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  2. Hubert Schlafly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubert_Schlafly

    Schlafly unveiled the teleprompter on the set of the CBS soap opera, The First Hundred Years, in 1950. [1] Schlafly and Irving B. Kahn also co-founded the TelePrompTer Corporation, which grew to become the largest cable television provider in the United States by 1973. They later sold the company to Westinghouse. [1]

  3. TelePrompTer Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TelePrompTer_Corporation

    TelePrompTer Corporation was an American media company that existed from approximately 1950 until 1981. The company was named for its eponymous primary product , a display device invented by Hubert Schlafly which scrolls text to people on video or giving speeches, replacing cue cards or scripts.

  4. Teleprompter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleprompter

    The TelePrompTer Corporation was founded in the 1950s by Fred Barton, Jr., Hubert Schlafly and Irving Berlin Kahn. Barton was an actor who suggested the concept of the teleprompter as a means of assisting television performers who had to memorize large amounts of material in a short time. [5] Schlafly built the first teleprompter in 1950.

  5. Irving B. Kahn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irving_B._Kahn

    With colleagues from Fox Radio, Fred Barton, Jr., a Broadway theatre actor, and Hubert Schlafly, an electrical engineer, [2] he founded TelePrompTer Corporation which, in the 1950s, invented the teleprompter, which scrolls text to on-camera talent, in order to help a soap opera actor who could not remember his lines.

  6. The First Hundred Years - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_First_Hundred_Years

    The First Hundred Years was the first ongoing TV soap opera in the United States that began as a daytime serial, airing on CBS from December 4, 1950 until June 27, 1952. [ 1 ] A previous daytime drama on NBC, These Are My Children , aired in 1949 [ 2 ] but only lasted one month, and NBC's Hawkins Falls began in June 1950 as a primetime "soap ...

  7. Luther Simjian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luther_Simjian

    Its invention is usually credited to Hubert Schlafly, an engineer working with CBS and Fred Barton, an actor, who developed a mechanical cueing device in the 1950s. Simjian and Jess Oppenheimer, the creator and producer of the classic sitcom I Love Lucy, improved it and replaced it with an optical teleprompter. Hayward wrote that the advantage ...

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  9. Schlafly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schlafly

    Schlafly is a surname of German-Swiss origin. People with that surname include: Andrew Schlafly (born 1961), American conservative activist, founder of Conservapedia, son of Phyllis; Hubert Schlafly (1919–2011), American electrical engineer, co-inventor of the teleprompter; Larry Schlafly (1878–1919), American baseball player