Spanning eight decades from the beginnings of commercial radio to the current era of international consolidation and emerging digital platforms, this pioneering volume illuminates the entire course of American broadcasting by offering the first comprehensive history of a major network. Bringing together wide-ranging original articles by leading scholars and industry insiders, it offers a comprehensive view of the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) that brings into focus the development of this key American institution and the ways that it has intersected with, and influenced, the central events of our times. Programs, policy, industry practices and personnel, politics, audiences, marketing, and global influence all come into play. The story the book tells is not just about broadcasting but about a nation’s attempt to construct itself as a culture—with all the underlying concerns, divisions, opportunities, and pleasures. Based on unprecedented research in the extensive NBC archives,
NBC: America’s Network includes a timeline of NBC’s and broadcasting’s development, making it a valuable resource for students and scholars as well as for anyone interested the history of media in the United States.
Tabla de materias
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
PART ONE: BROADCASTING BEGINS, 1919-38
Introduction to Part One
Michele Hilmes
1. NBC and the Network Idea: Defining the ‘American System’
Michele Hilmes
2. ‘Always in Friendly Competition’: NBC and CBS in the First Decade of National Broadcasting
Michael J. Socolow
3. Programming in the Public Interest:
America’s Town Meeting of the Air
David Goodman
4. Regulating Class Conflict on the Air: NBC’s Relationship with Business and Organized Labor
Elizabeth Fones-Wolf and Nathan Godfried
PART TWO: TRANSITIONAL DECADES, 1938-60
Introduction to Part Two
Michele Hilmes
5. Breaking Chains: NBC and the FCC Network Inquiry, 1938-43
Christopher H. Sterling
6. Why Sarnoff Slept: NBC and the Holocaust
David Weinstein
7. Employment and Blue Pencils: NBC, Race, and Representation, 1926-55
Murray Forman
8. NBC, J. Walter Thompson, and the Struggle for Control of Television Programming, 1946-58
Mike Mashon
9. Talent Raids and Package Deals: NBC Loses Its Leadership in the 1950s
Douglas Gomery
PART THREE: NBC AND THE CLASSIC NETWORK SYSTEM, 1960-85
Introduction to Part Three
Michele Hilmes
10. NBC News Documentary: ‘Intelligent Interpretation’ in a Cold War Context
Michael Curtin
11. What Closes on Saturday Night: NBC and Satire
Jeffrey S. Miller
12. The Little Program That Could: The Relationship between NBC and
Star Trek
Máire Messenger Davies and Roberta Pearson
13. Sex as a Weapon: Programming Sexuality in the 1970s
Elana Levine
14. Saturday Morning Children’s Programs on NBC, 1975-2006: A Case Study of Self-Regulation
Karen Hill-Scott and Horst Stipp
PART FOUR: NBC IN THE DIGITAL AGE, 1985 TO THE PRESENT
Introduction to Part Four
Michele Hilmes
15. Must-See TV: NBC’s Dominant Decades
Amanda D. Lotz
16. Creating the Twenty-first-Century Television Network: NBC in the Age of Media Conglomerates
Christopher Anderson
17. Life without
Friends: NBC’s Programming Strategies in an Age of Media Clutter, Media Conglomeration, and Ti Vo
Kevin S. Sandler
18. Network Nation: Writing Broadcasting History as Cultural History
Michele Hilmes and Shawn Van Cour
NBC Time Line
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Sobre el autor
Michele Hilmes is Professor of Media and Cultural Studies in the Department of Communication Arts and Director of the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is author of Only Connect: A Cultural History of Broadcasting in the United States and The Television History Book, among other books.