Current, media-jaded Americans, especially younger ones, would be surprised to know how eagerly their forebears anticipated the arrival of television. Tracing public and critical responses to TV from its pioneering days, Ray Barfield gathers and gives context to the reactions of those who saw television's early broadcasts. We hear from the privileged few who witnessed experimental and limited-schedule programming in the 1920s and 1930s, those who bought television sets and hoisted antennae in the post-World War II television boom, and still more who invested in color receivers and cable subscriptions in the 1960s. Viewers' comments recall the excitement of owning the first TV receiver in the neighborhood, recount the vexing challenges of reception, and record the pleasure that all young and many older watchers found in early network and local programs from the beginning to the fast-changing 1960s.The first two sections of this study illustrate the views of television's first broad public, and the third section shows how social and media critics, literary and visual artists, and others expressed their charmed or chagrinned responses to television in its earliest decades.
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