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    October 10

    The Passing of Television

    While nobody would say that TV is dead by any means, the recent US shutdown of analogue TV can be seen as the passing of an era. TV as people knew it in the 1950s is practically gone. People don’t watch television anymore, they watch video. And that’s even more true of the newer generations.

    In the 50s, 60s, and 70s, people would sit in front of the TV, often as a family, and watch it when their favorite shows came on. Then in the 1980s the VCR became a feature in most people’s homes. (While the home VCR came out in the 60s, it wasn’t mainstay until at least the late 70s.) Suddenly people started to watch not just live TV but recorded TV.

    But nowadays a person can watch a TV show not just from a live broadcast but from a DVR (including TiVo), a VCR (there are many still in use), a DVD, streaming across the Internet or as an Internet download (in many different formats). And even so-called live TV can be watched delayed on a PVR so that the ads can be passed over or the show can be paused. In the “old days” the idea of pausing TV was not even considered. People had to rely upon long ad breaks to find the time during the show to do what they need or wanted to do.

    While older generations are still use to TV, newer generations are going to get use to the various ways in which they can get their shows. As it is the quality of a downloaded show may be just as good as cable or satellite. They are not going to have the patience to sit through ads nor wish to wait and watch a show at the specific time a network decides to air it. Broadcast TV will be considered one of many options. And it’s this shift in attitude that could eventually lead to it’s demise. The shows will remain but they just won’t be delivered by broadcasters.

    For the time being (at least the next few decades) TV isn’t going anywhere. It’s still the best way to deliver TV content and the Internet just can’t handle live TV like a Superbowl or Oscars the way TV can. Radio is still around despite music (or at least specific songs) being more easily accessed through the Internet. And TV is a passive medium, which makes it more relaxing than trying to load up a video on a computer. But broadcasting is expensive and eventually the revenues needed to support the system could fall away, leaving the Internet as the new broadcasting medium.

    TV as we knew it , the analogue broadcast one always watched live, in the 50s, 60s and 70s has now passed away.

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