The
National Broadcasting Company
(NBC) is an American television network and former radio network headquartered in the GE Building
in New York
City's
Rockefeller Center
with additional major offices in Burbank
, California
. It is sometimes referred to as the
Peacock Network due to its stylized
peacock logo, created originally for color
broadcasts.
Formed in 1926 by the
Radio Corporation of
America (RCA), NBC was the first major broadcast network in the
United States. In 1986, control of NBC passed to
General Electric (GE), with GE's $6.4
billion purchase of RCA. After the acquisition, the chief executive
of NBC was
Bob Wright, until he retired,
giving his job to
Jeff Zucker. The
network is currently part of the media company
NBC Universal, a unit of
General Electric, which, on 1 December
2009, purchased the remaining 20% stake of NBC Universal which it
did not already own from
Vivendi..
NBC is available in an estimated 112 million households, 98.6% of
those with televisions. NBC has 10 owned-and-operated stations and
nearly 200 affiliates in the United States and its
territories.
History
Radio
Earliest stations: WEAF & WJZ
During a
period of early broadcast business consolidation, the radio-making
Radio Corporation of
America (RCA) had acquired New York radio station WEAF
from
American Telephone
& Telegraph (AT&T). An RCA shareholder,
Westinghouse, had a
competing facility in Newark, New Jersey
pioneer station WJZ
(no relation
to the current WJZ-TV
), which also
served as the flagship for a
loosely-structured network. This station was transferred
from Westinghouse to RCA in 1923, and moved to New York.
WEAF acted as a laboratory for AT&T's manufacturing and supply
outlet
Western Electric, whose
products included transmitters and antennas. The
Bell System, AT&T's telephone utility, was
developing technologies to transmit voice- and music-grade audio
over short and long distances, using both wireless and wired
methods. The 1922 creation of WEAF offered a
research-and-development center for those activities. WEAF had a
regular schedule of radio programs, including some of the first
commercially sponsored programs, and was an immediate success.
In an
early example of chain or networking
broadcasting, the station linked with the Outlet Company's WJAR
in Providence,
Rhode Island
; and with AT&T's station in Washington,
D.C.
, WCAP.
New parent RCA saw an advantage in sharing programming, and after
getting a license for station
WRC in
Washington, D.C., in 1923, attempted to transmit audio between
cities via low-quality telegraph lines. AT&T refused outside
companies access to its high-quality phone lines. The early effort
fared poorly, since the uninsulated telegraph lines were
susceptible to atmospheric and other electrical interference.
In 1925, AT&T decided WEAF and its embryonic network were
incompatible with AT&T's primary goal of providing a telephone
service. AT&T offered to sell the station to RCA in a deal that
included the right to lease AT&T's phone lines for network
transmission.
Red & Blue Networks
RCA spent $1 million to buy WEAF and Washington sister station
WCAP, shut down the latter station, and announced in late 1926 the
creation of a new division known as
The National Broadcasting
Company. The new division was divided in ownership between RCA
(fifty percent), General Electric (thirty percent), and
Westinghouse (twenty percent). NBC launched officially on November
15, 1926.
WEAF and WJZ, the flagships of the two earlier networks, operated
side-by-side for about a year as part of the new NBC. On January 1,
1927 NBC formally divided their respective marketing strategies:
the
Red Network offered
commercially sponsored entertainment and music programming; the
Blue Network mostly carried
sustaining or non-sponsored broadcasts, especially news and
cultural programs. Various histories of NBC suggest the color
designations for the two networks came from the color of the push
pins NBC engineers used to designate affiliates of WEAF (red) and
WJZ (blue), or from the use of double-ended red and blue colored
pencils. A similar two-part/two-color strategy appeared in the
recording industry, dividing the market between classical and
popular offerings.
On April 5, 1927, NBC reached the West Coast with the launch of the
NBC
Orange Network, also known as
The Pacific Coast
Network. This was followed by the debut on October 18, 1931,
of the NBC
Gold Network, also known as
The Pacific
Gold Network. The Orange Network carried Red Network
programming and the Gold Network carried programming from the Blue
Network.
Initially the Orange Network recreated
Eastern Red Network programming for West Coast stations at KPO
in San Francisco,
California
. In 1936 the
Orange Network name
was dropped and
network affiliate
stations became part of the Red Network. At the same time the Gold
Network became part of the Blue Network. NBC also developed a
network for
shortwave radio stations in
the 1930s called the
NBC White Network.

GE Building entrance
RCA moved
its corporate headquarters into the new Rockefeller
Center
in 1933, signing the leases in 1931.
RCA was
the lead tenant at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, the RCA Building
(now the GE
Building
). The building housed NBC studios, as
well as theaters for RCA-owned
RKO
Pictures. Rockefeller Center's founder and financier
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., arranged the deal
with the chairman of GE,
Owen D.
Young, and the president of RCA,
David Sarnoff.
The chimes
The famous three-note
NBC chimes came
about after several years of development.
The three note
sequence G-E-C were heard first over Atlanta's WSB
. The
chimes outline what is known to musicians as a second inversion C
Major triad. Someone at NBC in New York heard the WSB version of
the notes during the networked broadcast of a
Georgia Tech football
game and asked permission to use it on the national network. NBC
started to use the three notes in 1931, and it was the first
audio trademark to be accepted by
the
U.S.
Patent and
Trademark Office .
A variant sequence was also used that went
G-E-C-G, known as "the fourth chime" and used during wartime
(especially in the wake of the attack on Pearl Harbor
), on D-Day, and
disasters. The NBC chimes were mechanized in 1932 by
Richard H. Ranger of the Rangertone company; their
purpose was to send a low level signal of constant amplitude that
would be heard by the various switching stations manned by NBC and
AT&T engineers, and thus used as a system cue for switching
different stations between the Red and Blue network feeds.
