge. And he decided on me. So in 1964, he appointed me to take office on the first day of September 65, but only for one year. At the end of that time, I had to run for an eight year term. And so it was quite a feat trying to serve on that bench for one year, knowing that, I had to face the entire electorate. And at that time, it was the Shelby County, not just Memphis, and the population was overwhelmingly white and overwhelmingly prejudiced. But we managed to get that done simply because the 15 immediate past presidents of the Bar Association signed my petition. And the ranking lawyers, the outstanding lawyers, and of course, you've got to remember 1966 was a different age. Lawyers were not as rambunctious or unruly or individualistic. those who had served as past presidents had immense influence, and all 22 judges up at the same time. And that was this fear, if anybody ran against me, all of them would have opposition. So the 22 judges said, Hooks has done a good job, he's a good fellow, leave him alone, 15 past presidents, all the bank presidents, so I had no opposition. Strangest thing in the world happened, however, even though I had no opposition, and my one vote would have elected me. The 22 judges, none of them had opposition. In the predominantly white wards, where they would vote 800 and 900 for the white judge, when they got to my name, would drop to 50 and 60, which shows you the amount of prejudice still in their hearts. They just could not bring themselves to give me a vote even when I was unopposed. And they were very well aware of the fact that I was black. Otherwise, how could the judge right before me get 800 votes? Right under my name get 800 fifty, sixty, two hundred or something like that. On the other hand, black people were aware that was going to happen. So, in the black war, there was sixteen hundred for hooks and they didn't bother to vote for the white judges. So, when the results came in we all had about the same number of votes.","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=29.71,280.6"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/3","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 1:\u003c/strong\u003e Thank you.","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=281.05,281.07"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/4","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 2:\u003c/strong\u003e But I'd never have forgotten that because it was an indication now, things have changed greatly in Memphis now. Had I elected to remain on the bench, I'd dare say now, if I had done as well the balance of my terms as I did the three or four years I served, that I'd be getting 90 percent of the white vote today. That's just judgment. That does not mean there's been a 90 percent change. But I've discovered in the South that white people react to individuals. And they come to the conclusion. that this black person is sensible, intelligent, maybe militant, but not a crazy, if I can put it that way, then you can get something. So I am not pessimistic about the whole future of race relations. I'm pessimistic only to the extent it's still gonna take much more time than it should have taken.","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=282.2,330.77"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/5","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 1:\u003c/strong\u003e You stood on the side of the law, served a role as a judge and with the law. Was it then ever difficult, a crisis of conscience for you at all when you began to work with the civil rights movement and had to many times oppose laws?","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=333.21,347.27"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/6","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 2:\u003c/strong\u003e Well, of course, my civil rights movement started first. I started practicing law in February of 1949, and I took out my membership in the NAACP in March of 1949, about 10 days after I got to town. I was chairman of the Freedom Committee. I led the movement. I represented some 6,000 young people who were arrested in the demonstrations, all of this before I became a judge. I was a member of the board of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. I was very well acquainted with and worked. That's Dr. Martin Luther King's organization. And I marched and demonstrated with him all over the South. So I was wrapped up, you know, tooth and toenail in the civil rights movement. And I never would have become a public defender, our judge, but for the agitation and the hell raising of NAACP and civil rights organizations. That is what, even though Governor Clement wanted a black judge, he wanted one, primarily because in order to get black voter support, he had to make some... it moves that were fairly dramatic and so was all political and pressure mounted and I recognized that I was a beneficiary of the movement. People, you know, walked the streets that I might sit on the bench and they didn't put me on that bench to act like some other white man up there. They put me up there to remember that even though I was not to be unfair or partial, the fact of the matter is that for years routinely blacks had been given worse sentences, more harsh sentences had been treated differently and in a worse way than whites and my job was to try to redress the balance. My job was to remind people and it was a strange thing because sitting there one day in a courtroom, I