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Chapter 6

Television has evolved through various eras from broadcasting to streaming, becoming a central hub in the digital media landscape. The document outlines the history of TV, including the birth of broadcast TV, the dominance of major networks, the rise of cable and satellite competition, and the current digital era characterized by on-demand content and streaming services. It also discusses the implications of these changes on culture, democracy, and access to diverse content.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views28 pages

Chapter 6

Television has evolved through various eras from broadcasting to streaming, becoming a central hub in the digital media landscape. The document outlines the history of TV, including the birth of broadcast TV, the dominance of major networks, the rise of cable and satellite competition, and the current digital era characterized by on-demand content and streaming services. It also discusses the implications of these changes on culture, democracy, and access to diverse content.

Uploaded by

mominsaleh28
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHAPTER 6

Television: From Broadcasting to Streaming


Television Today
• TV has evolved rather than died; it acts as a vital
hub in our digital media environment

• An array of content is produced and delivered by a


wide range of industry players

• Four stages of evolution


• Birth of commercial broadcasting
• Network era
• Post-network era
• Digital era
How We Got Here: The Birth of Broadcast TV
(1 of 5)

• Paul Nipkow’s rudimentary TV camera (1880s)


connected electric sensors to a mechanical spinning disk
with perforated holes

• Cathode ray tube (1890s)


• Projected electronic signals onto a glass screen inside a
vacuum tube
How We Got Here: The Birth of Broadcast TV
(2 of 5)

• Analog: technological standard based on radio waves


• Standard adopted in 1941

• RCA wins battle with CBS over color TV systems


because existing sets could receive its color images in
black and white
• In 2009, digital standard adopted
• High-definition broadcast images and sound quality
• Requires less spectrum space

• TV licensing freeze until 1952


How We Got Here: The Birth of Broadcast TV
(3 of 5)

• Characteristics of local stations


• Free of charge
• Licensed by FCC to broadcast on their specific
channel in a specific market
• Geographically divided and assigned to designated
market areas
• Light on local programming
How We Got Here: The Birth of Broadcast TV
(4 of 5)

• Broadcast networks own and operate a limited


number of broadcast stations (O&Os)

• Broadcast networks deliver programming lineups to


affiliate stations

• Independent stations are not associated with a


broadcast network
How We Got Here: The Birth of Broadcast TV
(5 of 5)

• As producers experimented with the new medium in


the 1950s, two ways of making TV shows emerged
• Live TV recorded with a three-camera live system
• Kinescope: a film camera placed in front of a TV
screen to capture a program as it aired
• Filmed TV recorded with a one-camera film system

• Modern TV often uses multi-cam production


techniques
The Network Era: The Big Three Dominate TV
(1 of 5)

• Between 1958 and the 1980s, TV industry dominated by


Big Three broadcast networks: NBC, CBS, and ABC

• Early television programs followed single-sponsorship


model
• Programs were developed, produced, and supported by a
single sponsor; networks lacked creative control

• In magazine-sponsorship model, networks manage


program development and sell spots to various sponsors
The Network Era: The Big Three Dominate TV
(2 of 5)

• Quiz-show scandal in late 1950s hastens move toward


magazine sponsorship
• Quiz shows rigged at the urging of their sponsors

• Networks expand their control over distribution


• Provide affiliates with programming to cover prime time—
the critical evening hours when viewing is highest

• Big Three develop efficient ways of producing and


distributing content
• Create structured full-day TV schedule
• Designed to make TV watching a habit
The Network Era: The Big Three Dominate TV
(3 of 5)

• Networks abandon live anthology dramas


• Anthology dramas: artistically significant plays written for
television, featuring different characters and settings each
week
• Complex and expensive to produce

• Networks focus on episodic series, a format in which


the main characters remain the same from week to week
• Chapter shows: all story lines wrap up each week
• Serial programs: story lines continue across episodes
• Hybrid series: one plotline may wrap up, but other story
arcs play out over several episodes or seasons
The Network Era: The Big Three Dominate TV
(4 of 5)

• TV production moves from NY to LA by 1960s


• Big Three rely on Hollywood production companies

• Producers create innovation-imitation-saturation


cycle
• Cloning: involves creating a new series by copying
key features of an innovative and popular program
• Spin-off: when a character from a hit series becomes
the lead in a new one
• Franchise: when producers leverage the name
recognition of a popular show to brand other series
The Network Era: The Big Three Dominate TV
(5 of 5)

• Newton Minow characterizes TV as “a vast wasteland,”


reflecting four interconnected areas of concern linked to
network control
• Content quality
• Concentrated cultural power
• Unfair competition
• Limited local control

• Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) established in 1969


• Targets viewers “less attractive” to commercial networks
• Government funding vulnerable to political interference
• Increasing reliance on support from viewers and corporate
underwriting
The Post-Network Era: Competition Heats Up
(1 of 7)

• By the 1980s, cable channels emerge to challenge


the Big Three

• CATV: community antenna television


• First cable system
• Originated where mountains or tall buildings blocked
TV signals
• Two big advantages: eliminated over-the-air
interference and increased channel capacity
The Post-Network Era: Competition Heats Up
(2 of 7)

• Must-carry rules: required cable operators to


include all local TV broadcasts on their systems

• FCC requirements for the top 100 TV markets


• Access channels: nonbroadcast channels dedicated
to local education, government, and the public

• Electronic publishing: cable operators able to


choose which channels to carry
• Midwest Video case (1979)
The Post-Network Era: Competition Heats Up
(3 of 7)

