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| Dynamics of Mass Communication: Media in the Digital Age, 7/e Joseph R. Dominick
Television
Main Points- Electronic television developed during the 1930s.
After World War II, it quickly grew in popularity
and replaced radio as the main information and
entertainment medium.
- The three networks NBC, CBS, and ABC
dominated early TV. Live drama, variety, and quiz
and game shows were popular during the 1950s.
- Television matured in the 1960s and its content
became more professional. The public television
network began in 1967. Cable TV grew slowly
during this decade.
- The 1970s saw TV programs criticized for
excessive violence. The Prime-Time Access Rule
helped companies that syndicated TV programs.
- In the 1980s and 1990s, the three traditional TV
nets lost viewers to cable and to VCRs. The Fox
network became a major competitor.
- The Telecommunications Act of 1996 had a
significant impact on TV-station ownership and
also introduced program content ratings. Rules for
the eventual conversion to digital TV were
announced in 1997.
- Changing from analog to digital signals will mean
better pictures and sound. Consumers will have to
buy a new TV set or a converter to receive the new
signals. TV stations may use the digital signal to
broadcast high-definition television or several
lower-definition programs.
- TV is universal, dominant, and expensive. Its
audience is currently fragmenting into smaller
segments.
- The broadcast TV industry consists of program
suppliers, distributors, and local stations.
- Big conglomerates own the major TV networks,
and large group owners control most of the
stations in large markets.
- Public broadcasting relies less on tax revenues and
more on private sources of funding.
- Cable TV had reached maturity by the late 1990s
and was facing problems associated with its rapid
growth. The Telecommunications Act of 1996
permitted cable and phone companies to compete
with one another.
- The costs and revenues connected with a cable
system are different from those of a broadcast
station.
- Home video is dominated by the major motion
picture studios. Retailers are concerned about the
eventual impact of direct broadcast satellite
systems (DBS) on their business.
- DBS systems grew more slowly than expected, but
their overall impact on the industry has yet to be
determined.
- The Nielsen company compiles both network and
local-station television ratings.
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