Television
The history of television is at once familiar and unexpected, in that television, like every new medium, experienced a time when it was simultaneously written off as a fad and hailed as a world-changing wave of the future. The truth was somewhat more nuanced, because although television did change the world in serious, wide-ranging ways, it did not do so in the way many early critics and theorists suspected. By examining the evolution of television, including the context of its invention and its impact on other media, it will be possible to better understand not only how the history of television exemplifies the development of all new mediums, from the novel to videogames, but also how the unique qualities of television and its affect on the public consciousness shaped the contemporary world by transitioning humanity from structured monopolies to anarchistic experimentation.
Like many of inventions arising out of the intense scientific interest of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, as a technology television was not the result of a single innovation, but rather the combination of efforts by a number of individuals and organizations reaching all the way back to the first efforts at photography (Armes, 1988, p. 12). Like the myriad machines and devices constructed to play and record audio, the first televisions and television broadcasts were all slightly different and based on the specific designs of whichever scientist or inventor happened to create it (Edgerton, 2007, p. 3). Film production and exhibition was ramping up at the same time that these early television prototypes were being developed, so at first, it seems understandable if the public was not particularly interested in television during the early years of the twentieth century; the idea of transmitting images via electromagnetic waves in a manner similar to radio, though novel, did not appear to threaten the hegemony of film, especially because the earliest television prototypes could not transmit moving images.
It was not until the 1920s that live, moving images became possible, but even then the audience and the broadcasting power was simply not great enough to spark a true change. The first television broadcasts in 1928 were crude, with resolution far below what would be considered the bare minimum today, but they kicked off a gradual process of refinement and development (Huff, 2001, p. 111). Thus, General Electric's 1928 broadcasts were at thirty lines or resolution, meaning that they could only transmit thirty vertical lines of black on a white background, but by 1935 Great Britain was setting standards for television broadcasts as 240 lines of resolution (Huff, 2001, p. 111). The evolution was slow (compared to the exponential developments in media and technology in the twenty-first century), but gradually television broadcasts became easy and of high enough quality to truly break into the media landscape; all it needed now was an audience, and the actual televisions to watch on.
Like with any new medium, television ultimately required the financial backing of the existing media powers to be successful, and it found it in the form of the Radio Corporation of America, or RCA (whose name is today synonymous with television, rather than radio) (Edgerton, 2007, p. 3). RCA was headed by David Sackoff, who had gotten his start working for Guglielmo Marconi, inventor of the wireless telegraph (Edgerton, 2007, p. 4). When Marconi's American holdings were spun off into a separate company, Sackoff became the head of what would turn into RCA. Arguably one of the most important decisions made after the formation of RCA was the development of the National Broadcasting Company in 1926, a broadcasting subsidiary that could also be used to market and sell the actual radios manufactured by RCA (Edgerton, 2007, p. 5). Sackoff parlayed NBC's success in order to drum up public interest for television, so that by 1939, the public had already experienced "the most extensive and ballyhooed series of public relations events ever staged around any mass medium in American history" (Edgerton, 2007, p. ).
The publicity surrounding television's grand debut at the New York World's Fair in 1939 offers a useful point to briefly interrupt the history of television itself in order to discuss it in the context of other arts and media at the time, because in many ways the excited run-up to television's debut can only be explained and understood in the context of the mass media that had been developing for the previous forty years. In short, one may view television as the first medium to truly emerge from within the preexisting context of a mass media environment, rather...
Television in Australia Television itself was quite an invention and made significant changes all around the world. It became common in the United Kingdom and the United States by the end of the Second World War. The American system basically had the commercial system in which government interference wasn't so pronounced. On the other hand, the British system was more government owned and dominated by BBC. The television in Australia has
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S. (Larson-Duyff, p.412). As cable television increased the availability of youth-oriented television programming and children spent even more time in front of the T.V., several sociologists made observations similar to those previously published in connection with the amount of advertising absorbed by children in connection with their exposure to violence on the screen (Henslin, p.67). According to them, constant exposure to violence on television, (even if it was mostly fictional), corresponded
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