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#television broadcast
fashionlandscapeblog · 3 months
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The Endless Sandwich (1972) - dir. Peter Weibel
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vid9838 · 2 months
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THE HOLLYWOOD PALACE
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Eerie broadcasts on the radio? Creepy images on the telly? Strange messages on your mobile screen?
Nothing the Inspector hasn’t sorted out in short order.
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chubbidust · 2 months
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smollusk grows up
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reportwire · 2 years
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9NEWS announces preseason television broadcast team
9NEWS announces preseason television broadcast team
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. – The Broncos’ hometown television partner, 9NEWS, has announced the television broadcast team for the 2022 preseason slate. Steve Levy will return as play-by-play commentator, and he’ll be joined in the booth by color analysts Chad Brown and Ryan Harris. 9NEWS’ own Rod Mackey will serve as the sideline reporter on the broadcasts. Entering their 12th season as the team’s hometown…
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strangerathecinema · 7 months
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wow guys can’t believe the episode titled “emotional consequences of broadcast television” showed me the consequences of my emotional investment in a broadcast television show
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hyunpic · 2 months
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stone-cold-groove · 6 months
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The following program is brought to you in living color on NBC.
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novantinuum · 3 months
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thinking about the fact that steven must've gone along with the diamonds' whole little "we're gonna televise your coronation to the whole universe" thing without telling them his true intentions JUST so he could get the opportunity to go on that universe wide broadcast and basically say "yeah so Fuck This Throne man i'm never sitting on that throne imma go home and have a gd pizza or whatever anyways peace"
he must've felt like the slyest motherfucker ever in the hours leading up to that lmao
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If I had a penny for every time I cried when Abed hugged someone goodbye, I'd have two pennies, which isn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened twice
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emrys-the-wild · 4 months
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CBS News:
Award-winning journalist Charles Osgood, who anchored "CBS Sunday Morning" for 22 years and was host of the long-running radio program "The Osgood File," died Tuesday at home in New Jersey.  He was 91.  The cause of death was dementia, his family said. Osgood, a gifted news writer, poet and author, spent 45 years at CBS News before retiring in September 2016. Osgood began anchoring "CBS Sunday Morning" in 1994. During his run on the show it reached its highest ratings levels in three decades, and three times earned the Daytime Emmy as Outstanding Morning Program.
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Often referred to as CBS News' poet-in-residence, Osgood was called "one of the last great broadcast writers" by Charles Kuralt, whom Osgood succeeded as host of the Sunday morning magazine program in 1994. But he did more than carry on a great American oral tradition; he could also play piano, organ, banjo, violin, and was an accomplished composer and lyricist who could also sing along. He employed his many talents inside and outside CBS, sometimes performing with professional orchestras such as The New York Pops, The Boston Pops and The Mormon Tabernacle Choir. 
"To say there's no one like Charles Osgood is an understatement," said "Sunday Morning" executive producer Rand Morrison. "He embodied the heart and soul of 'Sunday Morning.' His signature bow tie, his poetry … just his presence was special for the audience, and for those of us who worked with him. At the piano, Charlie put our lives to music. Truly, he was one of a kind – in every sense."  Veteran broadcaster Jane Pauley, who succeeded Osgood as host of "Sunday Morning" in 2016, said, "Watching him at work was a masterclass in communicating. I'll still think to myself, 'How would Charlie say it?', trying to capture the elusive warmth and intelligence of his voice and delivery. I expect I'll go on trying. He was one of the best broadcast stylists and one of the last. His style was so natural and unaffected it communicated his authenticity. He connected with people. Watching him  on TV, or listening on the radio, as I did for years, was to feel like you knew him, and he knew you. He brought a unique sensibility, curiosity and his trademark whimsy to 'Sunday Morning,' and it endures."
Former CBS Sunday Morning host Charles Osgood passed away at 91.
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oldshowbiz · 2 years
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“This is a test of the Emergency Broadcast System. This is only a test.”
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A Sesame Street rendition of a VeggieTales song, "Sneeze If You Need To". It's up to Doctor Ernie to help Bert with his sneezing problem, and he does so through many attempts in song.
Sesame Street (C) Sesame Workshop/PBS
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broadcastarchive-umd · 5 months
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#ThrowbackThursday The world’s first television remote control. The wireless “Flash-Matic” was invented by Zenith engineer Eugene Polley in 1955.
"This Zenith was the first set sold with wireless remote control...This system uses Photoelectric cells in the four corners of the screen to control On/Off, mute and channel selection. Since it used regular visible light to control the functions (the remote was basically a flashlight), it was subject to all sorts of interference from room lighting or even sunlight if it was positioned facing a window.These problems spelled doom for this system and it was only used for one year. It was followed by Zenith's improved ultrasonic "Space-Command" system in 1956." -- VintageTVsets.com
Pictures via 1 | 2 | 3 Originally posted November 15, 2013.
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khruschevshoe · 4 months
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Community 6x13, Emotional Consequences of Broadcast Television | Noah Kahan, The View Between Villages
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