Sunday, 8 January 2023

Tralfaz Sunday Theatre: What's Happening To Television

You hear it all the time. Television was so much better in the old days. News coverage is biased, not like when Uncle Walter was on the air. Too much junk. Anything decent on streaming services gets cancelled. Yes, the old days were better.

Of course, this is all bunk.

Cronkite, Chet Huntley and David Brinkley all had their critics (mainly people who wanted partisan spin accepted as truth). Shows like The Beverly Hillbillies and Gilligan’s Island were among the many shows bashed for being inane. Westerns and detective shows and even the Three Stooges were denounced for violence. The networks let live drama die, and shoved newsmaker interview shows to the least-watched parts of the day, if not emasculating them (eg., Ed Murrow’s See It Now).

In other words, nothing has really changed.

As proof, we present to you this hour-long documentary that aired on NET (it became PBS) on April 4, 1966. “What’s Happening To Television” unabashedly states that quality TV programme should win out over ratings. It never does say where the money would come from to pay for it. The show was rerun later that season.

Interestingly, it does not have a host. Instead, the producers hired freelance commercial actor Joe Sirola to narrate (uncredited) off-camera.

You should be able to play both halves of the show. See how many of these complaints (and excuses) are still heard.

3 comments:

  1. And of course, there was the famous "vast wasteland" speech by Newton Minow in 1961. You're right, the "TV sucks now" mentality is nothing new. That's why I roll my eyes whenever I see it.

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  2. And we all know that Newton Minow spawned the name of " The Skipper's Boat " on " Gilligan's Island ". A kick in the pants from Sherwood Schwartz. I have always loved Joseph Sirola. Funny, I saw him just this weekend playing an organized crime head in " Kolchak, The Night Stalker ". When asked is the money good in major commercial voice-overs, Joe said " Ohhhhhhh yes... It is really, really good ". A solid character actor and voice over artist.

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  3. Hans Christian Brando9 January 2023 at 17:37

    In its heyday TV indeed had idiotic programs which at least didn't pretend to be anything else, or meant for anything other than entertainment (and to sell products); unlike today's television whose writers are eager to share the profound human insights they've gleaned in therapy or rehab, watched by people who obediently equate Netflix with quality.
    TV also at one time presented what were called spectaculars (one-time-only events with A+-list stars) and live drama, for which there's no equal today.
    When you get right down to it, other than "I Love Lucy," Bugs Bunny, and news coverage of certain historical events, there's no such thing as Must See TV.

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