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Like other television programming, sign-on and sign-off sequences can be initiated by a broadcast automation system, and automatic transmission systems can turn the carrier signal and transmitter on/off by remote control. [a] Sign-on and sign-off sequences have become less common due to the increasing prevalence of 24/7 broadcasting.
The episode received positive critical reviews from television journalists and critics. Alan Sepinwall, writing for New Jersey's The Star-Ledger, praised the episode for expanding the role of female characters, building on the characters established in the pilot, writing "the small details of how these characters are written and played gives ...
Airline is a British fly on the wall television programme produced by LWT that showcases the daily happenings of passengers, ground workers and flight crew of Britannia Airways (series 1) and later EasyJet (from series 2). The show was broadcast between 6 March 1998 and 19 January 2007 on ITV, was often repeated on ITV2 and aired in syndication ...
The Woman in the Wall, which dropped its first episode on Paramount+ Friday, tells the fictional story of a fictional woman played by The Affair‘s Ruth Wilson. But there’s one element of the ...
(WDTV changed to KDKA-TV only a few days prior, and the show was long off the network by this point, but it's the only surviving example of the program) International Playhouse – 12 episodes (although not all can be confirmed as DuMont episodes) Jimmy Hughes, Rookie Cop – one episode (network premiere from May 8, 1953)
The code was created to self-regulate the industry in hopes of avoiding a proposed government Advisory Board [1] and satisfying parental concerns over violence and other matters. [2] Prior to the Television Code, the 1935 NAB Code of Ethics for radio was applied to television but fewer than half of television stations subscribed to it; when the ...
"Emotional Consequences of Broadcast Television" was written by showrunner and series creator Dan Harmon and Chris McKenna, and was directed by Rob Schrab. [2] The opening shots of the episode featuring the characters exiting the building were originally going to be used for an episode based around a fire drill. [3] Series creator Dan Harmon
Colonel Humphrey Flack is an American sitcom which ran Wednesdays at 9 p.m. ET from October 7, 1953, to July 2, 1954, on the DuMont Television Network, then revived from 1958 to 1959 for first-run syndication.