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In the 90s, cable companies like Comcast, Time Warner, and Cox played a pivotal role in shaping home entertainment. These 90s cable companies brought iconic networks like MTV, Nickelodeon, and ESPN to living rooms across the country, revolutionizing how we watched TV.
This page contains a list of old and vintage cable channel lineups in the United States from companies that may or may not still be in service today. They will be listed in order by which they're first presented on TVCL.
Verizon's purchase of Yahoo will close the book on one of the oldest Internet companies. What happened to the other famous '90s brands, like GeoCities, Netscape and CompuServe? A nerdy...
Cable television in the United States. Cable television first became available in the United States in 1948. [1] By 1989, 53 million U.S. households received cable television subscriptions, [2] with 60 percent of all U.S. households doing so in 1992. [3]
Up until 1992 did cable companies make active and vigorous construction efforts, and it resulted in more than 50 million households getting a cable subscription by 1990, and the number of networks going well over 50 by that time.
During the decade, cable subscribers grew from 51.7 million in 1990 to 67.3 million in 1999, just shy of its 68.5 million peak in 2000. And cable found itself with a new competitor: satellite...
WTBS was under the Turner Broadcasting System, one of the largest cable TV conglomerates throughout the 1970s and 80s. WTBS would later join other national networks. In the 1990s, Turner Broadcasting System joined with WarnerMedia and is now owned by Warner Bros. Discovery.