• Changes in media regulations and development of


communication satellites spur the growth of cable
industry
• Cable franchise: a mini-monopoly awarded by a
city or town, usually for a 15-year period
• Basic cable channels: channels included in less
expensive cable packages
• Premium channels: channels included in more
expensive cable packages
The Post-Network Era: Competition Heats Up
(4 of 7)

• In addition to cable, new broadcast networks emerge by


the 1980s to challenge Big Three domination
• Fox, UPN, WB

• In the 1990s, cable and broadcast model face


competition from direct broadcast satellite (DBS), a
system that transmits signals directly to a satellite dish at
customers’ homes
• Cable channels scramble signals to prevent free access to
broadcasts
• Modern services include DirecTV and Dish
The Post-Network Era: Competition Heats Up
(5 of 7)

• New technology gives viewers more control over


what they watch and when they watch it

• VCRs enable viewers to time-shift: record


programs to watch at their convenience

• DVDs give consumers another way to access TV


and producers a new distribution option

• Home video game consoles begin transforming TV


sets into digital home entertainment hubs
The Post-Network Era: Competition Heats Up
(6 of 7)

• Competition changes programming strategies

• In network era, executives followed principle of


least objectionable programming: a strategy
aimed at attracting as big an audience as possible
by not turning off any viewers

• Post-network era characterized by narrowcasting:


providing specialized programming for diverse and
fragmented groups
The Post-Network Era: Competition Heats Up
(7 of 7)

• Broadcasters compete for the quality audience: the segment of


viewers advertisers pay the most money to reach
• Well-educated (middle- and upper-class) eighteen-to-forty-nine-year-
olds
• Networks begin to take risks, both financially and aesthetically

• Networks begin including more gay material in broadcasts


• Believe that quality audience were more likely to be socially liberal and
want “hip” and “edgy” content
• Gay material rarely used to attract LGBTQ+ audience; shaped how gay
characters and themes were represented

• Reality TV
• Introduces audiences to characters more like them
• Inexpensive to produce
Our Digital Era and the Business of TV
(1 of 8)

• Infrastructure of TV shaped by government policies and


corporate strategies

• Telecommunications Act of 1996


• Massive overhaul of communications law that affected
almost every aspect of U.S. television industry
• Government established a plan to switch to new digital
standard
• Removed barriers between phone companies, long-
distance phone carriers, and cable companies
• Allowed phone and cable companies to provide Internet
access
Our Digital Era and the Business of TV
(2 of 8)

• By the 2000s, thousands of independent cable


systems snapped up by multiple-systems
operators like Comcast and Charter
Communications, which own many cable systems
around the country

• By the 2010s, cable infrastructure threatened by


wireless infrastructures
Our Digital Era and the Business of TV
(3 of 8)

• Time shifting continues to change viewing habits in


the digital era
• Linear TV: broadcast TV’s and cable’s traditional
approach to content delivery, in which a show airs at a
specific time
• On-demand TV: programs are made available to
viewers to watch whenever they want
• Video-on demand: another name for streaming
services
• Place shifting: the practice of accessing stored
media from different locations
Our Digital Era and the Business of TV
(4 of 8)
• Content delivery services: companies whose business it is
to gather and distribute TV content
• Traditional broadcasters and new players like Netflix, YouTube,
Amazon, and Apple

• Two types of revenue models: advertisers and subscribers


• Ad-supported TV uses measurements to negotiate prices
• An episode’s Nielsen rating indicates what percentage of TV
households watched that episode
• An episode’s share indicates what percentage of TV households who
had their TV set turned on at that time were watching that episode
• Subscription sites rely on viewers’ subscription fees for funding
Our Digital Era and the Business of TV
(5 of 8)

• Over-the-top media services: streaming sites that allow


viewers to access TV content through an Internet
connection without having to go through broadcast,
cable, or satellite providers

• Cord cutting: consumers cutting the cord to expensive


cable subscriptions in favor of a streaming subscription

• Digital subchannel broadcast networks: provide


content for local broadcast stations’ multiplex channels
Our Digital Era and the Business of TV
(6 of 8)

• Broadcast networks, cable channels, and streaming


services race to develop original content

• Peak TV: the high amount of production in recent


years
• Industry observers argue that it is not sustainable and
anticipate a collapse once there are clear winners and
losers in content delivery battles
Our Digital Era and the Business of TV
(7 of 8)

• Syndication: leasing the right to air TV shows


• First-run syndication: any program originally produced
for sale into syndication markets
• For local network-affiliated stations, syndicated programs are
often run during fringe time: just before the prime-time
schedule and after the local evening news or a network late-
night talk show
• Second-run syndication (reruns): older programs
originally run on a specific network, cable channel, or
streaming service
• Made available to rerun on other stations, cable channels, or
streaming services, or in foreign markets
Our Digital Era and the Business of TV
(8 of 8)
• Increased access to resources and distribution systems has
democratized the creation and spread of video content
• DIY producers explore characters and story lines or develop visual
styles and narrative structures that differ dramatically from those of
mainstream TV production

• User-generated content blurs boundaries between DIY and


professional production and draws into question what counts as
TV
• Content produced on TikTok, YouTube, and Twitch

• Television ownership concentrated around a handful of


corporations
Television and Democracy
• TV has reflected and contributed to America’s cultural
shift from mass nation to niche nation

• TV during the mass nation created shared cultural


touchstones but at the expense of letting diverse ideas
and values circulate

• The loss of shared experiences and consensus


narratives likely contributes to political polarization

• Variety of content offered in the digital era is increasingly


available only to those who can afford it, undermining
the principle of free and universal access to television

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