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TELEVISION FACTS & FIGURES

What’s in a name?
Have you ever wondered where the word television came from? It comes
from the Greek word tele, which means ‘far’ and the Latin word videre,
which means ‘to see’ and it certainly lives up to its name, when you think
about it! Just think every time you turn on your television at home and you
can see instantly an event happening in anywhere in the world. A
television screen is like a magic window on the whole world through which
people anywhere in the world can see things, which are not normally part
of their lives. Remember though, for every image you see on the television
there is a camera and someone else is deciding where it looks and what it
shows.
With the development of technology and the ability to post and stream
video online as it happens, news producers can now share the most
intimate news stories in incredible detail globally, using media gathered
from a person’s cell phone. Indeed the very notion of a News Producer has
become a job that is able to be carried out by anyone with an internet
connection posting video online. But when was the first television
invented?

Television timeline….
1884 In Germany a gentleman by the name of P. Nipkow patented the
Nipkow disc. It was used for transmitting an exact image of an object
onto a screen.

1897 Another German by the name of F Braun invented the cathode ray
tube, which later became the basis for the modern television set. He
painted the inside end of a glass tube with fluorescent paint. A
cathode, which is a type of electrode, was placed inside the tube. It
emitted electrons that made the paint inside glow! Not very
interesting on its own you might say but…

1920 During this decade Professor Robert Jack of Otago University began
experimenting with the new technology.

1925 A Russian by the name of V Zworykin patented the iconoscope. This


was an electronic device with a lens that focused an image on to a
screen inside a glass tube.

1925J Baird of Great Britain gave the first demonstration of a television. He


used the Nipkow discs to transmit images on to a screen, unfortunately
the images were very blurred.

1936The BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) began operating with the


first clear black and white television service from London. Baird’s
system for producing pictures had been dropped in favour of one that
was developed by Marconi and EMI based on the cathode ray tube and
the iconoscope.

1953The first successful transmission of colour television was made in the


United States.
1960 NZBS (New Zealand Broadcasting Service) plans to run the country’s
first television service in all the main centres.

1960 The first television commercials appear in New Zealand. Lots of


people complain!

1960Public television broadcasting in New Zealand began in June. Initially


for only two hours a night, two nights a week!

1963A new programme called NZBC – Reports goes on air. It is New


Zealand’s first television News Programme.

1968 The Wahine ferry goes down in a storm off the coast of Wellington,
providing the New Zealand News Service with its biggest story to
date. The story goes on to win a world Newsfilm Award.

1969NZBC Network News goes on air for the first time and is broadcast
simultaneously around the country. The presenter is Dougal Stevenson.

1972 The second channel begins operating.

1972New Zealand changes from black and white broadcasting to colour


and begins full networking.

1975 Sony of Japan introduced the first domestic videotape system, known
as the betamax. It uses a cassette to tape programmes while other
stations are being watched.

1975 Avalon Television Studios open in Wellington.

1975 Television 2 opens by showing New Zealand’s first ever Telethon.

1976 Both TV 1 and TV 2 become one corporation – BCNZ.

1980 TV1 and TV2 merge to become Television New Zealand (TVNZ).

1985 24-hour a day access to satellites enabled international news to be


available on demand.

1989 TV3 begins broadcasting.

1989 Ratings show that the public prefer TVNZ news to the TV3 product.

1990 Pay television enters the market. TV3 begins its popular one hour
news.

1995 TVNZ begins to broadcast its one-hour news programme.

1995 Kiwi Cable begins transmission on the Kapiti Coast.

1996 Saturn Communications (which bought out Kiwi Cable) extends its
cover to include Wellington and the Hutt Valley.
1997TV3 Network Services launches TV4. Its target audience being 15 to
39 year olds.

2001 TVNZ changes from state owned enterprise to a crown owned


company and at the end of the year TV 1 & 2 simulcast on Sky
Digital platform.

2003 TVNZ officially adopts its charter in March. In December, under the
TVNZ Bill, the previously known TVNZ Group splits into a television
company and a new transmission company (Transmission Holdings
Ltd). The legislation requires TVNZ to balance its commercial
performance with public broadcasting objectives (as set out in the
charter).

2003 TV4 renamed C4 on October 1st.

2006 Television signals in both analog and digital formats


The US switch-off of all analogue terrestrial TV broadcasts is
scheduled to begin NO LATER THAN February 17, 2009
The switch-off of all analogue terrestrial TV broadcasts is scheduled
to begin in 2008. The last regions will be switched off in 2012
A Digital Terrestrial replacement, called Freeview, enables analogue
television sets to receive digital programmes
2007 The digital license frequency plan, including some changes of
frequency for existing analogue television services, was finalised in
August and published on 12 September 2007.

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