Contrary
to popular legend, the three musical notes, G-E-C, did not
originally stand for NBC's current parent corporation, the General
Electric Company; although GE's radio station in Schenectady,
New York
, WGY
, was an
early NBC affiliate, and GE was an early shareholder in NBC's
founding parent RCA. General Electric did not own NBC
outright until 1986. G-E-C is still used on NBC-TV. A variant with
two preceding notes is used on the
MSNBC cable
television network. NBC's radio branch no longer exists.
New beginnings: The Blue Network becomes ABC
The
Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) had, since its creation in
1934, studied the
monopolistic effects of
network broadcasting. The FCC found that NBC's two networks and its
owned-and-operated stations dominated audiences, affiliates and
advertising in American radio. In 1939 the FCC ordered RCA to
divest itself of one of the two networks. RCA fought the
divestiture order, but in 1940 divided NBC into two companies in
case an appeal was lost. The Blue Network became
NBC Blue
Network, Inc. (now
Citadel
Media), and NBC Red became
NBC Red Network, Inc. In
January 1942, the two networks formally divorced operations, and
the Blue Network was referred to on the air as either
Blue
or
Blue Network, with official corporate name
Blue
Network Company, Inc. NBC Red, on the air, became known simply
as
NBC.
After
losing its final appeal before the U.S.
Supreme
Court
in May 1943, RCA sold Blue Network Company, Inc.,
for $8 million to Life Savers magnate
Edward J. Noble, completing the sale in October
1943.
Noble got the network name, leases on
land-lines and the New York studios; two-and-a half stations (WJZ
in Newark/New York; KGO
in San
Francisco, and WENR in Chicago, which shared a frequency with
Prairie Farmer station WLS
); and about
60 affiliates. Noble wanted a better name for the network
and in 1944 acquired the rights to the name
American Broadcasting
Company from
George
Storer. The Blue Network became ABC officially on June 15,
1945, after the sale was completed.
Defining radio’s golden age

The front entrance of the NBC Tower
at 454 N.
Columbus Drive, Chicago, IL.
In the golden days of network broadcasting, 1930 to 1950, NBC was
at the pinnacle of American radio. NBC broadcast radio's earliest
mass hit,
Amos 'n' Andy,
beginning in 1926–27 in its original fifteen-minute serial format.
The show set a standard for nearly all serialized programming in
the original radio era, both comedies and
soap operas. The appeal of the two struggling
title characters landed a broad audience, especially during the
Great Depression.
NBC became home to many of the most popular performers and programs
on the air.
Al Jolson,
Jack Benny,
Edgar
Bergen,
Bob Hope,
Fred Allen, and
Burns
and Allen called NBC home, as did
Arturo Toscanini's
NBC Symphony Orchestra, which the
network helped him create. Other programs were
Vic and Sade,
Fibber McGee and Molly,
The Great
Gildersleeve (arguably broadcasting's first spin-off
program, from
Fibber McGee),
One Man's Family,
Ma Perkins, and
Death Valley Days. NBC stations were
often the most powerful, and some occupied unique
clear-channel national frequencies,
reaching many hundreds or thousands of miles at night.
In the late 1940s, rival
Columbia Broadcasting
System (CBS) gained ground by allowing radio stars to use their
own production companies, which was a tax break. In early radio
years, stars and programs commonly hopped between networks when
their short-term contracts expired. In 1948–49, beginning with the
nation's top radio star, Jack Benny, many NBC performers jumped to
CBS.
In addition, NBC stars began moving toward television, including
comedian
Milton Berle, whose
Texaco Star Theater on
NBC became television's first major hit. Conductor Arturo Toscanini
conducted ten television concerts on NBC between 1948 and 1952. The
concerts were
simulcast on both TV and
radio, perhaps the first such instance in which this was done. Two
of them were historic firsts - the first complete telecast of
Beethoven's Symphony No.
9, and the first complete
telecast of
Verdi's
Aida, performed in concert rather than with
scenery and costumes. The
Aida telecast starred
Herva Nelli and
Richard Tucker.
Aiming to keep classic radio alive as television matured, and to
challenge CBS's Sunday night radio lineup, much of which had jumped
from NBC with Jack Benny, NBC launched
The Big Show in November 1950.
This 90-minute variety show updated radio's earliest musical
variety style with sophisticated comedy and dramatic presentations.
Featuring stage legend
Tallulah
Bankhead as hostess, it lured prestigious entertainers,
including Fred Allen,
Groucho Marx,
Lauritz Melchior,
Ethel Barrymore,
Louis Armstrong,
Ethel Merman, Bob Hope,
Danny Thomas,
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and
Ella Fitzgerald. But
The Big Show's
initial success didn't last despite critical praise. The show
endured two years, with NBC losing perhaps a million dollars on the
project (they were only able to sell advertising time during the
middle half-hour every week).
NBC's last major radio programming push, beginning June 12, 1955,
was
Monitor, a creation
of NBC President
Sylvester "Pat" Weaver,
who also created the innovative NBC television programs
Today Show, Tonight Show, and Home. Monitor was a continuous
all-weekend mixture of music, news, interviews and features, with a
variety of hosts including well-known television personalities
Dave Garroway,
Hugh Downs,
Ed McMahon,
Joe Garagiola and
Gene Rayburn. The potpourri show tried to keep
vintage radio alive by featuring segments from Jim and Marian
Jordan (in character as Fibber McGee and Molly);
Peg Lynch's dialog comedy
Ethel and Albert (with Alan Bunce);
and iconoclastic satirist
Henry
Morgan.
Monitor was a success for a number of years,
but after the mid-1960s, local stations, especially in larger
markets, were reluctant to break from their established formats to
run non-conforming network programming. After
Monitor went
off the air January 26, 1975, little remained of NBC network radio
beyond hourly newscasts and news features, and
The Eternal Light on Sunday
mornings.