mean in a court with the other judges in the chambers, the lawyer was sitting next to me explaining something and he kept using the word nigger. Sitting next to me. Hit me on the... on the knee. I guess he's forgotten there was a black judge sitting there. And other judges were incensed. They were mortified. They were turning colors. They didn't know what to say. And finally, I think it dawned on this lawyer, Ben Hooks is sitting here, and he turned around and said, Judge, I didn't mean a bit of harm. But at that time, here I was dealing with a man that's 70 years old, and I knew from my boyhood that he'd used the word [Unrecognized] all his life. There was nothing new. What I am saying as though my presence there made him become aware of it. my presence, not Ben Hook's, but a black presence, in the Federal Communications Commission was the same thing. Wherever a black man or woman has a chance to serve in a different role, whether television anchor person, newspaper reporter, editorial board, it makes a distinct difference. It helps everybody to do a better job because you can't walk in that room without being aware that today we can't talk like we were talking. Same thing as it relates to women. the kind of jokes that are told. And it's stupid, you know, and I tell this on myself. As a young lawyer, with all the pressures against me, didn't want me to sit on the bench where a lawyer sat, didn't want to treat me right in the clerk's office, many of them, and many of the clerks were very fine, by the way. But the white lawyers, there were about three or four women lawyers, and they would make fun of the women lawyers. And I was expected to laugh. And I guess sometimes I did until it dawned on me, you've been a fool. You know, you're helping these people who don't like either women or blacks, you know, to gang up on you. And I refuse to do it from that point on. It's a learning process. The words I use as a child, I didn't even know what they meant, but I use words that describe people racially. And I had no conscious meaning to hurt them. And so sometimes I think people overreact. like to do to Jesse sometimes about some words he might have used, it doesn't necessarily mean hatred. It means from a childhood we learn certain things that we have to unlearn. And this business of making America better from my childhood experience is to understand that routinely white folk call us certain names, but at the same time we call them certain names. And not all of it was a hatred just to learn the thing. I called people names and they didn't even realize I was slandering them, you know, until I... got older. That may seem like a cop-out, but it's the God's truth. But once I become aware of what I'm doing, then I'm responsible for what I'm doing, and I must start trying to get myself straight. And I think this is what my life experience has been about. There were many other things that on the commission we discovered. Every issue that came before the commission had an angle that particularly affected black people. Cable television. Shall we pay for what we're getting free, or is the diversity more important? Can you have pornography? First Amendment, I go berserk, because I believe in it so completely. But I do get these funny feelings when you put hardcore pornography on the television, and then somebody tells me, well you can turn it off, when I know too many homes where their mother and father are working, and the children are there by themselves, who's there to control that? There's a certain legitimacy connected with that box. That box says, if it comes in your living room, it's all right. I read dirty comics as a boy growing up, but I had sense enough to know it was something that wasn't right. But if I look at it on television, hear it on radio, in my own living room, it has a sense of legitimacy. And I think that there are many things we've got to rethink. And even though I believe with all my heart, soul, mind, and body in the First Amendment, that we've got to rethink some of these things in light of reality. So All of these issues, because there were more poor blacks than there were white blacks in a sense of percentages, that all of these things made a difference. Telephone service. We talk about lifeline service now. 10 years ago, when AT\u0026T was a predominant company, they already had it. You could get a phone for $2.25, called a party phone, where you had to share it. But the angles that a black person can bring into a medium. not because we're that knowledgeable but because it's a way of life. We've dealt with deprivation and hardship so long and poverty that we can bring some insights and that's why I will be working the rest of my days for the concept of integration.","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=348.36,736.67"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/7","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 1:\u003c/strong\u003e Were you criticized by people that you had worked with in the civil rights movement when you took a job because it was with the Nixon administration?","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=738.65,744.63"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/8","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 2:\u003c/strong\u003e No, I was not criticized by people who knew me, but I called hell from folk who didn't know me. Nixon was a peculiar, is a peculiar man I guess, but he was an enigma as president. And it has always