Monday, August 13, 2018

Finding Philo


It is currently raining in this part of NJ, which means my satellite TV signal is glitchy. So, this is a good moment to write about TV instead – something I’ve been meaning to do for a couple of days.

Saturday night I watched the 1941 The Wolf Man on Me TV, a nostalgia cable/satellite channel. The Wolf Man wasn’t the first werewolf movie, but it set the standard for all the ones that followed. I’m not sure why I watched it since I own a DVD of it, but somehow it drew me in. It and other Universal monster movies appeared frequently on non-network TV channels when I was a child; there was still a shortage of original content in those years, so old movies got a lot of air time. I don’t remember the first time I saw it but it likely was prior to 1960 and certainly wasn’t much later. I know I had seen it multiple times before assembling an Aurora plastic model of the Wolf Man sometime in the early 60s. All of my elementary school friends had seen it, too, and that is the point I pondered (during commercials) on Saturday.

TV’s hundredth birthday is less than a decade away. In the past few decades we have seen Wunderkinder dropouts design cutting edge personal computers, programs, videogames, social media platforms, smart phones, apps, and other tech, but youth is nothing new in technology. In 1920 14-year-old Philo T. Farnsworth in Rigby Utah showed his high school science teacher his designs and accompanying formulae for a scanning cathode ray television system. It was way over his teacher’s head, but the fellow was supportive and referred him to Brigham Young University. Philo soon moved to California. Despite working with limited funds out of his own workshop, by 1927 he had a fully functional television system from camera to screen. (Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce at the time, appeared on TV on April 7, 1927.) As so often happens when available components and theory make a new technology ripe, several inventors simultaneously were developing similar systems: notably Vladimir Zworkyin who had the resources of RCA at his disposal. In the patent dispute that followed, however, Farnsworth prevailed because his high school science teacher still had his sketches thereby proving his work was prior.

Television broadcasting began in the UK and Germany in the 1930s and in the US in 1939, in which year Franklin Roosevelt became the first sitting president to be televised. Nonetheless, the eye-watering cost of early TV sets, the Depression, and then World War 2 prevented the technology from taking off commercially. Prior to the end of the war, home TV sets in the US numbered in the mere hundreds. After the war, pent up civilian consumer demand quickly changed all that. US TV sets numbered in the millions by 1949. My parents bought their first set in 1948.

This collection of Vidal's 1950s
TV screenplays still holds up well
Television broadcasting in the 1950s was better than one might expect of a fledgling medium. (I was a little young to judge it at the time, but I did like to watch reruns of The Little Rascals before school and acquired my taste for scifi after school.) Top notch writers were hired for weekly dramas, vaudeville performers still on their game got their own shows, innovative series such as The Twilight Zone got a footing, and (bringing us back to The Wolf Man) older movies were introduced to a new generation. Because the channels were few, the effect was to homogenize popular culture in a way that radio hadn’t. People from all regions and walks of life watched the same shows and televised movies. So much was this the case that everything from water usage to restaurant attendance varied predictably depending on what was on. You could talk about the latest Ed Sullivan Show at a party and be pretty sure most people there had seen it. As late as the 1970s shows like All in the Family and The Jeffersons had diverse audiences of 30 or 40 million per episode.

No longer. The proliferation of channels and the blurring of television and internet have split us into niche audiences. We can pick and choose as we please among near endless options. Viewership divides along ideological, ethnic, and generational lines (among others) even where one wouldn’t expect. That is not entirely a bad thing. Greater choice is something I’m certainly happy to have. It is not the job of video entertainment (in whatever format on whatever screen) to homogenize popular culture. It is worth noting, though, that it once did and now doesn’t.

On the other hand, some of the niches span the divides in curious ways. Look at the membership, for example, of classic movie or science fiction or detective fiction discussion groups on Facebook. The members bear little in common but enjoyment of the genre. (By the way, the term "idiot box" is unjustified. Academic and IQ scores actually are higher in countries that watch more TV. Within countries there is a bell curve: in the US, academic scores are positively correlated with TV viewership up to 3 hours per day but fall off above that.) So, while we no longer can assume the people we meet  have seen the same television and movies as we, it’s easy enough to find some folks who have: so much so that if I had kept that Wolf Man model in the box it would be worth something. That’s not a common culture, but it will do.


Blondie’s ode to TV: Fade Away and Radiate

4 comments:

  1. I caught part of that Wolfman showing on Me TV too last weekend. I think it's the atmosphere of the film that captures my attention. Both it and Frankenstein are a tie for some of the better horror films. I also caught part of the documentary, Best of Enemies, Buckley vs. Vidal again. It has been worth multiple viewings as I've picked up a little something new each time, and like you said, back then (and their debate was broadcast around '68, TV was more homogenized with their just being three networks or so.


    I'm not sure when we got our first TV, but it was after I was born as I slight remember them delivering it to our home. There wasn't a lot for kids on it, but I remember Howdy Doodie, Little Rascals, Three Stooges, Superman, Sky King, Tarzan, Laurel & Hardy, the cartoons, and many others.


    Speaking of Buckley, I found him to be an elitist, smart, but a skunk in his political views, some which still stick with the GOP today. At any rate, here he is with Groucho Marx, I one of his more congenial moods, although even then he can be a provocateur. It may have been his style. Groucho is as easy going as ever. https://youtu.be/cXlIZBZpkoA

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    1. The New York metro area market was richer in airwaves than most with seven stations, but four of those scratched for content – WOR would run the same afternoon movie every day for a week. I doubt either Buckley or Vidal would fare well today as TV hosts: despite the uncharacteristic reality-show-style spat at the 68 convention, neither as a general rule was angry enough to suit modern audiences. Neither shunned the opposition out of hand. Buckley regularly engaged respectfully with guests on the left on Firing Line, while Vidal made a point of scheduling appearances in areas with conservative audiences. “No point in preaching to the converted,” he said.

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  2. I've seen all the classic Universal monster movies, but have somehow missed "The Wolf Man". TCM was running them all one year and that one was on at a bad time. Need to catch up with it, because I keep hearing it was one of the better ones.

    I did not know the story behind the creation of the television. That was fascinating. Thanks for sharing that.

    I've been listening to a Podcast all about Jerry Goldsmith. The three presenters are tackling all his work in chronological order. This meant they started in the 50s with his work for radio and television. It has been really interesting to hear them cover the way early television programs were written and produced.

    They just started in on his work for the "Twilight Zone" which has been really excellent so far. Can't wait for them to get to his "Thriller!" work.

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    1. Much of 1950s TV was broadcast live (including many TV dramas) due to the insanely expensive broadcast-quality videotape machines then; the stations couldn't afford enough of them to tape all their shows ahead of time, so they taped (if at all) just once at the time of the live broadcast. (Desi and Lucy used actual film, for which they themselves paid extra, which is why the I Love Lucy episodes still look so good.) That must have made every broadcast a nailbiter, including with regard to the music.

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