home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
050189
/
05018900.006
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-25
|
6KB
|
117 lines
<text id=89TT1121>
<title>
May 01, 1989: The Show-And-Sell Machine
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
May 01, 1989 Abortion
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
VIDEO, Page 61
The Show-and-Sell Machine
</hdr><body>
<p>At the Smithsonian, a fresh angle on TV's 50th anniversary
</p>
<p>By Richard Zoglin
</p>
<p> Anniversaries are television's most annoying bad habit. No
TV series, it seems, can pass a milestone ending in zero
(Barbara Walters' 50th special, Sesame Street's 20th season)
without leading us on a forced march down Memory Lane. Now,
saints preserve us, the 50th anniversary of TV itself has
arrived -- at least by one measure. On April 20, 1939, RCA
formally introduced the modern system of TV broadcasting at the
New York World's Fair. One could just as plausibly trace TV's
origin back to 1927, when the nation's first experimental TV
stations went on the air. Or ahead to the start of regularly
scheduled national TV broadcasts, which did not come until after
the end of World War II.
</p>
<p> But who's counting? The real problem in celebrating TV's
anniversary is not locating the proper date but encompassing
adequately a medium whose impact has been so broad, so
overpowering, so unfathomable. What should TV's birthday
revelers commemorate? TV as an entertainment medium? As a
chronicler of our times? A business enterprise? A technological
device? A social force?
</p>
<p> The folks at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum
of American History have come to the wise conclusion that "all
of the above" is the worst possible answer. In an admirably
focused and thoughtful new exhibit, "American Television: From
the Fair to the Family, 1939-89," running until next April, the
museum shies away from a nostalgic, you-must-remember-this
approach. Imagine a survey of TV history with no mention of
Milton Berle, Edward R. Murrow or the Kennedy-Nixon debates.
</p>
<p> Instead, the exhibit treats TV as a chapter in American
social and economic history: it shows how the medium worked its
way into the American home and what changes it wrought there.
In the view of curator Larry Bird, who wrote the show's text,
television was not just a masterpiece of marketing, it was a key
shaper of the postwar consumer age. TV helped induce Americans,
still reeling from the Depression and a world war, to start
buying again.
</p>
<p> Introduced at the end of a decade of economic hardship, TV
was touted early on as a creator of jobs as much as a purveyor
of entertainment. The centerpiece of the Smithsonian's exhibit
is a display of old TV sets -- clunky wooden boxes with tiny,
anemic-looking screens. But perhaps more significant is a
selection of print advertisements that tried to sell Americans
on this strange new gizmo.
</p>
<p> The first ads for TV sets showed elegantly dressed models
watching in posh surroundings, and often contained practical
advice. ("Should the room in which you are viewing television
be darkened to resemble a movie theater? Answer: Definitely
not!") But soon the marketers of TV had a brainstorm: promoting
the new device as a way of bringing the family together again.
"There is great happiness," exulted an ad for DuMont sets, "in
the home where the family is held together by this new common
bond -- television." Another promotional piece listed the things
that "took the family away from home" -- including baseball,
vaudeville and movies -- and presented TV as the family-saving
alternative. (The job may have been done too well; today a lot
of parents might welcome a baseball game or two to get the kids
away from the set.)
</p>
<p> Many of TV's first users were reluctant to give the set a
conspicuous place in the home, often hiding it behind cabinets.
But the TV set soon became the focus of the living room. By the
early '50s, Motorola was advertising "a TV set for every
decorating scheme" -- schemes helpfully defined as "period
formal," "period informal," "modern formal" and "modern
informal." Only later, when families could afford more than one
set, was TV marketed as a personal item -- from the first bulky
"portables" to the Sony Watchman.
</p>
<p> Once Americans were sold on TV, the new medium began to
sell them on a wealth of consumer products -- both through
commercials and, more subtly, through the well-appointed
suburban homes portrayed in the shows themselves. One of the
exhibit's cleverest displays is a caseful of advertiser premiums
tied in with popular shows: a Lone Ranger deputy badge (15 cents
plus a Cheerios box top), a Captain Video board game, a Cisco
Kid writing tablet. Such premiums were one of the first methods
used by sponsors to gauge the size and composition of their
audience. Also on display is a collection of TV-inspired lunch
boxes, as well as a tribute to another important box: the early
Audimeters used by the A.C. Nielsen Co. to measure viewership,
which helped turn TV into a sophisticated selling medium.
</p>
<p> Yes, Fonzie's jacket is here too. So is J.R. Ewing's hat,
a coffeepot from The Guiding Light and an "Awwa-a-y We Go" toy
bus marking Jackie Gleason's switch from the DuMont network to
CBS in 1952. But the Smithsonian has gone well beyond such
mementos. Refreshingly, it has illuminated what TV -- the medium
itself, and not merely the programs it has presented -- has
meant in American life. Not a bad birthday present.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>