funded me to see us as civil rights leaders not scrambling to save programs that Nixon initiated. And yet we very seldom will give him credit for having initiated them. First four years of Nixon's administration he did some good things. I think the second four years he kind of went off or something, but the first four years, many of the initiatives, and he had a good cabinet, and they made some real positive steps toward black entrepreneurship, appointment of black generals and admirals. I was only the second person to serve on any commission, and the first, of course, of color to serve on the Federal Communications Commission. And so, black folk across the country who did not know me. But Martin King, Abernathy, and all the people who knew me rejoiced to see me there because they knew what I was going to be fighting for. But life is strange. And people who didn't know me assumed that if I were appointed by Nixon, that ipso facto, I had to be a Nixon clone that would be opposed to everything. Well, the other thing that was funny about Nixon never met me, never talked with me, never interviewed me, never asked anything of me. I happened to know Howard Baker. who's a Republican senator from Tennessee. When a vacancy occurred, it was a Democratic vacancy, he called me and asked if I was interested. And I told him I was. I mean, I told him I was not. My wife told him I was, so that was the end of that. And so I was, and he said, well, I'll propose your name. And Nixon was under siege by that time because Chuck Percy and Howard Baker and the chair of the Commissioner and Senator from Rhode Island, Rodino, had been to see Mr. Nixon and told him they would not confirm another white appointment to the FCC until the black had been nominated. And they didn't. Nixon appointed somebody, but he served a recessed appointment and we were confirmed on the same day because they stuck to their promise. So that it's strange and unfortunate, but I know now. realistically having lived in Washington Baltimore New York that people up here have this peculiar sensation that if you're appointed by a certain person you have to think, act, walk and quack like they quack and that's far from the truth.","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=746.29,907.76"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/9","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 1:\u003c/strong\u003e Um. There was a time in America's history when you were a very visible, very important figure, when there was a lot of fear and a lot of violence. Martin Luther King Jr. shot, Bobby Kennedy shot. During that period of time, were you ever frightened about how public a figure you were, how visible you were?","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=909.29,931.63"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/10","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 2:\u003c/strong\u003e Yes, there were days when I had on two or three, maybe five different occasions, I had 24-hour police protection because of threats that were made. Coming out of Brownsville one night, there were three other lawyers we were shot at. I was the victim of hate mail and bum threats. I would go to Mississippi to lead voter registration drives and come out of there going back to Memphis doing 135 miles an hour. Yes. I didn't live in a state of fear. I was picketed by the Ku Klux Klan in Colorado. Now we'll forget once in Tennessee they'd issued some threats on my life and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation sent five agents down and then they had me stopped in a hotel like the one Dr. King got killed in. You remember the old hotels where there was a balcony and a great big plate glass, one of the worst kind of hotel to be in if somebody was after you because you have no protection. in hotels, ordinary hotels, you're in your room, you're pretty well safe unless they break the door down. And they put me in this hotel with a great big plate glass window, facing about into the courtyard. And having put me there, I said, now, Mr. Hooks, we are trying to run these leads down. We can't stay in the hotel with you because there's no room. We'll be about three blocks up the street. Here's the phone number if anything happens. I said, if anything happens. I don't know. I'm sure you'll not get here before I'm dead, you know, that was their way of giving protection. Of course, I finally stopped accepting it because I thought it only made you a victim. You have three or four policemen walking along with you. You're black and they're white. The first supposition is you're either under arrest or that's the one I want to kill. I take my chance on keeping my head down and walking fast.","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=932.53,1043.339"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/11","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 1:\u003c/strong\u003e Martin Luther King Jr. said soon before he was shot that he was not afraid to die. Did you confront that fear during that time in history?","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=1044.359,1053.3"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/12","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 2:\u003c/strong\u003e Well, I guess that my, I can't say that I could ever said when I was young that I was not afraid to die. I was in the Army and I faced death daily as a combat infantry soldier. And I don't know that I ever got ready to die. I