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The Past, Present and Future of Broadcasting

The Past, Present and Future of Broadcasting. Presented By: LeAnne Agne. The Technology Explosion. 1910 First radio signal broadcast to the public 1916 Phonograph concert service offered three times a week Nov. 7, 1916 First broadcast election coverage in the U.S.

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The Past, Present and Future of Broadcasting

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  1. The Past, Present and Future of Broadcasting Presented By: LeAnne Agne

  2. The Technology Explosion • 1910 First radio signal broadcast to the public • 1916 Phonograph concert service offered three times a week • Nov. 7, 1916 First broadcast election coverage in the U.S.

  3. The Technology Explosion • 1917-1918Department of Commerce suspends amateur licenses; takes over wireless land stations • Fall of 1919Wartime ban is lifted; the Radio Corporation of America is formed

  4. GrowingCompetition • Nov. 1919First broadcast of a football game • Sept. 6, 1920WWJ becomes the first to broadcast a prize fight • Fall of 1920 First college station started

  5. GrowingCompetition • 1921Warren G. Harding becomes first president to speak over the airwaves; first baseball game with a play-by-play airs • Jan. 1922AT&T announces plans to enter broadcasting

  6. Networking Power • Feb. 12, 1924 First network sponsored show • Feb. 22, 1924 President Calvin Coolidge broadcasts from the white house • July 1925 First station to operate a 50-kilowatt transmitter

  7. Networking Power • April 1926 Frequency choice ruling • July 1926 Radio jurisdiction ruling • Nov. 1926 NBC debuts with 24 stations • March 1927 First FRC meeting

  8. Television Enters the Picture • 1925 Synchronized transmission of pictures and sound • 1926 New York Times editor dismisses TV as a passing fancy • April 1927 First successful long distance TV demonstration

  9. Television Enters the Picture • Sept. 1927 First electronic TV transmission demonstration • Feb. 1928FRC grants first TV license to Jenkins Laboratories • May 1928General Electric starts regularly scheduled programming

  10. Battle of the Giants • Oct. 1931 NBC puts a Television transmitter atop the Empire State Building • 1932 RCAdemonstrates 120 line all-electronic television system • Nov. 8, 1932CBS TV transmits coverage of the presidential election to estimated 7,500 sets

  11. Battle of the Giants • 1934-1935 Stations begin switching from mechanical to electronic systems • Summer of 1936 343-line TV signal transmitted from the Empire State Building • Apr. 1, 1937CBS applies for an experimental video station with a transmitter in the Chrysler building tower.

  12. Signal Heard ‘Round the World Oct. 1927 First international broadcasting license issued Dec. 1928 NBC sets up permanent coast-to-coast network 1935 FCCallows stations to re-broadcast June 1936 First 500,000-watt radio station

  13. Signal Heard ‘Round the World May 6, 1937 Hindenburg disaster Oct. 30, 1938 “War of the Worlds” broadcast Oct. 1939 Stations begin using FM system Oct. 1943 Blue Network changes to ABC

  14. WAR OF THE WORLDS

  15. Impressive Media

  16. A Part of Our Daily Lives The All Powerful Media

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