The King Bee said:...I believe such notification was required by the FCC up until the mid '50s...you will see and/or hear such notification on almost all early '50s programming. ("This has been a filmed presentation.")
Tim-In-Houston said:Piggybacking on this topic, so forgive me.
I recall seeing during the end credits of local newscasts through the 80s (at the very least) and into the mid-90s (in Houston, no less, on KPRC) "portions (of tonight's newscast was) pre-recorded."
Wasn't is obvious that news reports were pre-recorded? Or were certain segments (sports, or the "C" block) of those newscasts taped in advance? If so, when did that practice end?
Thanks!
Kind of along the same lines, why did they feel the need to tell us that any given TV show "was taped live before a studio audience"? You mean the laughter wasn't "canned"?Tim-In-Houston said:Piggybacking on this topic, so forgive me.
I recall seeing during the end credits of local newscasts through the 80s (at the very least) and into the mid-90s (in Houston, no less, on KPRC) "portions (of tonight's newscast was) pre-recorded."
Wasn't is obvious that news reports were pre-recorded? Or were certain segments (sports, or the "C" block) of those newscasts taped in advance? If so, when did that practice end?
Thanks!
The example that you gave was probably obvious to anyone who lives there, but I'm thinking that they would still put "file footage" on the screen if it was not, especially if it was relevant to the story. For some reason, they feel the need to put "commercial" on the screen whenever they show parts of a TV commercial as part of a newscast, as if we couldn't figure that out for ourselves! :Lkeller said:Another disclaimer local TV news used to do: a "File Footage" bug on screen to indicate that the film or tape accompanying a story was not from the story itself, but was old footage from the archives.
They don't do that anymore. In San Francisco recently, a local news program ran a story on our local transit agency - Muni. They showed unlabelled file footage of Muni street cars going down Market Street. You could clearly see an advertisement on the streetcar for a local morning-drive radio personality. Problem is - the radio station flipped formats about 8 years ago, and the DJ in the photo died about 3 years ago under tragic circumstances.
Lkeller said:Another disclaimer local TV news used to do: a "File Footage" bug on screen to indicate that the film or tape accompanying a story was not from the story itself, but was old footage from the archives.
They don't do that anymore. In San Francisco recently, a local news program ran a story on our local transit agency - Muni. They showed unlabelled file footage of Muni street cars going down Market Street. You could clearly see an advertisement on the streetcar for a local morning-drive radio personality. Problem is - the radio station flipped formats about 8 years ago, and the DJ in the photo died about 3 years ago under tragic circumstances.
Tim-In-Houston said:Lkeller said:Another disclaimer local TV news used to do: a "File Footage" bug on screen to indicate that the film or tape accompanying a story was not from the story itself, but was old footage from the archives.
They don't do that anymore. In San Francisco recently, a local news program ran a story on our local transit agency - Muni. They showed unlabelled file footage of Muni street cars going down Market Street. You could clearly see an advertisement on the streetcar for a local morning-drive radio personality. Problem is - the radio station flipped formats about 8 years ago, and the DJ in the photo died about 3 years ago under tragic circumstances.
To me, that's *extremely* lazy reporting. Seriously...how long would it have taken a photog (or if you're KRON, the VJ) to drive (or walk) a few blocks and shoot a few minutes of fresh video.
Wasn't all forms of pre-recorded programs require some sort of notification that it was pre-recorded? Programs that were videotaped required some sort of "This program was recorded" announcement into the 1970s, though filmed programs may have already been exempt by the 1960s, as its quality was already obvious.
Mark said:I recall in the latter years of "All In The Family" they used to say "'All In The Family' was played to a studio audience for live responses"
Mark said:I thought this was gonna be about Eva Gabor saying "This has been a Filmways Presentation Dahling"![]()
If you ever saw a sitcom from the 60's (Bewitched, I dream of Jeannie, etc) you could see that they were filmed in a closed set. It was All in the Family that broke away from that practice and went back to taping in front of a live audience just like I love Lucy. Good Times even went one step further with " From Studio City in Hollywood, Its...visaman said:Kind of along the same lines, why did they feel the need to tell us that any given TV show "was taped live before a studio audience"? You mean the laughter wasn't "canned"?
Kurt Toy said:Good Times even went one step further with " From Studio City in Hollywood, Its...
You mean TELEVISION City in Hollywood.