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Slow to dominate
Given the
virtually unregulated free market for television in the United States, it's
surprising to note that television was a slow starter.
While
experiments in Europe had led to a regular medium-definition service in Nazi
Germany followed by the world's first regular high-definition service from the
BBC in London during the 1930s, television remained strictly experimental in
the States.
Radio
dominated all. William S Paley's Columbia Broadcasting System had the stars
and began broadcasting its radio network in 1928 as the result of a merger
between his own company and the small United Independent chain.
General David
Sarnoff had started the ball rolling in 1926 when his Radio Corporation of
America began the National Broadcasting Company's service as a way of boosting
sales of RCA radios. His service was unusual for having two networks - NBC
Red and NBC Blue. The three networks, plus the smaller Mutual Broadcasting
System dominated the airwaves of America in such a way that television could
only really be done by them - and they didn't want the competition.
Because of
NBC's ownership by RCA, when the threat of television started to draw very
close in the late 1930s, NBC began to plan a station in New York.
Broadcasting from the Empire State Building, the programmes were limited and
tended to be versions of the more popular radio programmes with one
difference: advertising and sponsorship were not allowed on television until
1941.
CBS were
caught on the hop. Without a big industrial giant as a parent, they had no
need to invest in television and no cross subsidy to do it with.
Nevertheless, the minor splash NBC Television made at the World's Fair in New
York was enough to force Paley's hand and CBS Television began in 1940.
The birth of
advertising on television in 1941 - Bulova watches holding the title of
'world's first television commercial' - should have begun a boom in American
television. But it was not to be. When the Japanese attacked Hawaii in that
year, and the United States finally broke from its decades-long isolation to
join World War Two, television again found itself on hold. This time, the
need for RCA to produce radar screens and the three networks - NBC, CBS and
DuMont - to transmit programmes related to civil defence meant that television
development ceased.
The huge
technological leap that WWII brought to the world so nearly destroyed by it
also benefited television. Improved quality receivers and transmitters had
been invented as part of the push towards a better radar system, while the
pause in the marketing and development of the medium had given the Federal
Communications Commission time to form a National Television System Committee
to oversee future technical standards.
NBC found
wartime to be both the making of its news reputation and the end of the
two-network era. Congress forced RCA to divest itself of one network and the
less popular NBC Blue became the independent American Broadcasting Company in
1943.
This led to a
new powerful force appearing in television, as ABC rapidly began accumulating
affiliates to form ABC Television, accidentally destroying the DuMont network
in the process.
At the end of
the war, whilst much of the now divided world lay in ruins, America uniquely
had both a virtually undamaged infrastructure and money to spend. The
American people suddenly developed a new habit they were to retain for the
rest of the century - Shopping. And shopping for material goods like
televisions meant that they would by default develop a market for advertising
on television.
By the time
all the major markets in America had network stations in 1951, a love affair
between the American public and television had began that would come to
dominate leisure time, spending patterns and virtually all parts of family
life.
Russ J Graham
Compilation © 2002 Transdiffusion Broadcasting System
Text © 2002 Russ J Graham. All rights reserved. Used with permission
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