didn't want to die, I tell you that right now. I didn't want to die then, don't want to die now. But the older you get I guess the less fear you have because according to the Bible you only have 12 hours. And I've spent most of my 12 hours. It doesn't make as much difference now as it once did, but I confronted my question of death in six months of frontline combat duty. That was every day, not one day that I was away from the threat of bombs or being shot and that type of thing. And I made peace with the fact that if I went, I just went. I didn't step at night shaking. I was with my dog, James Ratlin, and I didn't... doing my knees praying every day and I didn't give up smoking and other things I was doing at that time, you know, so I'd be ready to go to help them. I just said, I'm sure the Lord will take me like I am. Since I've gotten older, I'm a little more religious, you know, and obviously we've changed. But when I came back into civilian life, I took it for granted once I got into the movement and two or three times. I remember once And Dr. King was speaking in Memphis, and the place was packed in jams. and I don't recall there being any white folk there but reporters, and a white man got into the building, into the church, over 2,500 people, and made his way all the way through the crowd. And he had on a, it looked to me like a hospital outfit. He didn't have on a suit, shirt and a tie. He looked like an escapee from a hospital. And he made his way all the way down the aisle and started up on the platform where Dr. King wars and I stopped him. And it turned out he was a mental patient, had a tag. He was wearing a hospital gown and a hospital garb. And he was much bigger than I was, but much older than I was at that time. I stopped him politely. He tried to come by me, and I shook him two or three times because nonviolence was learned by me as not a part of my nature like it was Dr. King. It didn't take much for the nonviolence to rub off. I believe in it, and I don't misunderstand it. But personally, it was not as easy for me as it's for him. and then Birmingham, I introduced him one night when there's been all kinds of threats, it's a terrible thing to speak in an auditorium with seven or eight thousand people and all the lights off in the auditorium and nothing but the spotlights down, you can't see a thing you're speaking into a vast nothingness and when I introduced Dr. King I had that peculiar feeling that that night somebody was going to try to kill him, they didn't they jumped on him that night and hit him but nobody shot at him So, you had to conquer his fear of death, because you can't stand. and speak to audiences like that night after night, if you feel for them. Once they turn the house lights off and turn those flood lights on your face, you are speaking into the light. You don't see one person out there. So a guy could very calmly get a rifle, load it, aim it and shoot it and you'd never know it until you were dead. And I'm sure he had to conquer that and to the extent that I've been threatened and that now... from time to time I'm threatened either by a phone call or by a letter written or whatever. I just refuse to think about it. You got to die someday. And thinking about it, worrying about it is not going to make it any sooner or easier. I take ordinary precautions. I'm not as reckless as maybe other people would be. But other than that, I just try to move my life along.","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=1053.87,1274.99"},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/13","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eSpeaker 1:\u003c/strong\u003e We're just about the end of the tape. Do you mind if we go a little?","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644#t=1277.62,1280.26"}]},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526","type":"AnnotationPage","label":{"en":["English [Transcript]"]},"items":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267644/transcript/77526/annotation/14","type":"Annotation","motivation":"subtitling","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/file_transcripts/associated_files/000/077/526/original/trint_WJZ-UNKN-069-003_FFV1_transcript.vtt?1742308407","format":"text/vtt","language":"en"},"target":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/file_transcripts/associated_files/000/077/526/original/trint_WJZ-UNKN-069-003_FFV1_transcript.vtt?1742308407"}]}]},{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267645","type":"Canvas","label":{"en":["Media File 2 of 2 - open-uri20250314-1605153-fixbdq.mp4"]},"duration":1397.396,"width":640,"height":360,"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/collection_resource_files/thumbnails/000/267/645/small/open-uri20250314-1605153-fixbdq_1741979896.jpg?1741979896","type":"Image","format":"image/jpeg"}],"items":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267645/content/1","type":"AnnotationPage","items":[{"id":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267645/content/2/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"painting","body":{"id":"https://aviary-p-marmia.s3.wasabisys.com/collection_resource_files/resource_files/000/267/645/original/open-uri20250314-1605153-fixbdq.mp4?1741979894","type":"Video","format":"video/mp4","duration":1397.396,"width":640,"height":360},"target":"https://marmia.aviaryplatform.com/collections/948/collection_resources/144794/file/267645","metadata":[]}]}],"annotations":[]}]}