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  1. The origins of premium cable lie in two areas: early pay television systems of the 1950s and 1960s and early cable (CATV) operators' small efforts to add extra channels to their systems that were not derived from free-to-air signals.

  2. Then, in 1975, Norman Lear’s One Day at a Time (1975–84), the first successful series about a divorced woman, became a hit for CBS. Television in the United States - Relevance Movement, Late 1960s, Early 70s: After the introduction of television to the public in the 1940s, a distinct dichotomy emerged between entertainment programming ...

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  4. Regardless of these developments, more cable channels and networks kept popping up, to the tune of well over 100 channels earlier in the decade. The average subscriber could count on at least 50 channels available to them. More households had a cable subscription than didn’t have one, and cable television was firmly a part of American life.

  5. Cable had about 2 percent of U.S. household penetration in the early 1960s and had grown to about 8 percent in 1970. Most early cable systems had a limit of twelve channels, but Ronald Mandell patented a converter in 1967 that was placed on the subscriber's television set and broke the twelve-channel barrier.

  6. The late Golden Age. By the mid-1950s, television programming was in a transitional state. In the early part of the decade, most television programming was broadcast live from New York City and tended to be based in the theatrical traditions of that city. Within a few years, however, most of entertainment TV’s signature genres—situation ...

  7. Jul 10, 2000 · According to the NCTC&M website, several technological developments boosted the channel capacity of cable systems in the 1960s, including the use of solid state electronics in amplifiers and the introduction of set-top converters that processed signals in frequencies above the 12 channel VHF band.

  8. By the end of the decade, nearly 60 percent of American homes were wired for basic cable, and almost half of those were receiving some premium channels. In the late 1970s, more than 90 percent of the prime-time viewing audience was tuned to ABC, CBS, or NBC; by 1989 that number was down to 67 percent, and it fell steadily throughout the ...

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