This book chronicles the metamorphosis of videotape from its
beginnings nearly 35 years ago as a media technology controlled by
a handful of television executives, to a popular communications
agent which is profoundly altering the way America consumes
information and entertainment. The authors analyze videotape
technology and its impact on the broadcasting and advertising
communities, the home video market, and the private sector. Well
documented and accessible to the general reader, Shifting Time and
Space tells the fascinating story of how videotape revolutionized
the content and style of the $12 billion broadcast and
satellite-delivered television industries and brought about the $17
billion home video market.
Since its commercial introduction in 1956 the videotape recorder
has evolved from a mechanism initially limited to the broadcast
television field to a popular technology that gives consumers
control over television viewing patterns. This book discusses the
major role the VCR has played in the shift of consumer electronics
research and development and manufacture from the West to the Far
East. It covers the initially slow adoption of the technology by
the motion picture industry as a primary source of revenue through
the distribution of prerecorded feature films on videotape
cassette. The authors examine the increasingly important role the
VCR will play in the U.S. media environment as new generations of
technologically proficient consumers become more comfortable with
the technology. Professionals working in the advertising,
broadcast, satellite television, and home video industries, as well
as communications scholars will find "Shifting Time and Space"
provocative and insightful reading.
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