The last years of NBC Radio
Beginning on June 18, 1975, NBC launched the NBC News and
Information Service (NIS), which provided up to 55 minutes of news
per hour around the clock to local stations that wanted to adopt an
all-news format. NIS attracted several dozen subscribing stations,
largely in smaller markets, but not enough for NBC to expect
profitability, and NBC discontinued it May 29, 1977. In 1979, NBC
started The Source, a modestly successful secondary network
providing news and short features to
FM rock stations.
The NBC Radio Network also pioneered personal advice call-in
national talk radio with a satellite-distributed talk show in the
evening entitled TalkNet, featuring Bruce Williams (personal
financial advice) and Sally Jesse Raphael (personal / romantic
advice). While never much of a ratings success, TalkNet nonetheless
helped further the national talk radio format. For affiliates, many
of them struggling AM stations, TalkNet helped fill the evenings
with free programming, allowing the stations to sell local
advertising in a dynamic format without the cost associated with
producing local programming. Some in the industry feared this trend
would lead to ever-more control of radio content by networks and
syndicators.
GE acquired NBC in 1986, signaling the beginning of the end of NBC
Radio. There were three factors that lead to its demise. First, GE
decided that radio did not fit its strategy. Second, the radio
division had not been profitable for many years. Finally, Federal
law of the time would not allow GE to own both a radio and TV
division. Although ABC got a waiver to do so after being acquired
by
Capital Cities
Communications in 1985, GE/NBC chose not to do so. In the
summer of 1987, GE sold NBC Radio's network operations to
Westwood One, and sold off the NBC-owned
stations to different buyers. In 1989 the NBC Radio Network as an
independent programming service ceased to exist, becoming a brand
name for content produced by Westwood One, and ultimately by
CBS Radio. The
Mutual Broadcasting System, which
Westwood One had acquired two years earlier, met the same fate, and
essentially merged with NBC Radio.
It should be noted that GE's divestiture of NBC's entire radio
division was the first cannon shot of what would play out in the
national broadcast media, as each of the Big 3 broadcast networks
were soon acquired by other corporate entities. The NBC case was
particularly noteworthy in that it was the first to be bought --
and was bought by a corporate behemoth
outside the
broadcast industry. Prior to the acquisition by GE, NBC operated
its radio division partly out of tradition, and partly to meet its
then-FCC-mandated requirement to distribute programming for the
public good (the now-defunct "
Fairness
Doctrine"). Syndicators such as Westwood One were not subject
to such rules as they owned no stations. Thus did GE's divestiture
of NBC Radio -- "America's First Network" -- in many ways mark the
"beginning of the end" of the old broadcasting era and the ushering
in of the new, largely unregulated industry that we see
today.
By the late 1990s, Westwood One was producing
NBC
Radio-branded newscasts, on weekday mornings only. In 1999,
these were discontinued, and the few remaining NBC Radio Network
affiliates began to receive
CNN
Radio-branded newscasts around the clock. But in 2003,
Westwood One began distributing a new service called
NBC News
Radio, consisting of one-minute news updates read by
television anchors and reporters from
NBC
News and
MSNBC. The content, however, is
written by employees of Westwood One - not NBC News.
Television

30 Rockefeller Center, also known as
the GE Building, is the world headquarters of NBC.
For many years NBC was closely identified with
David Sarnoff, who used it as a vehicle to
sell consumer electronics. It was Sarnoff who ruthlessly stole
innovative ideas from competitors, using RCA's muscle to prevail in
the courts. RCA and Sarnoff had dictated the broadcasting standards
put in place by the FCC in 1938, and stole the spotlight by
introducing all-electronic television to the public at the 1939–40
New York World's Fair,
simultaneously initiating a regular schedule of programs on the
NBC-RCA television station in New York City. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt appeared at the fair, before
the NBC cameras, becoming the first U.S. president to appear on
television on April 30, 1939. The David Sarnoff Library has
available
an actual, off-the-monitor photograph of the
FDR telecast.
The broadcast was transmitted by NBC's New
York television station W2XBS Channel 1 (now WNBC-TV
channel 4) and was seen by about 1,000 viewers
within the station's roughly coverage area from their Empire State
Building transmitter location.
The next day, May 1, four models of RCA television sets went on
sale to the general public in various New York City department
stores, promoted in a series of splashy newspaper ads. It is to be
noted that DuMont (and others) actually offered the first home sets
in 1938 in anticipation of NBC's announced April 1939 start-up.
Later in 1939, NBC took its cameras to professional football and
baseball games in the New York City area, establishing many
"firsts" in the history of television.
Actual
NBC "network" broadcasts (more than one station) began about this
time with occasional special events — such as the British King and
Queen's visit to the New York World's Fair — being seen in
Philadelphia (over the station which would become WPTZ, now
KYW
) and in
Schenectady (over the station which would become WRGB), two pioneer
stations in their own right. The most ambitious NBC
television "network" program of this pre-war era was the
telecasting of the Republican National Convention in 1940 from
Philadelphia, which was fed live to New York and Schenectady.
However, despite major promotion by RCA, television set sales in
New York in the 1939-1940 period were disappointing, primarily due
to the high cost of the sets, and the lack of compelling regular
programming. Most sets were sold to bars, hotels and other public
places, where the general public viewed special sporting and news
events.
Television's experimental period ended, and the FCC allowed full
commercial telecasting to begin on July 1, 1941.
NBC's New York
station W2XBS received the first commercial license, adopting the
call letters WNBT (it is now WNBC-TV
). The first official, paid television
commercial on that day broadcast by any station in the United
States was for Bulova Watches, seen just before the start of a
Brooklyn Dodgers telecast on NBC's WNBT, New York. A test pattern,
featuring the newly assigned WNBT call letters, was modified to
look like a clock, complete with functioning hands. The Bulova
logo, with the phrase "Bulova Watch Time", was shown in the lower
right-hand quadrant of the test pattern. A photograph of the NBC
camera telecasting the test pattern-advertisement for that first
official TV commercial can be seen at
http://www.earlytelevision.org/images/rca_bulova_ad-1.jpg
Limited programming continued until the U.S. entered World War II.
