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Live television

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"Live TV" redirects here. For the British TV station formerly known by this name, see L!VE TV.

Live television refers to television broadcast in real time or on a short tape delay basis. It is used in the local news.

In general live television was more common for broadcasting content produced specifically for television in the early years of the medium, before technologies such as videotape recording appeared. As video recording became more prevalent, many entertainment programs were recorded and edited before broadcasting rather than being shown live. Entertainment events such as professional sports games and awards programs continue to be generally broadcast live.

Uses of live television

Live television is most common in television news, where news programs are generally broadcast live, presenting recorded and edited news stories. Events that networks and stations decide most viewers will want to or should know about as soon as possible are broadcast live, often interrupting regularly scheduled programming, as news bulletins, and if they are quickly changing and developing, with coverage as they unfold as "breaking news" stories.

Live television inherently has an extemporaneous, spontaneous, and urgent quality that often appears more suspenseful and exciting than recorded programming even if the content itself is not. It has this quality for many reasons: the fact that what is shown is happening in real-time, as it unfolds; the limited amount of control that is possible over live programming compared with recorded programming; and the resulting potential for mishap, that is, the idea that "anything can happen". Thus, it even extends itself to the live presentation of scripted material.

Live television is often used as a device, even when it is not necessary, in various types of programming to take advantage of these qualities, often to great success in terms of attracting viewers. The NBC live comedy/variety program Saturday Night Live, for example, has been on that network continuously since 1975.

On September 25, 1997, NBC broadcast a special live episode of its hospital drama ER, which at the time ranked as the third most-watched episode of any drama program ever. Many television news programs, particularly local ones in North America, have also used live television as a device to gain viewers by making their programs appear more exciting. With technologies such as satellite uplinks, a reporter can report live "on location" from anywhere where a story is happening in the city. This technique has attracted criticism for its overuse and resulting tendency to make stories appear more urgent than they actually are.

The unedited nature of live television can pose problems for networks because of the potential for mishaps. To enforce broadcast standards and regulations, networks often broadcast live programs on a slight delay to give them the ability to censor words and images while keeping the broadcast as "live" as possible.

Famous incidents on live television

Many incidents have happened on live television broadcasts that are well-remembered, sometimes because they were part of a major news story already, and always because they happened unexpectedly and before audiences of thousands or millions of viewers.

News

  • November 24, 1963 - Lee Harvey Oswald (the alleged assassin of U.S. President John F. Kennedy) was shot dead in Dallas by nightclub owner Jack Ruby while being transferred to a county jail.
  • November 13, 1965 - Critic and author Kenneth Tynan became the first person to say the word "fuck" on British television while commenting on censorship during a live TV debate on the BBC. The incident helped to establish Mary Whitehouse as self-appointed guardian of television morality in the United Kingdom, and Tynan was fired.
  • December 24,1968-Apollo 8 Genesis reading during the 9th orbit of the moon. [1]
  • July 20, 1969 - The moon landing.
  • July 15, 1974 - Christine Chubbuck, a television news reporter for station WXLT-TV in Sarasota, Florida, committed suicide on live television by firing a revolver shot into her head.
  • January 22, 1987 - Pennsylvania State Treasurer R. Budd Dwyer called a live press conference after being convicted on corruption charges where he read a 20-page speech, handed manila envelopes to three of his aides, said "This will hurt someone", placed the barrel of a Magnum .357 revolver into his mouth and pulled the trigger.
  • June 17, 1994 - The slow-speed chase of a vehicle containing American football star and murder suspect O. J. Simpson was broadcast live throughout the U.S., with NBC interrupting its coverage of the 1994 NBA Finals to do so.
  • April 30, 1998 - Daniel V. Jones, a cancer and HIV-positive patient apparently frustrated with his HMO coverage, ended a live televised stand-off with police on a Los Angeles freeway by committing suicide, shooting himself in the chin with a shotgun. The event, which took place on a Thursday afternoon, was witnessed by many children whose after-school cartoons had been interrupted in order to broadcast the incident (which originally began as a high-speed pursuit), and led many to criticize Los Angeles television stations' practice of airing police pursuits live.
  • September 11, 2001 - At 9:03 AM EDT, United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the south tower of the World Trade Center, in front of millions of viewers who were already watching live coverage of the unfolding terrorist attacks of that day. Major networks had broken into regular programming just minutes earlier with live shots of the twin towers after American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the north tower at 8:46 EDT. Millions of viewers around the world watching live coverage of the attacks saw both buildings collapse.
  • September 21, 2005 - JetBlue Airways Flight 292 made an emergency landing in Los Angeles. The passengers were able to watch the incident unfold on live television.

