
An important media artifact-unique among the mostly unrecorded history of pirate broadcasting.įrom ephemeral radio stations playing rave music without a license, to the latest streaming sites with their strange and iterating domain names, examples of piracy are hard to discover the pirates are trying to hide. Who episode, the intrusion was captured for posterity.
#MAX HEADROOM STREAMING TV#
Their dish antenna placed high above the city, the theory goes, overpowered the TV stations’ feeds on their way to the receivers that would amplify them across the Windy City.Īnd, thanks to those viewers hoping to record an old Dr. These pirates got away with stealing a signal boost. Not once, but twice, the masked Max Headroom and his fly-swatting accomplice had hijacked the airwaves, and decades later it’s safe to say: they got away with it.

The event, technically called a signal intrusion, was the second that night on 22 November 1987. You’d just witnessed what would later be regarded as the greatest unsolved mystery in pirate television. The audio is distorted, but you can make out some murmurs about a “masterpiece for all the greatest world newspaper nerds.” A little over a minute later, the interruption ends and you’re back watching Doctor Who, wondering what… just… happened? Like an amateur broadcast from another dimension, this mad Max Headroom imposter shuffles in front of some spinning corrugated sheet metal, a homemade effect mimicking the television character’s signature wavy backdrops. Or at least, someone wearing a latex Max Headroom mask is. Just as the plot turns, your television fuzzes out and Max Headroom, the 1980s fictional AI icon appears-and he’s staring right at you.

On air is the Doctor Who classic “ Horror of Fang Rock”-one of the scariest episodes in the British science fiction show’s run.

You’re up late watching reruns on a cold, cloudy night in Chicago. Imagine an age before YouTube videos and on-demand streaming.
