Transcript comm1 tv
The History of Television
Television
Introduced to the masses at the NY
World’s fair in 1939
Conflicting opinions about tv: the positives
Harmless pastime
Educational tool
Important part of culture
Television
The negatives:
Presents dangerously unrealistic picture of
the world
Promotes violence
Waste of time
Tv statistics
% of households with at least 1 tv: 99
# of tv sets in avg. U.S. household: 2
% of U.S. homes with 3+ tv sets: 66
# of hours per day tv is on in avg. U.S.
home: 6 hrs. 47 min.
% of Americans that regularly watch tv
while eating dinner: 66
Genres and Program Types
Purpose of tv
#1 to gather an audience for advertisers
Also:
Entertainment
Information/ education
Genres and Program Types
Because tv programs serve to gather an
audience for advertisers (yes, you are viewed as
a commodity):
There has been little change in programming since
the beginning of tv
Networks tend to stick with what has worked in the
past – success copying
When a certain type of program is successful on 1 network,
others rush to produce a similar one
Accounts for waves of popularity of certain types of shows
from season to season
Genres and Program Types
Very few series last more than 3 yrs; many
cancelled during 1st yr.
Dependable programming:
Soap opera: daytime tv drama
Originated on radio shows; soap companies were often
sponsors
Crime drama
CSI, NCIS, Law and Order
Reality tv
First shows: The Real World; Cops
Currently 1 of the most-watched genres
Dancing w/ Stars, American Idol, The Voice, etc.
Television and Stereotypes
Stereotype:
The application to an entire group of the
qualities of a limited sample of that group
Examples of stereotypes:
How does tv perpetuate stereotypes?
How can we dispel stereotypes?
MTV and New Production
Techniques
Created in 1981 as an all-music video
channel for young audiences
MTV strives to use capabilities of video in
new ways
Rapid-fire editing
Hand-held camera movements
Synchronizing video edits to music
Integration of digital production
technology/effects
Broadcast Television
1350++ stations in the U.S.
Channels 2-13 (VHF – very high
frequency)
Channels 14-83+ (UHF – ultra high
frequency)
# of channels available in any given area
increased dramatically:
Cable networks
Satellite dishes
Licensing
Tv stations are licensed by the FCC to
serve the “public interest”
License must be renewed every 3 yrs
4 Major Networks
Nearly 85% of all tv stations affiliated with
(not owned by) 1 of the following:
CBS: Columbia Broadcasting System
ABC: American Broadcasting Company
NBC: National Broadcasting Company
Fox: Fox Broadcasting Company
The most profitable stations are those
affiliated with 1 of the above networks
Public Broadcasting Service (PBS)
A tv station that does not belong to a major
network is either an independent station or
a member of PBS
PBS stations carry cultural and
educational programming
Supported by gov’t grants, donations from
foundations and corporations, and
contributions from individuals and groups
PBS
Not as dependent on advertising $ as
commercial tv networks
PBS stations do present messages about
underwriters or supporters
Independent Stations
Stations that do not belong to a major
network or PBS
Program movies, local sports, and
syndicated tv shows
Networks and Local Stations
Networks are not television stations; they
do not broadcast programs – they supply
programs to local tv affiliates via satellite
Local stations must fill their own
programming when networks do not
supply it
Networks provide programs free to the
affiliates and are paid for the advertising
time they can sell during the program
Cost of Advertising
The cost of advertising depends on the
popularity of the program
The more viewers, the higher the cost of
advertising
A small amount of time during each
program is left for the local station to sell
to local advertisers
This advertising constitutes main source of
income for local stations
Cable Television
Began in the late 1940’s as a solution to a
problem in rural areas
People paid fee to have tv set wired by cable to
master antenna
Good reception without expense of rooftop antenna
• From isolated rural areas, tv moved to cities
• Tall buildings and airplane interference impacted
reception
• A few cable systems offered subscribers additional
channels brought in from nearby cities as added
service
Cable tv
Offers more channels than are possible
with broadcast tv
Greatest benefit of cable tv:
It offers a large # of channels to everyone
Television Ratings
Tv networks have more competition and
find fewer viewers in prime time
Nielson Ratings
Determine a program’s future
Nielson Ratings measure:
How many people watched a particular show in a
particular time slot
What % of households with a tv watched show x
How show x is rated amongst other shows aired
that week
Nielson Ratings
The higher the rating, the higher the cost
of advertising, and the higher the revenue
$$$$$$
Up for Debate …
Has television had a positive or negative
effect on people and culture over the past
70 years?
Discuss!!!!