Entertainment

  • November 30, 1958 - Midway through transmission of the Armchair Theatre play Underground on the British ITV network, actor Gareth Jones died off-camera, forcing the production to improvise for the remainder of the telecast.
  • March 5, 1975 - Graham Kennedy mimicked a crow call ("faaaaaaark") remniscient of the word fuck during a hairspray ad on The Graham Kennedy Show on the Nine Network in Australia. He was banned from live TV indefinitely for the stunt. He quits the network on April 17 after the network took advantage of the pre-taping to delete a speech critical of Senator Doug McClelland (the then Minister for the Media).
  • December 1, 1976 - Appearing in a live interview on the Thames Television pre-watershed programme Today, the Sex Pistols were interviewed by Bill Grundy to promote their recently released Anarchy in the UK single. After being called a "dirty old man" by Pistols guitarist Steve Jones, Grundy goaded the band into swearing on live TV. Jones ended the interview with "you dirty bastard," "you dirty fucker," and "you fucking rotter".[1]
  • February 20, 1981 - Appearing on the live ABC comedy show Fridays as guest host, comedian Andy Kaufman refused to read his lines during the last sketch, to the annoyance of the cast and crew. The situation escalated into a minor brawl, and the network cut off the broadcast. Kaufman later admitted that the fight was planned by him and some of the cast and crew.
  • January 4,1987 - A massive bench clearing brawl occurred in the WJHC between Canada and the Soviet Union. After Pavel Kostichkin took a two handed slash at Theoren Fleury, the Soviet Union's Evgeny Davydov came off the bench, eventually leading to both benches clearing. The officials walked off the ice and tried shutting off the arena lights, but the brawl lasted for 20 minutes until the IIHF declared the game null and void. Both teams were disqualified from the tournament and barred from attending the end-of-tournament dinner.
  • October 17, 1989 - Right before Game 3 of The 1989 World Series between the San Francisco Giants and the Oakland Athletics, the Loma Prieta earthquake occurred.
  • February 1, 2004 - During a performance by singers Justin Timberlake and Janet Jackson at the Super Bowl XXXVIII half time show, Timberlake pulled off a part of Jackson's leather corset, revealing her right breast covered by a piece of jewelry attached to her nipple. He later described the incident as a "wardrobe malfunction". The incident caused public outrage and demands for the FCC to crack down on indecency on television and radio.
  • April 21, 2004 - After commenting on a UEFA Champions League match on ITV1, Ron Atkinson thought that the broadcast had finished. However, although transmission in the UK had finished, he was still on air to various countries in the Middle East and proceeded to say that "...he is what is known in some schools as a fucking lazy thick nigger" towards Marcel Desailly. He resigned with immediate effect.
  • April 14, 2007 - At the conclusion of an AFL match between Fremantle and West Coast on Network Ten, Eagles player Michael Braun (in front of a TV audience of 550,000 and a crowd of 42,051) concludes his Ross Glenndenning Medal acceptance speech with "Let's have a fucking good year". Braun was fined $5,500 by the AFL for the stunt.

Live television episodes

Although all programs were once live, the use of videotape means that very few television programs in the modern era have ever attempted such a feat. In the U.S., soap operas including As the World Turns and The Edge of Night were broadcast live until 1975. The most recent scripted series to do so on a regular basis was the Charles S. Dutton series Roc in the 1992-93 season.

However, on occasion, scripted series will do an episode live to attract ratings. In the U.S. and Canada, the episode is usually performed twice: once for the east coast (Eastern and Central time zones) and again three hours later for the west coast (Mountain and Pacific time zones). Notable examples of shows that have had a live episode include:

In recent years there have been a number of special films broadcast live as well. These include the remakes of Fail Safe (2000) and The Quatermass Experiment (2005).

References and footnotes

  1. ^ Sex Pistols vs Bill Grundy
  2. ^ a b Performed twice so that viewers in multiple time zones saw a live version