{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/69a623113df6e19cf76b5d4e/69ac3331b49eecc0b7f6e40f?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"CNN - Part 1: Broadcasting's Untamed Frontier","description":"The late 1970s. An era of quiet conformity in American media. Three titans – ABC, CBS, NBC – held sway, their evening newscasts a ritual, a fixed point in the day. But beneath the polished veneer of network dominance, a tremor began. A faint signal, a whisper of change carried on unseen waves, promising a new dawn for information, a revolution brewing on the distant horizon.\r\n\r\nImagine a world where news arrived not as a constant stream, but as a rigid, scheduled event. Each evening, precisely at 6:30 or 7:00 PM Eastern, the nation collectively paused. Thirty minutes of curated summaries, carefully packaged, filtered, and broadcast. The airwaves belonged to the giants, their vast bureaus deploying resources, yet much immediate coverage condensed, delayed, or edited to fit the unforgiving clock. Economically robust, their news divisions were public service, but bound by tradition. Yet, above, satellites like Satcom 1, launched in 1975, silently began to weave a new tapestry, decentralizing signal distribution, chipping away at terrestrial exclusivity. Cable, still a nascent frontier reaching only 15-20% of homes, lay ripe for disruption.\r\n\r\nLearn more at: https://theoriginarchive.com/company/cnn","author_name":"The Archive Network"}