C-SPAN对美国民主的影响

IF 1.2 4区 社会学 Q3 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Robert Browning
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1979年,一个新的美国有线电视网成立。它被称为C-SPAN,这是一个反映其起源的首字母缩写。有线卫星公共事务网络是为了记录公共事务节目,并通过有线电视和卫星将其传送到美国家庭。有线电视在当时还是一个新生产业。它最初主要是将广播信号重新传输到地面接收较差的地区。20世纪70年代被称为“开放天空”的卫星革命使新网络有可能将信号传输到家庭卫星天线,但更重要的是,传输到有线电视运营商,他们可以向当地用户出售新的独家非广播网络。家庭票房(Home Box Office,简称HBO)以这种方式成功地提供了电影,允许以溢价提供免费的商业内容。因此,有线电视运营商对这种新的卫星传输内容感兴趣,这种内容将区分有线电视,并为客户提供订阅理由。Brian Lamb就是其中一位网络企业家,他拥有广播、广播电视、公共事务、卫星政策和有线电视的背景,他设想了一个有线卫星网络,将通过有线电视系统向美国家庭提供未经编辑的华盛顿特区公共事务节目。他说服了一些具有互补企业家精神的有线电视高管对他的想法进行投资。其结果是建立了一个致力于公共事务活动的非营利网络。它将由有线电视运营商每月向网络支付每个家庭的许可费,以换取接收电视信号。然而,这只是C-SPAN起源故事的一半。当Brian Lamb正在发展他的想法,并思考如何通过卫星到有线电视系统提供来自华盛顿特区的活动内容时,另一个小组也在研究类似的想法。那一年是1977年,当时的组织是美国众议院。20世纪70年代中期是美国国会令人兴奋的时期。1974年,尼克松总统在国会对1972年水门事件进行调查后辞职。国会通过了影响深远的《战争权力法》和《国会预算征收法》,推翻了总统的否决权,以加强国会对著名历史学家小阿瑟·施莱辛格所写的“帝国总统任期”的支持。“当美国众议院于1979年3月19日首次对其会议过程进行电视转播时,C-SPAN开始通过卫星传输信号,新的网络可用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of C-SPAN on US Democracy
In 1979, a new US cable television network was created. It was called C-SPAN, an acronym reflecting its origin. The Cable Satellite Public Affairs Network was created to record public affairs programming and deliver it by cable and satellite into US homes. Cable was a nascent industry at that time. It began mostly as a retransmission of broadcast signals into areas that had poor terrestrial reception. The satellite revolution of the 1970s known as “Open Skies” made it possible for new networks to deliver their signals to home satellite dishes, but more importantly, to cable operators who were offered new exclusive, nonbroadcast networks that they could sell to the local subscribers. Home Box Office, or HBO, was successful delivering movies this way, which allowed commercial-free content offered for a premium. Cable operators were thus interested in this new satellite-delivered content that would distinguish cable and give customers reasons to subscribe. Brian Lamb was one of these network entrepreneurs, who with a background in radio, broadcast television, public affairs, satellite policy, and cable television, envisioned a cable satellite network that would bring unedited, Washington, DC–based public affairs programming delivered over cable television systems to American homes. He convinced some cable television executives, with a complementary entrepreneur spirit, to invest in his idea. The result was a nonprofit network dedicated to public affairs events in their entirety. It would be paid for by monthly, per-home license fees paid by the cable operators to the network in exchange for receiving the television signal. This, however, was just half of the story of the origin of C-SPAN. While Brian Lamb was developing his idea and thinking of how content from Washington, DC, events could be delivered via satellite to cable systems, another group was also working on a similar idea. The year was 1977 and the group was the United States House of Representatives. The mid-1970s were a heady time for the US Congress. President Nixon resigned in 1974 after congressional investigations of the 1972 Watergate break in. Congress passed the far-reaching War Powers Act and Congressional Budget Impoundment Act over presidential vetoes to strengthen Congress over what noted historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. wrote was the “Imperial Presidency.” When the US House of Representatives first televised its proceedings on 19 March 1979, C-SPAN began transmitting the signal via satellite and the new network was available.
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来源期刊
Political Science
Political Science POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: Political Science publishes high quality original scholarly works in the broad field of political science. Submission of articles with a regional focus on New Zealand and the Asia-Pacific is particularly encouraged, but content is not limited to this focus. Contributions are invited from across the political science discipline, including from the fields of international relations, comparative politics, political theory and public administration. Proposals for collections of articles on a common theme or debate to be published as special issues are welcome, as well as individual submissions.
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