190 likes | 291 Views
Raiding the Lost Ark: The Golden Age of TV News Documentary. Conclusions Where have we been? Where are we going?. From Murrow to MTV. Who produces docs? Journalists Producers Motivation? Prestige Avoid regulation Profit. Financing of documentaries Media vs. government
E N D
Raiding the Lost Ark:The Golden Age ofTV News Documentary Conclusions Where have we been? Where are we going?
From Murrow to MTV • Who produces docs? • Journalists • Producers • Motivation? • Prestige • Avoid regulation • Profit
Financing of documentaries Media vs. government Current issues (not past history) Controversial issues (not fluff) Major Themes
Early Motivations (1950’s-’60’s) • Enthusiasm of experienced radio journalists (“The Murrow Boys”) • Networks needed to fill air time • TV was a profitable industry & could afford the “luxury” of unprofitable documentary divisions
Early Motivations (1950’s-’60’s) • Cold War provided substance • Legacy of WWII provided “patriotism” • Audience demand - not a factor in building the documentary “machines” of NBC and CBS
1950-1958 Docs not expected to make much money 1958 demise of “See It Now” Murrow leaves CBS Increasing pressure to secure “sponsored” docs 1958 - 1963 Sponsored doc heyday Hundreds of hours of docs aired in prime time “lost” revenue from prime-time entertainment shows Profit Motive
1963 - 1968 Increased pressure for doc revenue 1967 100 hours of docs Compared to 400 hours in 1962 It was easy to argue against news docs They produced: More controversy Lower viewership Less revenue Profit Motive
News Programming & Revenue • In 1961, networks began to resent the disparity between air time devoted to news documentaries and revenue generated by the news divisions
News Programming & Revenue • In 1962, news programming consumed even more time… • … but produced less revenue
Contributing TV Trends • Fading of the quiz-show embarrassments • Reduced interest by sponsors • Seeking bigger audiences • Less controversy • Shift to “breaking news” • Witness of events, rather than interpreter • Non-controversial • Splintering of network audiences (cable TV) • Emergence of all-news channels (1980)
Tabloid TV • UC Berkeley students taped news programs for a week in Los Angeles in 1974 • More than half the news stories were about “fire, sex, tear-jerkers, accidents, exorcism” • “60 Minutes” joined the tabloid trend… • …spawning copycat programs now airing on most networks
Corporate Media Takeover • Corporate ownership of networks • Loss of independent journalism ethic • GE and NBC • Disney and ABC • AOL and CNN • Corporate interest in rising profits, declining controversy
Nowhere to go • Foreign policy diminished as a documentary subject in the 1960’s (after McCarthyism) • Domestic docs proved troublesome for the networks (“Hunger in America,” “Selling of the Pentagon”)
Other factors • Documentaries were “elitist” • Seemed aimed at whites (ignoring people of color), males, middle class • Seemed to ignore women and the feminist movement of the 1960’s • Docs intruded on evening entertainment • Docs were too serious for American audiences
Documentary lite • Vietnam and Watergate, poverty and hunger, injustice and hate… • …were replaced by history and nature and sports and Hollywood
Downsizing the News Divisions • In the 1980’s, as network profits fell, TV news units suffered hundreds of layoffs • Network news bureaus were closed • CBS News, once the pride and envy of the industry, is a shadow of its former self • CBS Reports died in 1985 • NBC and ABC suffering similar fates
Should we mourn? • The programs you have seen are pages of history • Some were jewels • Some were watersheds • But it’s not clear that they could draw sizeable audiences in today’s media environment… • … even if they were being produced today
A final word • “Surely we shall pay for using this most powerful instrument of communication to insulate the citizenry from the hard and demanding realities which must be faced.” • 1958