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Ian Mark Sirota's avatar

I dunno--to me, there is still something that brings me back to my childhood when I go to a theatre, spend $300 on a popcorn and soda combination, and watch a movie.

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WJ Hayes's avatar

"And, of course — because networks had to churn out 24 hours of programming a day — TV budgets were a far cry from movie budgets."

Not in the beginning. Into the 1980s, when I was a kid, the networks signed off between 12:30 and 1 am. (usually with the 'Star Spangled Banner' playing over stock footage and then a test pattern or just static). -NBC had programing that went to 2 am thanks to Tom Snyder's show.

It really wasn't until the early to mid-90s that networks started going 24/7. (I remember being up at 3 am in college and seeing ABC news running an overnight program that, in between covering the relevant stories of the day, had things such as weather segments that told you the current temperature in the White Press Room. The tag line for the overnight show was "More insomniacs get their news from ABC than any other network").

In my parents' childhood, the networks only scheduled about 4 hours of programming in the evening. (7pm-11pm Eastern Time). Games shows and soap operas seemed to come into existence as networks came to the realization that there were some people at home during the day and companies were willing to buy ads to sell products during those hours.

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