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The central concept of the system is a unique number, a PlusCode, assigned to each programme, and published in television listings in newspapers and magazines (such as TV Guide). To record a programme, the code number is taken from the newspaper and input into the video recorder, which would then record on the correct channel at the correct time.
Electronic programming guide interface in MythTV.. Electronic programming guides (EPGs) and interactive programming guides (IPGs) are menu-based systems that provide users of television, radio, and other media applications with continuously updated menus that display scheduling information for current and upcoming broadcast programming (most commonly, TV listings).
Broadcasters may schedule a program to air before or after a widely viewed tent-pole program, such as a popular series, or a special such as a high-profile sporting event (such as, in the United States, the Super Bowl), in the hope that audience flow will encourage the audience to tune-in early or stay for the second program. The second program ...
List of films and TV series set in Palm Springs, California; List of television shows set in San Diego; List of television shows set in San Francisco; List of television shows set in Wisconsin; List of television shows set in Washington, D.C. List of British television programmes by setting: List of television shows set in Liverpool
How (usually stylised as HOW) [2] [3] is a British educational television programme created by Jack Hargreaves. It was produced from 1966 by Southern Television, for which Hargreaves was a presenter and deputy programme controller. [4] It lasted until 1981, when the company lost its franchise to TVS.
Black-ish (ABC Studios); The Cosby Show (The Carsey-Werner Company); A Different World (The Carsey-Werner Company); Good Times (Sony Pictures Television); The Jeffersons (Sony Pictures Television)
Beginning in June 2005, Logo TV has been broadcasting programming of interest to the LGBT community. The network broadcasts a blend of original programming and syndicated fare previously broadcast on other networks. Logo offers content from a wide variety of genres, including drama, comedy, reality and documentary.
Williams argued that ads glued programs together which created the sense of television flow with a shift "from the concept of sequence as programming to the concept of flow." [3] Since the 1990s, the concept of flow has been transformed by new technologies and programming strategies that free the viewer from the old television model.