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Television: Broadcast and Beyond Draft for Ed 6 Chapter 9 Anchor as Advocate • Jorge Ramos speaks to huge audience (triple CNN's audience) as Univision anchor. • Ramos is advocate for Latino and immigrant groups; part of shift on many cable channels to opinion journalism. • Noted for controversy during 2016 presidential campaign with Donald Trump. Invention of Television Philo T. Farnsworth • 1922: Diagrams plans for television at age 16. • 1930: Receives patent cathode ray tube. • RCA attempted to promote its own Vladimir Zworykin as inventor of TV. • 1947: Farnsworth’s television patent expires just before TV starts to take off. Beginning of Broadcast Television • 1939: NBC starts broadcasting, most sets in bars, restaurants. • 1942: TV manufacturing suspended for duration of WW II; most stations go off air. • Licensing of new TV stations suspended 1948-1952, leaving many cities without television. Lucy & Desi End Live TV • 1951: Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz create I Love Lucy. • First sitcom to be filmed, rather than live. • Lucy and Desi hold onto syndication rights to the show, still being broadcast today. Color Television • 1950s: Early experiments in color television. • 1965: Big Three networks broadcasting in color. • NBC peacock logo designed to tell B&W viewers show was in color. • Early color TVs cost equivalent of big screen TVs today. Beginning of Cable Television • Community Antenna Television (CATV) Early form of cable television used to distribute broadcast channels in communities with poor television reception • Relatively expensive, was source of a good TV signal, not additional programming Rebirth of Cable • By mid-1970s, FCC began loosening rules on cable companies. • 1975: HBO starts providing programming nationwide, sending signal to local cable companies via satellite. • Key Point: HBO could send programming to 1,000 cable companies as cheaply as to one. Ted Turner – Cable Pioneer • 1963: Inherits failing billboard company from father. • 1970: Buys Channel 17 in Atlanta. • Buys Atlanta Braves and Hawks sports franchises to provide programming for channel. • Turns Channel 17 into Superstation WTBS in 1976, takes local station national. Ted Turner – Cable Pioneer • 1980: CNN becomes first cable 24-hour news network. • Developed idea of repackaging content across multiple channels. • 1996: Turner Broadcasting faces financial trouble, is acquired by media giant Time Warner. What’s on Cable? • Affiliates of Big Four broadcast networks • Independents and smaller network affiliates • Superstations • Local-access channels • Cable networks • Premium channels • Pay-per-view • Audio services Home Recording • Late 1970s: Videocassette Recorder (VCR) becomes household appliance. • Movie studios fight spread of VCRs, but 1984 Supreme Court decision says consumers can make recordings for own use. • 21st Century: DVRs, DVDs, on-demand replacing VCR technology. Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) • Early satellite TV required large/expensive dish. • Smaller pizza-sized DBS cheaper, easier to use than old systems; competing with cable. • As of 2015, 33 million American households have DBS. Conversion to Digital Broadcasting • Farnsworth’s television technology was analog. Same technology for decades. • B&W televisions could still receive new color signals. • In 2009, all broadcast television converted to digital. Analog sets went dark without either conversion box or cable/satellite. Digital Television • High-definition television (HDTV) High-resolution, wide-screen format with enhanced sound • Standard digital television Can broadcast up to six channels in airspace that carried one old-style channel Networks & Affiliates • Broadcast networks provide programming to local affiliate stations. • Affiliates have license from FCC, equipment, and local staff. • If affiliate carries programming from network, get limited ad revenue and (may) get carriage fee. • Can also carry local and syndicated programming, keep all ad revenue. Public Broadcasting • 1967: Corporation for Public Broadcasting created. • Public Broadcasting System (PBS) provides networklike programming to member stations. • PBS initially known for children’s programming like Sesame Street. • 1990s: PBS expands audience with programming like Ken Burns documentaries. • 2015: Sesame Street moves to HBO for first-run episodes; PBS continues to air episodes after they are shown on HBO. Big Three Becomes Big Four • 1986: Rupert Murdoch launches Fox Network. • Attracted independent stations by offering them free programming. • Shows like NFL football, The Simpsons, Empire, Family Guy and Bones have made Fox top-rated broadcaster. Audience Ratings • Challenge of rating major and minor broadcast networks, major cable networks, and minor cable networks • Problem of counting DVR audiences • Nielsen Media Research is major rating company Measuring Audiences • People Meters used in larger markets • Sweeps periods used to measure audience size of individual stations (4 times/year) • Rating point Percentage of potential television audience actually watching the show • Share Percentage of television sets in use tuned to a show An Earthquake in Slow Motion • 1976: Average viewer has 7 channels, Big Three networks have 90 percent of viewers. • 1991: Average viewer has 33 channels, Big Three lose 1/3rd of viewers. • 2011: ESPN most profitable part of Disney. • 2013-2016: ESPN loses 7 million subscribers as viewers find alternatives to cable/satellite. • Cable/Satellite more profitable because get subscription fees and ad revenue. • Streaming services major new source of competition. Diversity on Television • Networks frequently criticized for ignoring people of color. • Growth of non-English speaking characters • Growth of shows with African American women as leads • High level of diversity with competitors on Food Network Spanish Language Broadcasting • Univision is fifth largest broadcast network; often top rated in urban areas. • Suffering from general downturn facing Spanishlanguage media • Spanish-language telenovelas popular, produced in Mexico, Brazil. (Brazilian shows translated from Portuguese to Spanish.) Black Entertainment Network • 1980: Washington, DC area local station. • First black-owned cable network • Worth $2 billion at time it sold to Viacom Television as a Social Force • Television brings world into the home in an easy-toconsume format. • Television becomes dominant source of shared experience. • Television can dominate people’s leisure activity. • Video from non-TV sources is growing in popularity. Standards for Television • 1950s: Married couples had to sleep in separate beds; Capri pants immodest. • 1990s: Mild nudity appears on broadcast television. • 1997: Broadcasters implement content ratings. • Cable only stations are not subject to FCC rules on decency Problem of Decency • 2004: Janet Jackson’s Super Bowl “wardrobe malfunction”; decency rules become stricter. • 2012: U.S. Supreme Court throws out fines for Jackson exposure, but doesn’t clarify decency standards. • No fines for Nancy Grace exposure during Dancing With The Stars. • No clear standard as of 2012. Future of Television • Video-on-demand • Interacting with programming • Convergence of television and Internet • Rise of mobile streaming apps such as Periscope • Changing definition of “television” • Moving from broadcast/cable/satellite to “cord cutting”