FrontPage NetworkEra

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Television certainly began as a network-organized medium . . . . By the early 1960s, network-era conventions were more fully in operation: the television set (and for some, an antenna) provided the extent of necessary technology; competition was primarily limited to programming supplied to local affiliates by three national networks that dictated production terms with studios; the networks offered the only outlets for high-budget original programming; thirty-second advertisements—the majority of which were sold in packages before the beginning of the season—supplied the dominant form of economic support and were premised upon rudimentary information about audience size; and audiences, which exercised no control over when they could view particular programs, chose among few, undifferentiated programming options.
- Lotz, Amanda D. (2007-11-01). The Television Will Be Revolutionized (Kindle Locations 264-269). NYU Press academic. Kindle Edition.

NBC
CBS
ABC
U.S. “television” meant the networks ABC, CBS, and NBC.
. . . . These networks were organized hierarchically with many layers of managers, and each was administered by a figurehead with whom the identity and vision of the network could be identified.
. . . . [T]he networks forced producers to shoulder significant risk while offering limited reward through a system in which the producers financed the complete cost of production and received license fees (payments from the networks) often 20 percent less than costs.
- Lotz, Amanda D. (2007-11-01). The Television Will Be Revolutionized (Kindle Locations 282-283). NYU Press academic. Kindle Edition.
Single-sponsoring to multi-sponsoring program
Television was predominantly
* a non-portable,
* domestic medium,
* with most homes owning just one set.

. . . . These networks were organized hierarchically with many layers of managers, and each was administered by a figurehead with whom the identity and vision of the network could be identified.8



Early television unquestionably evolved from the network organization of radio.
- Lotz, Amanda D. (2007-11-01). The Television Will Be Revolutionized (Kindle Locations 255-257). NYU Press academic. Kindle Edition.

Television certainly began as a network-organized medium . . . . By the early 1960s, network-era conventions were more fully in operation: the television set (and for some, an antenna) provided the extent of necessary technology; competition was primarily limited to programming supplied to local affiliates by three national networks that dictated production terms with studios; the networks offered the only outlets for high-budget original programming; thirty-second advertisements—the majority of which were sold in packages before the beginning of the season—supplied the dominant form of economic support and were premised upon rudimentary information about audience size; and audiences, which exercised no control over when they could view particular programs, chose among few, undifferentiated programming options.
- Lotz, Amanda D. (2007-11-01). The Television Will Be Revolutionized (Kindle Locations 264-269). NYU Press academic. Kindle Edition.

U.S. “television” meant the networks ABC, CBS, and NBC.

. . . . These networks were organized hierarchically with many layers of managers, and each was administered by a figurehead with whom the identity and vision of the network could be identified.

. . . . The networks forced producers to shoulder significant risk while offering limited reward through a system in which the producers financed the complete cost of production and received license fees (payments from the networks) often 20 percent less than costs.
- Lotz, Amanda D. (2007-11-01). The Television Will Be Revolutionized (Kindle Locations 282-283). NYU Press academic. Kindle Edition.

Single-sponsoring to multi-sponsoring program
Television was predominantly
  • a non-portable,
  • domestic medium,
  • with most homes owning just one set.




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