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The New Technologies, Part I: Broadcasting

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'Our inventions are wont to be pretty toys, which distract our attention from ... Amateur radio operators talk to each other. Used in WWI, but not to public. Radio ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The New Technologies, Part I: Broadcasting


1
The New Technologies, Part I Broadcasting
  • Journalism Traditions JMSC0025
  • Assistant Professor Doreen Weisenhaus
  • Oct 2007

2
Some early views
  • Our inventions are wont to be pretty toys, which
    distract our attention from serious things.They
    are but improved means to an unimproved end.
    Henry David Thoreau, 1854
  • What did he mean?

3
Some early views
  • With the arrival of the telegraph, mere
    newspapers the circulators of intelligence
    merely must submit to destiny, and go out of
    existence James Gordon Bennett, founder, The
    New York Herald
  • Bennett meant this in a positive way. What was
    his point?

4
Early tech developments, pre-broadcast
  • Photography
  • 1829, developed by French painter Louis Jacques
    Daguerre
  • Used during U.S. Civil War (1861-1865). First
    war to photograph extensively
  • 1880s photographs began appearing in newspapers

5
Early tech developments, pre-broadcast
  • Telegraph
  • 1840s, electric telegraph as much a political
    development as technological. 1844 Morse code
  • Faster connections of people and places, markets,
    armies, governments
  • 1858, 1866, first transatlantic cables
  • Impact on journalists inverted pyramid
  • Telephone
  • 1870s
  • Both technologies handled differently by
  • governments. Europe control by the state.
  • US private enterprise, intense competition
  • monopolies

6
Early tech developments, pre-broadcast
  • Moving pictures (mass media)
  • 1860s, mechanisms for producing two-dimensional
    images in motion
  • Celluloid film developed for still photography
    could capture objects in motion
  • 1880s, motion picture cameras, projectors
  • 1920s, sound tracks for films (talkies)

7
Early tech developments
  • Newsreels
  • 1908, created by Pathe Freres, France
  • A newsreel is a documentary film regularly
    released in a public presentation place
    containing filmed news stories.
  • Staple of North American, British, Commonwealth
    countries (especially Canada, Australia and New
    Zealand), and throughout Europe, from silent era
    until 1960s when television news broadcasting
    completely supplanted its role.

8
Radio
  • 1895, Guglielmo Marconi wireless telegraphy, a
    means of sending Morse code through air
  • 1906, American Reginald Fessenden devised means
    for radio waves to carry signals for sound
  • Amateur radio operators talk to each other.
  • Used in WWI, but not to public

9
Radio
  • Broadcasting distribution of audio and/or video
    signals to a number of recipients that belong in
    a large group
  • 1920, Westinghouse Electric launched first
    commercial radio station, KDKA in Pittsburgh,
    with report on Harding-Cox Presidential voting
  • 1922 576 radio stations in US
  • How to make ? Originally, to sell more radios!
    But ATT charged for those who broadcast from its
    transmitters a toll for audience access. Later,
    became model for advertising basis
  • 1925 5.5 million radio sets in US
  • 1926 ATT sells to RCA (Radio Corp of America)
    which forms NBC (National Broadcasting Co.).
    Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) founded a year
    later

10
Radios impact
  • Much of early radio journalism borrowed from
    print but medium forced changes in vocabulary and
    sentence structure. Why?
  • 1930s First regular broadcast of daily news on
    radio. Modern newswriting style (short sentences,
    clear concise wording) honed on radio. Developed
    by Edward Murrow.
  • 1937 coverage of Hindenburg crash in NJ
    http//www.otr.com/hindenburg.shtml (original
    recording)
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v8V5KXgFLia4 (tv
    newsreel added)
  • 1940-1945 WWII was to radio what the Civil War
    was to newspapers Bring news home!
  • Big story 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor
  • Most reported live, although later used taped
    recorder (invented by Germans)
  • Used by President to communicate to whole country
  • Presence of national networks contributed to
    growth of federal political power in 1930s, 1940s
  • Contributed to national community

11
Radio in the UK
  • Different government controls in US. Unlike in
    Europe, no taxes or government control, favored
    policies encouraging new technologies, pluralism
    but eventually US saw need for central control.
  • 1922, first radio broadcasts in UK. BBC licensed
    by Post Office, financed on radio receivers.
    Thus, monopoly structure, tax financing and
    subordination to Government.
  • 1923 no advertising!
  • 1927 Became a public corporation. Restricted in
    content no editorial positions on its own, for
    example.

12
Television
  • 1884, transforming moving pictures in electronic
    signals
  • 1927, first system demonstrated in San Francisco
    by Philo Farnsworth
  • 1939 first television baseball game
  • 1941, CBS broadcasting two 15-minute newscasts in
    NY
  • Earliest TV newscasts contracted with newsreel
    companies for visuals (originally TV was mix of
    radio and newsreels)
  • At first, few TV news film crews cameras too
    bulky, time-consuming to develop film and send to
    NY, limitations (since filmed reports could not
    be aired for days, used for planned events,
    features)
  • 1946 6,000 TV sets
  • 1951 guess how many? (12 million!) And why?

13
Television
  • 1950s
  • Golden Age
  • CBS, NBC began own film reports with camera crews
    in largest cities
  • Early big story Sinking of Andrea Doria, 1956
  • 1960s
  • Kennedy-Nixon debates
  • Coverage of Kennedys assassination
  • Lee Harvey Oswald shot on TV
  • Vietnam War coverage and protesters
  • Much entertainment. 1961 vast wasteland
  • 1964 color

14
Clips
  • British WW2 newsreels (note news bias)
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vm0-fVLCnsBs
  • Nazi newsreel on Battle of Britain
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vU9mFvq8PjNs
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vHMiGc0wZ8a0
  • Plymouth news caravan/ 1950
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v-YyveYWpyYs
  • 1954 Taiwan!!
  • 1975 CBS fall of Saigon
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vg9l5AnATlIU
  • 1988 TVB Pearl
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vJ8RPnlwJ6bM
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vj4JOjcDFtBE
  • Challenger CNN Live 2.23
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v5hQL0NWS1Rc
  • More Challenger, parents of teacher astronaut

15
Public broadcasting
  • US 1967 think tank report recommended 4th
    noncommercial network Public Broadcasting
    System. Now, more than 300 stations
  • UK BBC (seen as a good counterbalance to papers)
  • HK RTHK
  • Compare funding Private fundraising (US) v. tax
    on sale of TV sets (BBC) v. direct government
    subsidy (RTHK)

16
Cable television and other new technologies
  • 1970s and 1980s emergence of cable as alternative
    television to major broadcasters
  • CNN 1980s, first 24-hour network, cable
  • 1980s home video recorders
  • More and better cable
  • 1990s the Internet more on this next week!
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