[7] In 1981, Ivers and Armstrong toured the country with their GoNightclubbing video programs, showing at museums and nightclubs in Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles, Minneapolis and San Francisco.
Ivers and Armstrong resumed shooting with a series of interviews of veterans of the punk scene, including Lenny Kaye and Jay Dee Daugherty of the Patti Smith group, Richard Lloyd of Television, Cheetah Chrome and Jeff Magnum of the Dead Boys.
"[11] In 2001-2002, they toured the US, invited to the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, the Experience Music Project in Seattle and the Walker Arts Center in Minneapolis, with stops in Portland, Chicago and San Francisco as well.
[9] In 2012, Bedford and Bowery, part of the New York Times Magazine, invited Ivers and Armstrong to write about the restoration of their archive in a weekly feature, which ran for nearly a year.
[13] To celebrate the acquisition by the Downtown collection, in 2014, Ivers and Armstrong created “GoNightclubbing: A Modern Punk History,” a multi-media project including video screenings at the Museum of Art and Design,[14] a photo and ephemera exhibition at Fales,[15] live talks, and a recreation of the iconic Video Lounge and larger than life images of punk icons at the 80 Washington Square East Gallery.
[17] Using the trope of the Times Square peep show booth,[18] "Alone at Last" examines the broad spectrum of sexual expression that existed in the heady days of downtown bohemia before AIDS struck the artistic community there.