{"id":3163,"date":"2023-07-26T15:25:12","date_gmt":"2023-07-26T07:25:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/poagao.org\/?p=3163"},"modified":"2023-07-26T15:30:39","modified_gmt":"2023-07-26T07:30:39","slug":"army-days-the-video","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/poagao.org\/2023\/army-days-the-video\/","title":{"rendered":"Army Days: The Video"},"content":{"rendered":"

A few years ago I was transferring some old VHS tapes to DVDs when I came across footage that I had made during my time as a conscript soldier in Taiwan. I\u2019d nearly forgotten about that video, but watching it again, I was amazed at what I\u2019d managed to capture.<\/p>\n

I was nearing the end of my military service in late 1997. Thanks to the entrenched seniority system tradition I had relatively few duties apart from regular training and managing our base\u2019s Karaoke bar, or KTV as we called it. Some of the officers had become aware that in my pre-military days I had been a camera operator at a major cable network; they called on me to film some official functions and promotional videos, so I was allowed to bring my camcorder, a JVC GF500 that was already eight years old at that point, onto base for a short time.<\/p>\n

But it seemed a shame to miss such an opportunity to record the strange, unknown world of military conscript life in 1990\u2019s Taiwan, hidden as it was behind walls and guards, away from civilian life, so one weekend afternoon when the base was at its emptiest, I took out the bulky JVC and walked cautiously around filming things. When I did encounter other soldiers, I\u2019d offer explanations such as \u201cJust making sure this thing works ok\u201d or \u201cRecording stuff to remember this by,\u201d etc. Many thought it was some kind of photographic device as they\u2019d seen me taking still pictures before, something I\u2019d been doing since my arrival at the base two years before. When I was a rookie I\u2019d had to hide disposable film cameras, then available at convenience stores, in my uniform, but eventually I was designated the official base photographer and could take photos a little more openly.<\/p>\n

The other soldiers, even the officers, seemed ok with me taking video on base, and I grew more confident, although still only daring to film during leisure times. I recorded the mundane minutiae of military life from a conscript\u2019s point of view, from washing dinner trays and playing sports to guard duty, office work, equipment maintenance and even managing the various cats and dogs that found their way onto base. The KTV was featured prominently as that was my domain, and soldiers could feel a bit more free and open there.<\/p>\n

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