Turner Classic Movies will be paying tribute to him Sunday night.
Isn't saying "father of the 24 hour news cycle" the best way of recognizing what CNN was, initially? Remember, in the first decades of CNN, it was a news station, not one with commentary and opinion most of the day.So I have to hear Fox News Radio, since our station runs it. They did a story about Ted Turner's passing today. Mentioned that he was the "father of the 24 hour news cycle" and that he owned the Braves, and founded TBS, TNT, The Cartoon Netwqork and TCM. BUT.....................
No mention of CNN. Small and Petty, and tells you all you need to know.
Absolutely.The man deserves every bit of of honor and respect he's being shown in the industry today.
Microwave was used starting in the 1950s to bring distant broadcast stations to translators and CATV systems in remote areas. That's how the first superstations, including WTCG, started. By the 1960s, microwave networks brought the LA independent stations as far east as West Texas, the Denver stations up into Montana and Wyoming, WTCG into various parts of the south and the NYC independent stations upstate as far as Buffalo.
But there was no such thing yet as an "original CATV channel." CATV providers could do local origination that was usually mostly just scrolling text or a camera panning across weather readouts. Cheaper video equipment in the early 1970s started to make it possible to do more with these local channels, and you began seeing local news and variety programming showing up in areas that might have been too small to support a broadcast TV station.
These were generally strictly local operations. HBO in 1974 was the first to break that mold, using microwave distribution to send some old movies and regional live sports around Pennsylvania and surrounding states.
Two years later, HBO and WTCG went up on the satellite, and that was really the first time cable systems around the country had access to quality programming that was more than just relaying broadcast stations.
It's pretty amazing how fast things boomed from there - go just six years forward from 1976 and by 1982 you had CNN, ESPN, Showtime, the Weather Channel, MTV, Nickelodeon, ARTS, USA Network, regional sports networks and so on. But none of that existed as late as the mid 70s. And at the center of it ALL was Ted Turner.
Isn't saying "father of the 24 hour news cycle" the best way of recognizing what CNN was, initially? Remember, in the first decades of CNN, it was a news station, not one with commentary and opinion most of the day.
Absolutely.
I remember that period of time when Turner sold his dad's profitable billboard company to invest in, OMG, a UHF TV station. How crazy.
But that was the same era when another company, MCI used microwave relays placed along railroad right-of-ways to compete with AT&T for long distance phone services.
"MCI was the first significant competitor to break AT&T's long-distance monopoly in the late 1960s and 1970s. After winning legal battles against the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and AT&T regarding their "Execunet" service, MCI paved the way for competition that ultimately led to the 1984 breakup of Ma Bell."
Today, we consider free long distance to be our "right". But back then, like long distance and AT&T, local TV stations had a monopoly. Turner provide a wealth of content via free channels that you only had to get a cable service to receive. He expanded our universe.
I recall sitting in my home office in Puerto Rico when Kuwait was invaded, watching Anderson Cooper hunched below his hotel windowsill as bombs exploded nearby. CNN brought the world to me... out on an island in the Caribbean... as history was being made. Ted Turner brought that to me.
Very true. Our national sales department at WHYI/WHTT in Miami in the early 80's could spend thousands a month on long distance for national sales. It went down to a couple of hundred when we got MCI.Talk about long distance, good night, I remember when visiting my aunt and uncle over in the next county, you had to pay, to call just a couple miles down the road to a Greensboro number. Long distance was special and expensive in those days.
Very true. Our national sales department at WHYI/WHTT in Miami in the early 80's could spend thousands a month on long distance for national sales. It went down to a couple of hundred when we got MCI.
Another issue regarding long distance. Talking to or from the outer suburbs of many big cities was toll call territory. That is why The Pulse and Hooper ratings did not survey the outer areas or the whole metro area... too expensive.
People who innovated the used of new technology were just as much pioneers as the creators. Ted Turner used every technical advance at his reach to bring his "cable channels" to people; he realized that there were things people wanted that had never been technically possible and he applied new tech to change that.
Scott, you bring up something I've wondered about, but never asked. When did the local Public Access (I believe that's the term) stations start? In the Greensboro, NC metro, we had two different cable companies back in the 80s, etc. We in Guilford County (outside Greensboro) were on Alert Cable and I can't remember what was in Greensboro proper and both had different channel lineups (of course) and different Public Access channels, but both of the latter were on channel eight.
I'm not @fybush but a little Internet research appears to go a long, long way.
According to both
Public-access television - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
and
the FCC actually mandated public access telivision back in 1969 with the first channels appearing a year or so later. Happy reading!
Myrtle Beach had one of those cameras showing weather readings. There were ads also.But there was no such thing yet as an "original CATV channel." CATV providers could do local origination that was usually mostly just scrolling text or a camera panning across weather readouts.
I had heard a couple of stories about "Turner Time" with the shows starting at :05 and :35 - one was the aforementioned standing out in the TV Guides. The other one I had heard was that people tended to channel surf to see what was on at the top and bottom of the hour. If they didn't find anything good, they wouldn't miss the start times of programs on WTBS. Of course, just that unconventional time fact would also keep people who were already watching WTBS tuned in, because they would likely miss the start of other programs by design and then would probably just stay with WTBS!The :05 was to get a separate listing in the print media like Newspapers and I guessTV Guide. I can't confirm TVGuide because we always had a daily newspaper with TV listings. No need to waste money on TVGuide.
Hogan (Terry Bollea) was already a long-established mega star before ever going to WCW in 1994.Without Ted Turner, we wouldn't have had.....
Braves baseball nationally on (W)TBS
TNT's giant library of classic MGM and RKO movies (everybody with a VCR taped many movies off TNT back in the day)
WCW Wrestling on TBS, which led to the overnight success and international popularity of the late Hulk Hogan
Larry King Live and the rolling news cycle
Headline News, a half-hour of news all day, every day
Cartoon Network, a small network with mostly older cartoons, grew into one of the most-watched children's networks. Not to mention, we wouldn't have The Powerpuff Girls, Dexter's Laboratory, Ed, Edd, and Eddy, Adult Swim, etc.
Turner Classic Movies, which needs no explanation, was the home of the late Robert Osborne for many years, a true class act in the cinema.
Oh, I almost forgot. Those James Bond, John Wayne, and Perry Mason marathons.
Ted Turner brought cable TV out of its newborn niche era and into an everyday part of American life and entertainment.
RIP and condolences to his family and friends.![]()
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Say hi to Larry King, Aaron Brown, Bernard Shaw, Tom Braden ("on the left" - remember Crossfire?) and the Hulk for us.
He was at the end of his career by the time he got to WCW.Hogan (Terry Bollea) was already a long-established mega star before ever going to WCW in 1994.