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7. Employment and Blue Pencils: NBC, Race, and Representation, 1926–55
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Murray Forman
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgments xi
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Part One. Broadcasting Begins, 1919–38
- Introduction to Part One: Broadcasting Begins, 1919–38 3
- 1. NBC and the Network Idea: Defining the “American System” 7
- 2. “Always in Friendly Competition”: NBC and CBS in the First Decade of National Broadcasting 25
- 3. Programming in the Public Interest: America’s Town Meeting of the Air 44
- 4. Regulating Class Conflict on the Air: NBC’s Relationship with Business and Organized Labor 61
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Part Two. Transitional Decades, 1938–60
- Introduction to Part Two: Transitional Decades, 1938–60 81
- 5. Breaking Chains: NBC and the FCC Network Inquiry, 1938–43 85
- 6. Why Sarnoff Slept: NBC and the Holocaust 98
- 7. Employment and Blue Pencils: NBC, Race, and Representation, 1926–55 117
- 8. NBC, J. Walter Thompson, and the Struggle for Control of Television Programming, 1946–58 135
- 9. Talent Raids and Package Deals: NBC Loses Its Leadership in the 1950s 153
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Part Three. NBC and the Classic Network System, 1960–85
- Introduction to Part Three: NBC and the Classic Network System, 1960–85 171
- 10. NBC News Documentary: “Intelligent Interpretation” in a Cold War Context 175
- 11. What Closes on Saturday Night: NBC and Satire 192
- 12. The Little Program That Could: The Relationship between NBC and Star Trek 209
- 13. Sex as a Weapon: Programming Sexuality in the 1970s 224
- 14. Saturday Morning Children’s Programs on NBC, 1975–2006: A Case Study of Self-Regulation 240
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Part Four. NBC in the Digital Age, 1985 to the Present
- Introduction to Part Four: NBC in the Digital Age, 1985 to the Present 259
- 15. Must-See TV: NBC’s Dominant Decades 261
- 16. Creating the Twenty-first-Century Television Network: NBC in the Age of Media Conglomerates 275
- 17. Life without Friends: NBC’s Programming Strategies in an Age of Media Clutter, Media Conglomeration, and TiVo 291
- 18. Network Nation: Writing Broadcasting History as Cultural History 308
- NBC Time Line 323
- Bibliography 331
- Notes on Contributors 343
- Index 347
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgments xi
-
Part One. Broadcasting Begins, 1919–38
- Introduction to Part One: Broadcasting Begins, 1919–38 3
- 1. NBC and the Network Idea: Defining the “American System” 7
- 2. “Always in Friendly Competition”: NBC and CBS in the First Decade of National Broadcasting 25
- 3. Programming in the Public Interest: America’s Town Meeting of the Air 44
- 4. Regulating Class Conflict on the Air: NBC’s Relationship with Business and Organized Labor 61
-
Part Two. Transitional Decades, 1938–60
- Introduction to Part Two: Transitional Decades, 1938–60 81
- 5. Breaking Chains: NBC and the FCC Network Inquiry, 1938–43 85
- 6. Why Sarnoff Slept: NBC and the Holocaust 98
- 7. Employment and Blue Pencils: NBC, Race, and Representation, 1926–55 117
- 8. NBC, J. Walter Thompson, and the Struggle for Control of Television Programming, 1946–58 135
- 9. Talent Raids and Package Deals: NBC Loses Its Leadership in the 1950s 153
-
Part Three. NBC and the Classic Network System, 1960–85
- Introduction to Part Three: NBC and the Classic Network System, 1960–85 171
- 10. NBC News Documentary: “Intelligent Interpretation” in a Cold War Context 175
- 11. What Closes on Saturday Night: NBC and Satire 192
- 12. The Little Program That Could: The Relationship between NBC and Star Trek 209
- 13. Sex as a Weapon: Programming Sexuality in the 1970s 224
- 14. Saturday Morning Children’s Programs on NBC, 1975–2006: A Case Study of Self-Regulation 240
-
Part Four. NBC in the Digital Age, 1985 to the Present
- Introduction to Part Four: NBC in the Digital Age, 1985 to the Present 259
- 15. Must-See TV: NBC’s Dominant Decades 261
- 16. Creating the Twenty-first-Century Television Network: NBC in the Age of Media Conglomerates 275
- 17. Life without Friends: NBC’s Programming Strategies in an Age of Media Clutter, Media Conglomeration, and TiVo 291
- 18. Network Nation: Writing Broadcasting History as Cultural History 308
- NBC Time Line 323
- Bibliography 331
- Notes on Contributors 343
- Index 347