Telecasts were curtailed in the early years of the war, then
expanded as NBC began to prepare for full service upon the war's
end. On
V-E Day, May 8, 1945,
WNBT broadcast hours of news coverage, and remotes from around New
York City. This event was pre-promoted by NBC with a direct-mail
card sent to television set owners in the New York area. At one
point, a WNBT camera placed atop the marquee of the
Hotel Astor panned the crowd below celebrating
the end of the war in Europe. The vivid coverage was a prelude to
television's rapid growth after the war ended.
The NBC television network grew from its initial post-war lineup of
four stations. The
1947 World
Series featured two New York teams (Yankees and Dodgers), and
local TV sales boomed, since the games were telecast in New York.
More stations along the East Coast and in the Midwest were
connected by coaxial cable through the late 1940s, and in September
1951 the first transcontinental telecasts took place.
The early 1950s brought success for NBC in the new medium.
Television's first big star,
Milton
Berle, drew large audiences to NBC with his antics on the
The Texaco Star
Theater. Under its innovative president,
Sylvester "Pat" Weaver, the network launched
Today and
The Tonight Show, which would bookend
the broadcast day for over fifty years, and which still lead their
competitors. Weaver, who also launched the genre of network
"spectaculars," network-produced motion pictures, and the live
90-minute Sunday afternoon series
Wide
Wide World, left the network in 1955 in a dispute with its
chairman
David Sarnoff, who
subsequently named his son Robert Sarnoff as president.
In 1951, NBC commissioned Italian-American composer
Gian Carlo Menotti to compose the first
opera ever written for television; Menotti came up with
Amahl and the Night
Visitors, a forty-five minute work for which he wrote both
music and libretto, about a disabled shepherd boy who meets the
Three Wise Men and is miraculously
cured when he offers his crutch to the newborn Christ Child. It was
such a stunning success that it was repeated every year on NBC from
1951 to 1966, when a quarrel between Menotti and NBC ended the
broadcasts. However, by 1978, Menotti and NBC had patched things
up, and an all-new production of the work, filmed partly on
location in the Holy Land, was telecast that year.
Color television
While rivals
CBS and
DuMont also offered color
broadcasting plans, RCA convinced a waffling FCC to approve its
color system in December 1953. NBC was ready with color programming
within days of the FCC's decision. NBC began with some shows in
1954, and that summer broadcast its first program to air all
episodes in color,
The
Marriage.
- In 1955, on the television anthology Producers' Showcase, NBC broadcast
a live production in color of Peter Pan, a new Broadway
musical adaptation of J. M. Barrie's beloved
play, with the musical's entire original cast, the first such
telecast of its kind. Mary Martin
starred as Peter and Cyril Ritchard
played the dual role of Mr. Darling and Captain Hook. The broadcast drew the highest
ratings for a television program up to then. It was so successful
that NBC restaged it live a mere ten months later, and in 1960,
long after Producers' Showcase had ended its run,
Peter Pan, with most of the 1955 cast, was restaged again,
this time as a TV special on its own, and videotaped so that it
would no longer have to be done live on television.
- In
1956 during a National Association meeting in Chicago, NBC
announced that its Chicago TV station WNBQ (now WMAQ-TV
) was the first color TV station in the nation (at
least six hours of color broadcasts a day).
- The television edition of the radio program The Bell Telephone Hour
premiered in color on NBC in 1959, where it continued for nine more
years.
- In September 1961, the Walt Disney anthology
television series moved from ABC to NBC, where the show
continued its very long run, this time in color. As many of the
Disney programs shown in black-and-white on ABC had actually been
filmed in color, they could easily be repeated on the NBC edition
of the program.
- The 1962 Rose Bowl was the first
color television broadcast of a college football game.
By 1963, much of NBC's
prime time
schedule was in color, although some popular programs like
The Man from
U.N.C.L.E., which premiered in late 1964, had their entire
first season in black-and-white. In the fall of 1965, NBC achieved
95% color programming in prime time (the exceptions were
I Dream of Jeannie and
Convoy), and began billing itself as
"The Full Color Network". Without television sets to sell, rival
networks followed more slowly, finally committing to 100%
prime-time color programming in the 1966–67 season.
Days of our Lives was the first soap
opera to premiere in color.
In 1967, NBC acquired
MGM's classic 1939 film
The Wizard of
Oz after
CBS, which had televised the
film beginning in 1956, refused to meet MGM's increased price for
more television showings.
Oz had been, up to then, one of
the few programs that CBS had telecast in color, but by 1967, color
was the norm on TV, and the film became another in the list of
color specials telecast by NBC. The network showed the film
annually for eight years, beginning in 1968, after which CBS,
realizing that they may have committed a colossal blunder by
letting this then-huge ratings success go to another network, now
agreed to pay MGM more money so that the rights to show the film
could revert back to them.
Two distinctive features of the film's showings on NBC were:
- 1) the film was shown for the first time without a host to
introduce it as had always been previously done,
- 2) the film was slightly cut to make room for more commercials.
Despite the cuts, however, it continued to score excellent
television ratings in those pre-VCR days, as audiences were
generally unable to see the film any other way at that time.
1970s doldrums
The 1970s started strongly for the network thanks to hits like
Adam-12,
Rowan & Martin's
Laugh-In,
Emergency!,
The Dean Martin Show,
and
The Flip Wilson
Show, but this did not last. In spite of the success of
such new shows as the
NBC Mystery
Movie,
Sanford and
Son,
Chico and the
Man,
Little
House on the Prairie,
The Rockford Files, and
Quincy, M.E., as well as continued success
from veterans like
The Tonight Show
Starring Johnny Carson and
The Wonderful World of
Disney, the network entered a slump in the middle of the
decade.
