Films Media Group Sign In | My Account | Cart | Wish List | How To Order  
Films for the Humanities and Sciences Cambridge Educational Shopware Meridian Education
Cable TV and Beyond

This program details the history of this dynamic medium from its modest beginnings. In 1949, cable meant television for locations that had very poor reception or were inaccessible to broadcast signals. By the mid-1970s, cable service began to expand rapidly due to the easing of government restrictions and the use of satellite transmissions. Fiber optics, new cable-ready TVs, and an explosion of programming by an ever-growing number of networks helped to increase the number of available channels from a mere handful to hundreds. In the 1990s, with nearly 60 percent of American households wired for cable, it drew close to parity with the Big Three networks and PBS. More recently, cable has come to mean Internet access as well. For many people, the TV is now a source of personal communication, expanded learning and entertainment, and shopping as viewers use e-mail and the World Wide Web from their TVs. As the world reaps the possibilities of media convergence, what else will come down the cable pipeline? (28 minutes)



 
                

Item#: BVL8515
Copyright date: ©1997
DVD ISBN 978-0-7365-6053-5



Part of the Series : The Film, TV, and Media Industries
     
DVD $99.95
DVD + 3-Year Streaming $149.93
3-Year Streaming $99.95


For additional digital leasing and purchase options
contact a media consultant at 800-257-5126 ext 3502 or sales@films.com.

Prices include public performance rights.
Only available in the US and Canada.





Television History
View Video Clip
Few innovations of the 20th century can top the television in overall effect on culture and daily life. This program covers the development of TV from the labs of John Baird, Philo T. Farnsworth, and Vladimir Zworykin to the present day. Pioneered as...(more details)
 
DVD $99.95
DVD + 3-Year Streaming $149.93
3-Year Streaming $99.95
Film Industry
View Video Clip
In spite of competition by other media, movies have remained a perennial favorite of American viewing audiences. But what is it like to make them? This program analyzes the film industry from a variety of technical, financial, legal, and business per...(more details)
 
DVD $99.95
DVD + 3-Year Streaming $149.93
3-Year Streaming $99.95
Broadcast Television
View Video Clip
In 1927, Herbert Hoover made TV history by appearing in one of America's first experimental broadcasts; 33 years later, the televising of the Kennedy-Nixon debates changed the face of political history forever. This program covers the progress of bro...(more details)
 
DVD $99.95
DVD + 3-Year Streaming $149.93
3-Year Streaming $99.95
Radio Industry
View Video Clip
Many technology and mass media pundits have predicted the demise of radio, but radio's mystique and extraordinary ability to adapt have repeatedly proved them wrong. In this program, the business side of public and commercial radio broadcasting is ex...(more details)
 
DVD $99.95
DVD + 3-Year Streaming $149.93
3-Year Streaming $99.95
Television News
View Video Clip
How do you juggle journalistic ideals with bottom-line concerns? Each day both local and national TV news operations attempt to report on the day's events in a way that will maximize viewers and advertising dollars. But what is the downside of this t...(more details)
 
DVD $99.95
DVD + 3-Year Streaming $149.93
3-Year Streaming $99.95


See additional titles in Mass Communication



About | Contact | Privacy Policy | Terms | Help | Request a Catalog © Films Media Group. All rights reserved.

132 West 31st Street
17th Floor
New York, NY 10001
P 800.322.8755
F 800.329.6687 and 609.671.0266
E custserv@films.com
Films Media Group, Films for the Humanities & Sciences,
Cambridge Educational, Meridian Education, Shopware and
their respective logos are trademarks of Films Media Group.