I had friends who had home dishes in the late 80s but didn't get to play with them. When I worked in a TV station in Indiana, we had the CBS dishes that were automatically switched by the network (they could even switch a specific region for one commercial break), different receivers for recording syndicated show feeds, and one we used for sports backhauls, newsfeeds, some shows and miscellaneous, and late at night when not in use, I got to play with that. CBS and ABC was scrambled by then (mostly but there were exceptions), NBC was in the clear (including their Mountain Time feed, though West Coast was a spot beam). There were the pre-feeds of network shows (I assumed from the production companies to the networks). Most of the syndicated show feeds were in the clear ("how do you know ALL the Jeopardy answers!"). There seemed to be 9,762 home shopping channels, "Shepherd's Chapel" which had the same preacher 24/7 and some oddities like a preview of the Las Vegas Television Network, which in addition to shows about old Las Vegas, ran soft porn overnight. When one of the satellites went down, and networks had to scramble for space, we found a Montreal French language station that mostly carried U.S. movies and shows dubbed into French. This was everything from The Blues Brothers, to the Adam West Batman (le pow?), to Dougie Howser M.D. (Docteur Doogie). There was always something interesting.