Disney, in particular, saw its ratings nosedive
once CBS put
60 Minutes up
against it in the 1975-1976 season. In 1974 under new president
Herb Schlosser, the network tried to go after younger viewers with
a series of costly movies, miniseries and specials. This failed to
attract the desirable 18-34 demographic, and alienated older
viewers. None of the new prime-time shows NBC introduced in the
fall of 1975 earned a second season, all failing in the face of
established competition. The network's lone breakout success that
season was the groundbreaking late-night comedy/variety show,
NBC's Saturday Night -- which would soon become
Saturday Night Live, in
a time slot previously held by reruns of
The Tonight
Show.
In 1978 Schlosser was promoted to executive vice presidency at RCA,
and a desperate NBC lured
Fred
Silverman away from number-one ABC to turn the network's
fortunes around. With the notable exceptions of
Diff'rent Strokes,
Real People,
The Facts of Life, and
the mini-series
Shogun, he couldn't find a
hit. Failures accumulated rapidly under his watch (such as
Hello, Larry,
Supertrain,
Pink Lady and Jeff, and
The Waverly Wonders). Ironically many of them were beaten
in the ratings by shows Silverman had greenlighted at CBS and
ABC.
Also
during this time, NBC suffered the defections of several longtime
affiliates in markets such as: Atlanta (WSB-TV
), Baltimore
(WBAL-TV
), Charlotte (WSOC-TV
), Dayton (WDTN
),
Indianapolis (WRTV
),
Jacksonville (WTLV
),
Minneapolis-St. Paul (KSTP-TV
), and San Diego (KGTV
).
Most were wooed away by ABC, which was the number-one network
during the late 1970s and early 1980s, while WBAL-TV went to CBS.
In the
case of WSB-TV and WSOC-TV, both were (and remain) under common
ownership with Cox
Communications, with its other NBC affiliate at the time,
WIIC-TV in Pittsburgh
(which would become WPXI
the
following year and also remains owned by Cox), only remaining with
the network because WIIC-TV itself was in a distant third to
then-CBS affiliate and Group
W powerhouse KDKA-TV
& pre-existing ABC affiliate WTAE-TV
. (KDKA-TV, which is now owned by CBS,
infamously passed up affiliating with NBC after Westinghouse Electric bought
the station from DuMont in 1954, leading to an acrimonious
relationship between NBC and Westinghouse for years afterward.) In
markets such as San Diego, Charlotte, and Jacksonville, NBC was
forced to replace the lost stations with new affiliates
broadcasting on the UHF band,
with the San Diego station (KNSD
) eventually
becoming an NBC O&O. Other smaller
television markets like Yuma, Arizona
waited many years to get another local NBC
affiliate (see TV stations KIVA and
KYMA
).
The stations in Baltimore, Dayton and Jacksonville, however, have
since rejoined the network.
When U.S. President
Jimmy Carter pulled
the American team out of the
1980
Summer Olympics, NBC canceled a planned 150 hours of coverage
(which had cost $87,000,000), and the network's future was in
doubt. It had been counting on $170,000,000 in advertising revenues
and on the broadcasts to help promote fall shows.
The press was merciless towards Silverman, but the two most savage
attacks on his leadership came from within. The company that
composed NBC's on-air
Proud as a
Peacock promo music created a spoof of the ad campaign called
"Loud as a Peacock." On
Saturday Night Live, series writer
and occasional performer
Al Franken
satirized Silverman in an SNL sketch titled "Limo for a Lame-O." As
a result, Silverman admitted he "never liked Al Franken to begin
with", and the sketch ruined Franken's chance of succeeding
Lorne Michaels as executive producer
of SNL.
Tartikoff's turnaround
In the summer of 1981, Fred Silverman resigned.
Grant Tinker became president of the network
and
Brandon Tartikoff became chief
of programming. Tartikoff inherited a schedule full of aging dramas
and very few sitcoms, but showed patience with promising programs.
One such show was the critically acclaimed
Hill Street Blues, which rated poorly
in its first season. Instead of canceling it, he moved the
Emmy Award-winning police drama to Thursday night
where its ratings improved dramatically. He used the same tactic
with
St. Elsewhere. Shows
like these were able to get the same ad revenue as their
higher-rated, mass-audience competition because of their desirable
demographics, upscale, 18-34 year-old viewers. While the network
claimed moderate successes with
Gimme
a Break!,
Silver
Spoons,
Knight Rider and
Remington Steele, its
biggest hit in this period was
The
A-Team, which, at tenth place, was the network's only
top-20 rated show of the 1982–1983 season, and it reached third
place the next year. These shows helped NBC through the disastrous
1983-84 season, in which none of its new shows gained a second
year. It was the only time that a network's entire line of new
series had failed to be renewed since the network's 1975
lineup.
In 1982 NBC canceled
Tom Snyder's
The Tomorrow Show and
gave the time slot to 34-year-old comedian
David Letterman. Though Letterman had had an
unsuccessful
daytime series
in 1980,
Late Night
with David Letterman proved much more successful.
In 1984 the huge success of
The Cosby
Show led to a renewed interest in sitcoms, while
Family Ties and
Cheers, both of which premiered in 1982 to
mediocre ratings, saw their viewership increase from having
Cosby as a lead-in. The network moved from third place to
second place that year. It reached first place in the Nielsen
rankings in the 1985-86 season, with hits
The Golden Girls,
Miami Vice,
227,
Night
Court,
Highway to
Heaven, and
Hunter. The network's upswing
continued through the decade with
ALF,
Amen,
Matlock,
L.A. Law,
The Hogan Family,
A Different
World,
Empty Nest, and
In the Heat of
the Night. In the 1988-89 season, NBC, which had an
amazing 18 shows inside the top 30 at the time, won every week in
the ratings for over a full year, an achievement not since
duplicated.
"Must See TV"
In 1991, Tartikoff left NBC to take a position at
Paramount Pictures. In one decade he had
taken control of a network with no shows in the Nielsen Top 10 and
left it with five.
