In the days before character generators and computer graphics, TV stations and networks used slides, title cards and various other visual aids.
One of my favorite types of graphics from those pre-computer days was the "numeral flaps", known variously as "Solari boards", after an Italian company that purportedly manufactured them, or, as onetime ABC News executive Av Westin referred to generically as "digital display units".
During the late 1960's into the 1970's, you might have seen these white-on-black numeral flaps either on game shows [as scoring or timing displays], election night [for vote tallies], or sporting events [NBA basketball or some football post-game shows]. Even after they went out of style in the early 1980's, the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Muscular Dystrophy Telethon continued to use a variation of those numeral flaps [black-on-white] for a running count of viewer pledges.
The fun part of these is that gap between 0 and 1 counting forward, or between 0 and 9 counting backward.
I know that Solari [ www.solari.it ] still makes numeral flaps today, and you might see some variation of those on ESPN Classic's "Classic Now" show, but I kind of miss the old flaps and those clicking sounds that came with them.
One of my favorite types of graphics from those pre-computer days was the "numeral flaps", known variously as "Solari boards", after an Italian company that purportedly manufactured them, or, as onetime ABC News executive Av Westin referred to generically as "digital display units".
During the late 1960's into the 1970's, you might have seen these white-on-black numeral flaps either on game shows [as scoring or timing displays], election night [for vote tallies], or sporting events [NBA basketball or some football post-game shows]. Even after they went out of style in the early 1980's, the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Muscular Dystrophy Telethon continued to use a variation of those numeral flaps [black-on-white] for a running count of viewer pledges.
The fun part of these is that gap between 0 and 1 counting forward, or between 0 and 9 counting backward.
I know that Solari [ www.solari.it ] still makes numeral flaps today, and you might see some variation of those on ESPN Classic's "Classic Now" show, but I kind of miss the old flaps and those clicking sounds that came with them.