A potpourri of genres
Although most programs fell within this escapist framework, the prime-time network schedules of the 1960s exhibited more genre diversity than would be seen again until the cable era. Variety shows (The Red Skelton Show [NBC/CBS/NBC, 1951–71]; The Ed Sullivan Show [CBS, 1948–71]; and others), westerns (Gunsmoke; Bonanza [NBC, 1959–73]; and others), game shows (What’s My Line [CBS, 1950–67]; To Tell the Truth [CBS, 1956–68]; and others), historical dramas (The Untouchables [ABC, 1959–63]; Combat! [ABC, 1962–67]; and others), an animated series (The Flintstones [ABC, 1960–66]), a forerunner of 21st-century “reality” shows (Candid Camera [ABC/NBC/CBS, 1948–67]), a cold war espionage parody (Get Smart [NBC/CBS, 1965–70]), a prime-time soap opera (Peyton Place [ABC, 1964–69]), animal shows (Lassie [CBS, 1954–71]; Flipper [NBC, 1964–68]), and a collection of sitcoms and dramas featuring lawyers, cops, doctors, and detectives all made the Nielsen top-30 lists during this decade.
The 1960s also saw the introduction of the made-for-TV movie. By mid-decade, film production was not keeping pace with network needs. In 1964 NBC began airing full-length movies that had been made especially for television. CBS and ABC each followed with two original features of their own in 1966. By 1970, 50 new made-for-television movies were broadcast on the networks. Although they were produced on shorter schedules and with lower budgets than feature films made for theatrical distribution, made-for-TV movies could present more complex narratives than a typical episode of a series, and they were not restricted, as series episodes were, by the episodic formula. Because they had not been seen in theatres, made-for-TV movies could be promoted as special events—“world premieres,” as NBC called them in 1966—and they often outperformed regularly scheduled programming. They could also serve double duty as pilot programs for potential new series. (Shorter 30- or 60-minute pilots that were not picked up as series were virtually worthless; a movie-length pilot could recoup its production costs by being broadcast as a “world premiere.”) By the 1970s ABC was broadcasting as many as three made-for-TV movies per week in regular time slots. These independent stories, united under a single series title, signaled a return, in a different guise, to the dramatic anthology format of the 1940s and ’50s. Many titles achieved a significant amount of critical acclaim, including Duel (ABC, 1971), Brian’s Song (ABC, 1971), The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (CBS, 1974), and The Execution of Private Slovik (NBC, 1974).
Technology and educational TV
Satellites
Although colour TV was introduced to consumers in 1954, less than 1 percent of homes had a colour set by the end of that year. Ten years later, in fact, nearly 98 percent of American homes still did not have one. It was not until 1964 that NBC was finally broadcasting over half its programs in colour; CBS reached that threshold the following year. Besides the steady introduction of colour television sets into American homes, the most significant development of 1960s television technology was satellite communications. Before the launching of communications satellites, pre-recorded programs were delivered physically to the networks, which in turn sent them to their affiliated stations by means of specially dedicated phone lines. Stations would then deliver the signals over the air to be received via antennae by households within each station’s range. Satellites made it possible to deliver audiovisual signals from remote locations directly to the networks and, eventually, to local stations and even to individual homes. Early satellites, such as Telstar, which was launched by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) in 1962, were capable of sending pictures across great distances, but only during periods in which the satellite was in a favourable position. Shortly thereafter, geostationary satellites were launched. They orbited at a speed and altitude that made them appear stationary with respect to a location on the ground and made satellite communication available at any time. Comsat, the Communications Satellite Act of 1962, which became law shortly after the launch of Telstar, created the Communications Satellite Corporation, a private company half of which was to be offered in stock to the general public and half of which would be owned by such major communications companies as AT&T and Western Union. Comsat also administered Intelsat (the International Telecommunications Satellite Organization), which was set up to coordinate a global system of satellite ground stations.
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U.S. serviceman watching television with his family, 1954.
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Milton Berle.
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George Burns and Gracie Allen at the CBS microphone.
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Sammy Davis, Jr., on an episode of The Ed Sullivan Show, Jan. 6, 1963.
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Jay Silverheels (left) and Clayton Moore as Tonto and the Lone Ranger, respectively, 1951.
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(Left to right) actors Jackie Gleason, Art Carney, Audrey Meadows, and Joyce Randolph gather around a table in a still from the television series, The Honeymooners, circa1955.
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Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz.
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U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy (covering microphones) during an investigation into communist infiltration of the government.
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Edward R. Murrow, 1954
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Ken Curtis (left) in the role of Festus Hagen and James Arness as Marshal Matt Dillon in a scene from the television western series Gunsmoke.
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