Warren
Littlefield took his place. His start was shaky due to the end
of most of the Tartikoff-era hits. Some blamed him for losing
David Letterman to CBS after giving
The Tonight Show to
Jay Leno, following
Johnny Carson's 1992 retirement. Things turned
around with hit series
Friends,
Mad About You,
Frasier,
ER, and
Will & Grace. One of Tartikoff's
late acquisitions,
Seinfeld,
initially struggled, but became one of NBC's top-rated shows after
it was moved into the timeslot following
Cheers. The
Must See TV tag line was
applied to Thursday night's strong lineup. After popular show
Seinfeld ended its run in 1998,
Friends became
the most popular sitcom on NBC. It dominated the ratings, never
leaving the top 5 watched shows of the year in its second through
tenth season and landing on the number 1 spot in season eight
(2001-2002 season).
Frasier was also popular and, despite
not being as highly rated as
Friends, still landed in the
top 40.
Friends finished its run in 2004 along with
Frasier and NBC's
Must See TV declined.
Friends spin-off
Joey (despite a relatively good start)
started to fail during its second season.
New leadership and decline
At the start of the 2000s, however, NBC's fortunes took a rapid
turn for the worse. In 2001, CBS chose its hit reality series
Survivor to
anchor its Thursday night line-up. Its success was taken as a
suggestion that NBC's nearly two decades of Thursday night
dominance could be broken. With the loss of
Friends and
Frasier in 2004, NBC was left with several moderately
rated shows and few true hits. NBC dropped to fourth in the ratings
race. CBS led for most of the decade, followed by a resurgent ABC,
and Fox (which would eventually become the most watched network for
the 2007-08 season). Adding to its woes, all of the networks face
shrinking audiences due to increased competition from cable, home
video, and the internet.With the beginning of the 2004-2005 season,
NBC became the first major network to produce its programming in
widescreen, hoping to attract new
viewers; however, the network saw only a slight boost.
In December 2005, NBC began its first week-long primetime game show
event,
Deal or No
Deal, garnering high ratings, and returning multi-weekly
in March 2006. On sustained success,
Deal or No Deal
returned in the fall of 2006. Otherwise, the 2005-06 season was one
of the worst for NBC in three decades, with only one fall series,
the sitcom
My Name Is Earl,
surviving for a second season. The 2006-07 season was a mixed bag,
with
Heroes becoming a
surprise hit on Monday nights, while the highly touted
Studio 60 on the Sunset
Strip, from the creator of NBC's hit drama
The West Wing, lost a third of its
premiere-night viewers by week six and was eventually canceled.
Sunday Night NFL football
returned to NBC after eight years,
Deal or No Deal stayed
strong, and its comedies
The Office and
30 Rock won the
Emmy
Award for Outstanding Comedy Series for four consecutive years.
However, NBC has remained in fourth place, ahead of the
The CW. No new primetime hits emerged in the
2008-2009 season (despite NBC's rare good fortune to have both the
Super Bowl and the Olympic Games in which to promote their new
offerings), while
Heroes and
Deal or No Deal both
collapsed in the ratings, causing the latter to be cancelled. NBC
Universal President/CEO
Jeff Zucker had
previously said that NBC no longer believed that they could be #1
in prime time.
When
Conan O'Brien replaced
Jay Leno as host of
The Tonight Show in 2009, the network
gave the latter host
a new talk
show, committing to air it every weeknight at 10:00 p.m. ET/PT
(9:00 p.m. CT/MT), as an inexpensive comedic alternative to the
procedurals and
other one-hour dramas that typically air during that time slot. In
doing so, NBC became the first large United States network in
decades, or possibly ever, to broadcast the same show every weekday
during
prime time hours. Its executives
called the decision "a transformational moment in the history of
broadcasting" and "in effect, launching five shows." However,
industry executives criticized the network for abandoning a history
of airing quality dramas at that hour, and that it would hurt NBC
by undermining a reputation built on successful scripted
shows.
In March 2007, NBC announced that it would offer full-length
prime-time television shows like
The Office and
Heroes on-demand to play on mobile phones. This was a
first for the United States, as the market shifts away from
traditional television.
NBC News

NBC News Washington Bureau
Programming
NBC presently operates on an 87-hour regular network programming
schedule. It provides 22 hours of
prime
time programming to affiliated stations: 8-11pm
(ET/PT)/7:00-10:00 pm (CT, MT, AT)/6-9 pm (HT) Monday through
Saturday and 7-11 pm on Sundays. Programming is also provided 7-11
am weekdays in the form of
Today, which also has a two-hour
Saturday and one-hour Sunday edition; the one-hour weekday drama
Days of our Lives;
nightly editions of
NBC Nightly
News; the Sunday political talk show
Meet the Press; weekday early-morning
news program
Early Today; late
night talk shows
The Tonight Show with Conan
O'Brien,
Late
Night with Jimmy Fallon and
Last Call with Carson Daly;
sketch comedy show
Saturday
Night Live; Late-late-night poker series
Poker After Dark; weeknight
rebroadcasts of
The Tonight
Show under the banner
NBC All Night; and a
three-hour Saturday morning animation block under the name
qubo. In addition, sports programming is also provided
weekend afternoons any time from 12-6 pm. ET, or
tape-delayed PT.
Prime time
Returning comedies are in
red; new comedies are in
pink; returning
dramas are in
green;
new dramas are in
blue; returning reality shows are in
yellow; new reality
shows are in
gold;
returning game shows are in
orange; new game shows are in
beige; news
programming is in
brown; sports programming is in
purple; talk shows
are in
wisteria.
All times are
Eastern and
Pacific (subtract one hour for
Central and
Mountain time), with the exception of
Sunday (see below).
Spring 2010
Daytime programs
NBC is currently the home of only one daytime
soap opera,
Days
of our Lives, which has been broadcast on the network
since 1965.
