The Hillbilly Snapshooter captions transcript

The Hillbilly Snapshooter

Video of an interview with photographer Joe Clark, known as the "Hillbilly Snapshooter." The video appears to have been produced by a Detroit news station, possibly WJBK, although there is no identifying information. Clark is known for his images of his native Cumberland Gap, Tennessee. Many images of rural life in Tennessee taken by Clark are featured throughout the interview with instrumental music, including a surf-rock interpretation of a traditional song, played as accompaniment.
Date: 1961
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Junebug Clark: Pictures that Tell a Story captions transcript

Junebug Clark: Pictures that Tell a Story

Professional photographers and longtime friends Dan Moore and Junebug Clark, of the photography business Moore/Clark Photography, talk about the business of photography and the legacy of Joe Clark, Junebug's father. This video was created while Junebug Clark was the 2001 Artist-in-Residence in Farmington Hills, Michigan.
Date: 2001
Creator: City of Farmington Hills (Michigan) Cultural Arts Division
System: The UNT Digital Library
Principal Product captions transcript

Principal Product

A "public service presentation of Chrysler Corporation" that shows a humorous story of a journalist who is sent to photograph the new line of Chrysler cars at an auto show in Detroit. The journalist's photographer doesn't make the trip so he warily hires a six-year-old photographer, Junebug Clark, who saves the day. A schoolteacher, standing at a blackboard, introduces the story and talks about Detroit's reputation as a car manufacturing town or "Motor City." The conclusion of the video reveals that Junebug Clark is one of the students in the teacher's class.
Date: 1956
Creator: Chrysler Corporation
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Tribute to Joe Clark's Life and Legacy captions transcript

A Tribute to Joe Clark's Life and Legacy

Video produced for the 2012 Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference about Cumberland Gap, Tennessee and the career of photographer Joe Clark, known as the "Hillbilly Snapshooter." Images of Cumberland Gap and its residents from the 1950s and 2010s are shown. Includes selections from a video interview with Art Hancock titled "Art Hancock Remembers Joe Clark."
Date: 2011
Creator: Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference
System: The UNT Digital Library