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ITV, American style
Americans like
myself would be very surprised to have visited Britain in the 1950s and early
60s. By the middle 50s, most American television set owners had access to
three channels. In some cities, like Chicago, it would be five channels. In
New York and Los Angeles, seven channels each.
Britain, of
course, had fewer frequencies for television, and as a result only one channel
until the mid-fifties. But even after ITV came into being some British viewers
would have a choice of only two channels for many years to come.
What if the US
regulatory agency for broadcasting, the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) had only a limited number of television broadcasting frequencies and
room for no more than one national network? How would the FCC have determined
who got what stations?
Had there been
only room for one national television network in the US, based on a scarcity
of channels, the FCC may well have done what the British did - divide the
country into regions with each region going to a different broadcaster.
Let us assume
that this was going to be the case in America, but let us also assume that the
sound radio broadcast frequencies as we know them also existed, meaning there
would be numerous radio broadcasters but few television broadcasters. Who
might have gotten what in what region?
Given its huge
population, New York might have been made a separate region, like London. The
National Broadcasting Company (NBC), the largest US radio network in the 1940s
and subsidiary of RCA, probably would have gotten New York City.
In the "golden
days" of American radio, "The Yankee Network" (founded by a man named John
Shepard) provided programmes to radio stations throughout New England; perhaps
they would have gotten a TV licence for the New England region and New York
State (except for New York City). A midwest (Great Lakes states) region
probably would have resulted in spirited competition between Chicago radio
station WGN and Cincinnati radio station WLW for the regional licence. A
licence for the Middle Atlantic States region might have involved bids from
radio broadcasters in Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington. Most likely to
get it might have been WFIL in Philadelphia, based on the fact they had fed
some programmes to the American Broadcasting Company (ABC; once known as the
NBC Blue) network.
The
Southeastern states weren't as populated as they are today, and such a TV
region might have included everything from Tennessee to North Carolina and
southwards, including Georgia, Florida, etc. The regional licence probably
would have gone to Nashville radio station WSM, although Atlanta radio station
WSB probably would have bid. The Northern Plains states (Iowa, Minnesota, the
Dakotas, etc.) probably would have wound up in the hands of radio station KSTP
in Minneapolis/St. Paul.
The
Southwestern states (Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona, New Mexico) probably would have
gone to radio station WBAP in Dallas/Fort Worth, while Denver station KOA
would have probably gotten the right to be the television licensee for the
Rocky Mountain states. And the licence for the West Coast (California, Oregon,
Washington State, plus Alaska and Hawaii once they became states) probably
would have gone to Don Lee Broadcasting of Los Angeles, which had a regional
radio network on the West Coast and had been well-regarded in that region.
When ITV came
on the scene in the U.K., a separate organization, Independent Television News
(ITN), was formed to produce news bulletins and news programmes. However, had
the ITV approach taken hold in the United States, the FCC may have decided to
grant a separate licence to someone to produce news programmes. Despite being
a major US nationwide radio network, I feel the Columbia Broadcasting System
(CBS) would not have applied for any regional TV licence, but instead would
have applied for the licence to produce news programmes, especially as CBS had
won wide acclaim throughout the USA for the quality of their radio newscasts
during the Second World War.
The "US TV"
network would have been somewhat "co-operative" like ITV, meaning
local/regional licensees would produce programmes not just for local
broadcast, but for network broadcast as well. Had the above scenario taken
hold in the US it is safe to assume that NBC (New York) and Don Lee (Los
Angeles) would have produced the great majority of US TV programmes, with WGN
in Chicago producing some, and CBS (with studios and newsrooms in both New
York and Washington) producing news bulletins.
Of course,
there were enough television channels available in the United States for three
(and later more) free-to-air broadcast TV networks to become established. But
had there been only room for one TV transmitter in each medium and large sized
city, and only one nationwide network, who knows?
Joseph Gallant
Compilation © 2002 Transdiffusion Broadcasting System
Text © 2002 Joseph Gallant. All rights reserved. Used with permission
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