Long-running
NBC Daytime dramas of the
past include
The
Doctors (1963–1982),
Another World (1964-1999),
Santa Barbara
(1984–1993), and
Passions
(1999-2007). NBC also aired the final four and a half years of
Search for Tomorrow
(1982–1986) after that series was dropped by
CBS, although many NBC affiliates did not air the show
during that time. NBC has also aired numerous short-lived soaps,
including
Generations (1989–1991),
Sunset Beach
(1997–1999), and the two
Another World spin-off,
Somerset (1970–1976) and
Texas (1980–1982).
Notable daytime game shows that once aired on NBC include
The Price Is Right
(1956-63),
Concentration (1958-1973 and
1987-1991),
The Match Game
(1962-1969),
Let's Make a
Deal (1963-1968 and 1991),
Jeopardy! (1964-1975 and 1978-1979),
The Hollywood Squares
(1966-1980),
Wheel of
Fortune (1975-1989 and 1991),
Password Plus/Super
Password (1979-1982 and 1984-1989),
Sale of the Century
(1969-1973 and 1983-1989) and
Scrabble (1984-1990 and 1993). The
final game show to air on NBC's daytime schedule was the
short-lived
Caesars
Challenge, which ended in January 1994.
Children's programming
Children's programming has played a part in NBC's programming since
its initial roots in television. In 1947, NBC's first major
children's series was
Howdy
Doody, one of the era's first breakthrough television
shows. The series, which ran for 13 years, featured a frecklefaced
marionette and a myriad of other
characters and hosted by
"Buffalo" Bob
Smith. Howdy Doody spent most of its run on weekday
afternoons.
In 1956, NBC abandoned the children's programming lineup on weekday
afternoons, relegating the lineup to Saturdays only with Howdy
Doody as their marquee franchise for the series' remaining four
years. From the mid-1960s until 1992, the bulk of NBC's children's
programming were derived from theatrical shorts like
The Pink Panther Show and
Looney Tunes, reruns of
popular television series like
The
Flintstones and
The
Jetsons, foreign acquisitions like
Astro Boy and
Kimba the White Lion, original
animated series (most notably
The Smurfs and
Alvin and the Chipmunks in the
1980s), cartoon adaptations of
Gary Coleman,
Mr. T,
Punky Brewster,
ALF and
Star
Trek, and original live-action series including
The Banana Splits,
The Bugaloos, and
H.R. Pufnstuf.
From 1984 to 1989,
One to Grow On
PSAs were shown after the end credits of every show or every other
children's show.
In 1989, NBC premiered
Saved by
the Bell, which originated at the
Disney Channel as
Good Morning, Miss Bliss.
Saved by the Bell, despite bad reviews from tv critics,
would become one of the most popular teen series in television
history as well as the number one series on Saturday mornings,
dethroning
The Bugs Bunny and
Tweety Show in its first season.
NBC abandoned the animated series in August 1992 in favor of a
Saturday edition of
Today and
more live-action series under the name
TNBC
(
Teen NBC). Most of the series on the TNBC lineup were
series produced by
Peter
Engel such as
City Guys,
Hang Time,
California Dreams,
One World and the
Saved by the Bell spinoff,
Saved by the Bell: The New
Class.
NBA Inside Stuff was also a part of the
TNBC lineup during the duration of the NBA season.
In 2002, NBC began a deal with
Discovery Communications' Discovery Kids channel to air their original
FCC-mandated educational programming under the banner
Discovery Kids on NBC. The schedule
originally consisted of only live-action series, including a
kid-themed version of
Trading
Spaces and
J. D. Roth's
Emmy-nominated reality game show
Endurace, but later expanded to
include some animated series such as
Kenny the Shark,
Tutenstein, and
Time Warp Trio.
In May
2006, in order to replace the Discovery Kids Saturday Morning
block, NBC announced plans to launch a new children's block on
Saturday mornings starting in September 2006 as part of the
qubo endeavor teaming parent company
NBC Universal with ION Media
Networks, Scholastic Press
, Classic Media and
Corus Entertainment's Nelvana. qubo will include blocks to air on NBC,
Telemundo (the Spanish-language network
owned by NBC Universal), and ION Media Networks's ION Television, as well as a 24/7 digital
broadcast kids channel, video on demand services and a branded
website.
The "Discovery Kids on NBC" block aired for the final time on
September 2, 2006. On Saturday, September 9, 2006, NBC started
airing the following qubo programs:
VeggieTales,
Dragon,
VeggieTales Presents:
3-2-1 Penguins!,
Babar,
Jane and the Dragon,
and
Jacob
Two-Two.
NBCi
- NBCi' redirects here.
In April 2000, NBC purchased a company that specialized with search
engines that learned from the users' searches for $32 million,
called
GlobalBrain.
In 2000, NBC briefly changed its web address to "
NBCi.com", in a
heavily-advertised attempt to launch an
Internet portal and
homepage. This move saw NBC teaming up with
XOOM.com, e-mail.com,
AllBusiness.com, and Snap.com (eventually
acquiring all four of them), launching a multi-faceted internet
portal with e-mail, webhosting, community, chat, personalization
and news capabilities. This experiment lasted roughly one season,
failed, and NBCi was folded back into NBC. The NBC-TV portion of
the website reverted to NBC.com. However, the NBCi web site
continued as a portal for NBC-branded content (NBCi.com redirected
to NBCi.msnbc.com), using a co-branded version of
InfoSpace to deliver minimal portal content. In
mid 2007, NBCi.com began to mirror NBC.com.
Evolution of the NBC logo
NBC has used a number of logos throughout its history; early logos
were similar to the logo of its then parent company,
RCA, but later logos included stylized
peacock images.
International broadcasts
Canada
NBC
broadcasts from the United States can be received throughout most
of Canada
, primarily
through cable television and
satellite television providers,
but also over the air in areas close to the Canada – United States
border. Aside from
simultaneous substitution, the
programming and broadcasting are the same as in the United
States.
