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- <text id=89TT1121>
- <title>
- May 01, 1989: The Show-And-Sell Machine
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 01, 1989 Abortion
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 61
- The Show-and-Sell Machine
- </hdr><body>
- <p>At the Smithsonian, a fresh angle on TV's 50th anniversary
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> Anniversaries are television's most annoying bad habit. No
- TV series, it seems, can pass a milestone ending in zero
- (Barbara Walters' 50th special, Sesame Street's 20th season)
- without leading us on a forced march down Memory Lane. Now,
- saints preserve us, the 50th anniversary of TV itself has
- arrived -- at least by one measure. On April 20, 1939, RCA
- formally introduced the modern system of TV broadcasting at the
- New York World's Fair. One could just as plausibly trace TV's
- origin back to 1927, when the nation's first experimental TV
- stations went on the air. Or ahead to the start of regularly
- scheduled national TV broadcasts, which did not come until after
- the end of World War II.
- </p>
- <p> But who's counting? The real problem in celebrating TV's
- anniversary is not locating the proper date but encompassing
- adequately a medium whose impact has been so broad, so
- overpowering, so unfathomable. What should TV's birthday
- revelers commemorate? TV as an entertainment medium? As a
- chronicler of our times? A business enterprise? A technological
- device? A social force?
- </p>
- <p> The folks at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum
- of American History have come to the wise conclusion that "all
- of the above" is the worst possible answer. In an admirably
- focused and thoughtful new exhibit, "American Television: From
- the Fair to the Family, 1939-89," running until next April, the
- museum shies away from a nostalgic, you-must-remember-this
- approach. Imagine a survey of TV history with no mention of
- Milton Berle, Edward R. Murrow or the Kennedy-Nixon debates.
- </p>
- <p> Instead, the exhibit treats TV as a chapter in American
- social and economic history: it shows how the medium worked its
- way into the American home and what changes it wrought there.
- In the view of curator Larry Bird, who wrote the show's text,
- television was not just a masterpiece of marketing, it was a key
- shaper of the postwar consumer age. TV helped induce Americans,
- still reeling from the Depression and a world war, to start
- buying again.
- </p>
- <p> Introduced at the end of a decade of economic hardship, TV
- was touted early on as a creator of jobs as much as a purveyor
- of entertainment. The centerpiece of the Smithsonian's exhibit
- is a display of old TV sets -- clunky wooden boxes with tiny,
- anemic-looking screens. But perhaps more significant is a
- selection of print advertisements that tried to sell Americans
- on this strange new gizmo.
- </p>
- <p> The first ads for TV sets showed elegantly dressed models
- watching in posh surroundings, and often contained practical
- advice. ("Should the room in which you are viewing television
- be darkened to resemble a movie theater? Answer: Definitely
- not!") But soon the marketers of TV had a brainstorm: promoting
- the new device as a way of bringing the family together again.
- "There is great happiness," exulted an ad for DuMont sets, "in
- the home where the family is held together by this new common
- bond -- television." Another promotional piece listed the things
- that "took the family away from home" -- including baseball,
- vaudeville and movies -- and presented TV as the family-saving
- alternative. (The job may have been done too well; today a lot
- of parents might welcome a baseball game or two to get the kids
- away from the set.)
- </p>
- <p> Many of TV's first users were reluctant to give the set a
- conspicuous place in the home, often hiding it behind cabinets.
- But the TV set soon became the focus of the living room. By the
- early '50s, Motorola was advertising "a TV set for every
- decorating scheme" -- schemes helpfully defined as "period
- formal," "period informal," "modern formal" and "modern
- informal." Only later, when families could afford more than one
- set, was TV marketed as a personal item -- from the first bulky
- "portables" to the Sony Watchman.
- </p>
- <p> Once Americans were sold on TV, the new medium began to
- sell them on a wealth of consumer products -- both through
- commercials and, more subtly, through the well-appointed
- suburban homes portrayed in the shows themselves. One of the
- exhibit's cleverest displays is a caseful of advertiser premiums
- tied in with popular shows: a Lone Ranger deputy badge (15 cents
- plus a Cheerios box top), a Captain Video board game, a Cisco
- Kid writing tablet. Such premiums were one of the first methods
- used by sponsors to gauge the size and composition of their
- audience. Also on display is a collection of TV-inspired lunch
- boxes, as well as a tribute to another important box: the early
- Audimeters used by the A.C. Nielsen Co. to measure viewership,
- which helped turn TV into a sophisticated selling medium.
- </p>
- <p> Yes, Fonzie's jacket is here too. So is J.R. Ewing's hat,
- a coffeepot from The Guiding Light and an "Awwa-a-y We Go" toy
- bus marking Jackie Gleason's switch from the DuMont network to
- CBS in 1952. But the Smithsonian has gone well beyond such
- mementos. Refreshingly, it has illuminated what TV -- the medium
- itself, and not merely the programs it has presented -- has
- meant in American life. Not a bad birthday present.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-