cable television. about 70 percent of u.s. households have cable tv

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Cable Television

Cable Television

about 70 percent of U.S. households have cable TV

TedTurner

Ted Turner and Jane Fonda

RupertMurdoch

Cable and Satellite: Early Years

• Late 1940s: CATV(Community Antenna Television)

• Used to bring broadcast signal to people in…..

Cable and Satellite: Early Years

Rural mountainous or hilly regions

Cable and Satellite: Early Years

big cities (tall buildings)

Cable HELPED broadcasters get their signal to a wider audience….

But then Cable began to THREATEN, not help, broadcasters….

Cable and Satellite: Early Years

Satellites: Envisioned in 1945 by science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke

(author of 2001: A Space Odyssey)

Clarke article, 1945

Clarke article, 1945

Cable and Satellite:Early Years

• Clarke: imagined 3 satellites in geosynchronous orbit (22,300 miles from earth, traveling at 6,800 mph)

• In this orbit, satellites maintain the same footprint

1958: First satellite launched (Explorer I)

1960: Echo satellite launched: (geosynchronous orbit)

First Communication Satellite Launched :

TelStar1962

(Kennedy era)

Today there are 2,500 satellites (operative and inoperative): J-Track/Nasa shows 900

Did you know there are over eight thousand artificial objects orbiting Earth? Over 2,500 are satellites, operative and inoperative. The remaining objects are orbital debris: parts such as nosecone shrouds, lens, hatch covers, rocket bodies, payloads that have disintegrated or exploded, and even objects that "escape" from manned spacecraft during operations.

--NASA

FCC protects Broadcasting

1. 1965 - The “Must Carry” rule– Local Cable company MUST carry local

broadcasting Channels

2. 1970s - Franchising begins – Only one cable company per municipality– Competition to win cable franchises. – Usually a 15-year monopoly

FCC protects Broadcasting(and supports democracy)

3. By 1972, all cable companies had to supply - Access Channels (PEG)

– (public, education, government)

Bigger threat to broadcasting: New Content

1. HBO (1975) --just movies2. Showtime (1976) --just movies

3. WTBS (1976): 1st Superstation

TBS: Logos, 1976 until today

later other superstations: WGN [Chicago, 1978]WWOR [New York/NJ, 1978]

Satellites: New Content

Cable begins to GROW•CNN (1980)

“Chicken noodle network”

Satellites: New Content

•MTV (1981)(video killed the radio star)

Discovery Channel, launched 1985

Comedy Central, launched 1989

= Franchising FRENZYIntense competition to acquire cable franchises

FCC Allows Cable to GROW:softens rules

(DBS is on the Horizon)

• 1992 - Must Carry rules are relaxed– Every three years, choose Must Carry (no $)

or Retransmission Consent (get $)– Some large broadcast station chains use

Retransmission consent to leverage new cable channels

• Public access rules are eventually relaxed

Fox News--network launched 1996

Fox News--network launched 1996

Cable Programming: Narrowcasting

• More than 250 cable video services offered nationally

• About 7,090 cable Systems• Cable is available to 97% of all

households• 73 % of all U.S. households

subscribe to cable• (27 % use rabbit ears)

Cable Programming: Narrowcasting

Network Broadcasting: “satisfy the masses”

Cable Services: niche programming

Planned and Existing Networks

Cable Programming: Narrowcasting

GROUP PROJECT:Divide into groups of 6Propose a new cable channel that does

two things:a) It should find a unique market nicheb) It should be successful: drawing an

audience that appeals to advertisers (be ready to name advertisers)

Cable Programming: Narrowcasting

RULE #1: IT CAN’T BE YOUR DEMOGRAPHIC

Rule #2: It can’t involve “the 80s” in terms Of programming or culture

Cable Programming: Narrowcasting

• Basic Cable - cable systems pay between – 5 cents (C-SPAN) – more than $3 (ESPN) =per subscriber, per month

(A la carte cable?)• Premium Cable

– HBO– Showtime

• Pay-per-view and Interactive Cable

Cable Programming: Narrowcasting

• VOD - Video on Demand. – Biggest new service. – For digital cable customers. – Downloads programs to digital cable

set top box.

Ownership in Cable• About 7.090 Cable Systems • Most of cable is controlled by MSOs

(multiple system owners)

• Top 5 MSOs control about 70% of cable audience. (Comcast, Time Warner, Cox, Charter, Cablevision)

– Prices keep going up– Increasing amounts of advertising

Ownership in Cable

1996 Telecommunications Act

Ownership in Cable

• 1996 TeleCommunications Act:– ended rate regulation.– Allowed cable and other businesses to enter

each other’s industries (e.g., cable companies now getting into telephone service).

– Despite “promises,” cable rates have REMAINED HIGH AND INCREASED.

– Less than 5 percent of cable customers have competition, which lowers prices significantly

– (Cedar Falls example).

Video: Cable and the 1996 Telecommunication Act

Ownership in Cable

• Cedar Falls Utilities(also Spencer, Hawarden, Larens) have

invested in city-owned cable operating systems.

• Ensured that Cedar Falls was part of the Internet revolution early on.

Broadcast Satellites

•DBS: DIRECT BROADCAST SATELLITE

= BIG THREAT TO CABLE

Broadcast Satellites

• How satellite companies operate

C-Bands: Huge dishes

Broadcast Satellites

Ku-bands: DirectTV /News trucks, etc.

Vincor: satellite company

Broadcast Satellites

• mid-1970s. Big Dish (6.5-10 feet) satellites appear in rural areas.

• 1994. DBS (Direct Broadcast Satellite) television begins. (3 feet or less)

• DirecTV (owned by News Corp.) and EchoStar are the main corporations.

• DirectV merges with Echostar, 2007--FCC JUST APPROVED IT BUT NOT QUITE DONE YET

Broadcast Satellites

• Satellite Radio– XM– Sirius

• INTERNET: download & Stream programming

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