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Documentary films
Sundance 2024
New documentary looks for a woman who was synonymous with typing in the 80s and
90s, with surprising results
Before bashing out emails and text messages by thumb became an accepted form of
communication, typing was a fully manual skill. In the 80s, “the office” was an
exclusive preserve for freaks who could type 40 words per minute at least. Those
too modest or miserly to sign up for brick-and-mortar classes could pick up a
software program called Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing for $50. At my Catholic high
school, the application was the typing class. The priests just switched on the
computers.
Launched in late 1987, Mavis Beacon quickly assumed pride of place on home PC
desks amid floppy disks for SimCity and After Dark. Among other features, Mavis
gamified typing drills and tracked typing progress in explicit detail. Its
defining feature was the elegant Black woman with a cream suit and slicked-back
bob marching proudly off to her high-rise job on the cover of the software
package. But it would take a few more decades for the bigger lesson in the
pitfalls of relinquishing control over your image and likeness to corporate
interests.
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