Europe, Latin America and the Middle East
NBC Nightly News,
The Tonight Show with Jay
Leno, and
Late Night with Conan
O'Brien are shown on
CNBC
Europe. NBC is no longer shown outside the Americas on a
channel in its own right. However, both NBC News and MSNBC are
shown for a few hours a day on
Orbit News
in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. MSNBC is also shown
occasionally on sister network
CNBC
Europe during breaking news. Border cities in the
Mexico – United States
border region can easily receive NBC on-the-air, as well as
cable and satellite subscribers across Mexico, especially in the
Mexico City area.
NBC Super Channel becomes NBC Europe
In 1993, the Pan-European cable network
Super
Channel was taken over by
General
Electric, the parent of NBC, and became
NBC Super Channel. In 1996, the channel was
renamed
NBC Europe, but was, from then
on, almost always referred to as simply "NBC" on the air.
Most of NBC Europe's prime time programming was produced in Europe
due to rights restriction associated with US primetime shows, but
after 11 p.m.
Central European
Time on weekday evenings, the channel aired
The Tonight Show,
Late Night with Conan
O'Brien and
Later, hence its slogan "Where the
Stars Come Out at Night." Many
NBC News
programs were broadcast on NBC Europe, including
Dateline NBC,
Meet the Press and
NBC Nightly News, which was aired
live.
The Today Show
was also initially shown live in the afternoons, but was later
broadcast the following morning instead, by which time it was more
than half a day old.
In 1999, NBC Europe stopped broadcasting to most of Europe. At the
same time the network was relaunched as a German language computer
channel, targeting a young demographic. The main show on the new
NBC Europe was called NBC GIGA. In 2005, the channel was relaunched
once again, this time as a free-to-air movie channel under the name
"Das Vierte". GIGA started an own digital channel then, which can
be received via satellite and many cable networks in Germany,
Austria and Switzerland.
The Tonight Show and
NBC Nightly News continue
to be broadcast on
CNBC Europe.
Canal de Noticias
In 1993, NBC began production of
Canal de Noticias NBC.
This service was
beamed to Latin America from the NBC Newschannel headquarters
located in Charlotte
, North
Carolina
.
Over 50 journalists were brought to produce, write, anchor and
technically produce a 24 hour news service based on the popular
"wheel" conceived at CNN. The service folded in 1997 as sales
departments were not able to generate any revenue. After Mexican
Noticias ECO, Canal de Noticias NBC
holds the distinction of being the first 24 hour news service to be
seen in Latin America.
Telenoticias, at
one point owned by CBS, came later followed by
CNN en Español.
Caribbean
In the
Caribbean, many cable television and satellite television providers
air local NBC affiliates, or the main network feed from WNBC
New York
City or WTVJ
in
Miami. A few locally-owned NBC affiliates do exist, in
Puerto Rico.
The island and the
nearby U.S.
Virgin Islands
are the main receivers of NBC programs available in
English and Spanish via the SAP
option.
Bermuda
NBC's full program lineup is carried by local affiliate
VSB-TV, received from the network's East Coast
satellite feed.
Netherlands Antilles
In
Aruba
, the network programming is carried on station
ATV 15.
Asia Pacific
Guam
KUAM-TV
is an NBC affiliate in Guam
and carries
the full NBC program lineup via satellite.
American Samoa
KKHJ-LP is the NBC affiliate for Pago Pago
; it signed onto the network in 2005.
NBC Asia and CNBC Asia
In 1995,
NBC launched a channel in Asia called NBC
Asia available in Japan, Malaysia
, South Korea, Taiwan
and
Thailand
. Like NBC Europe, NBC Asia featured most of
NBC's news programs as well as the Tonight Show and Late Night.
Like its European counterpart, it couldn't broadcast US-produced
primetime shows due to rights restrictions. It also had NBC Super
Sports for the latest action in selected sporting events. During
weekday evenings, NBC Asia had a regional evening news program. It
occasionally simulcasted some programs from
CNBC Asia and
MSNBC. On 1
July 1998, NBC Asia was replaced by the
National Geographic Channel.
Like in the case of NBC Europe however, selected Tonight Show and
Late Night episodes and Meet the Press can still be seen on
CNBC Asia during weekends. CNBC Asia shows
NFL games and also brands them as
Sunday Night
Football.
Regional partners
Through regional partners, NBC-produced programs are seen in some
countries in the region. In the Philippines, Solar Entertainment's
Jack TV airs
The Tonight Show and
Late Night,
Will & Grace and
Saturday Night Live, while
2nd Avenue airs NBC News programs like
Today Show,
Early Today,
Weekend Today and
Dateline.
C/S 9 on
the other hand airs NBC Nightly News.
Australia
The
Seven Network in Australia has
close ties with NBC and has used many of its slogans (including
Let's All Be There).
Seven News has featured
The Mission as its news theme
since the mid 1980s. Local newscasts were named
Seven Nightly
News from the mid 1980s until around 2000.Seven rebroadcasts
some of NBC's news and current affairs programming, including:
In 2009, NBC and
Seven Network used
Guy Sebastian's #1 Aria selling song
Like it Like
That for their summer station promo.
Afilliates world broadcasters of NBC
Library
Through the years, NBC has produced many shows in-house, in
addition to airing content from other producers such as Revue
Studios and its successor Universal Television.
Notable in-house productions of NBC included
Get Smart, Bonanza,
Little House on
the Prairie, Las
Vegas and
Crossing
Jordan. NBC sold the rights to its pre-1973 shows to
National Telefilm
Associates in 1973. Today, those rights are owned by
CBS Television
Distribution.
NBC continues to own its post-1973 productions, through sister
company
NBC Universal
Television Group, the successor to Universal TV. As a result,
NBC in a way now owns several other series aired on the network
prior to 1973, such as
Wagon
Train.
See also
References
- RCA Lead Tenant of Rockefeller Center, see:
- See the article on WSB, the origination station for a 1930 broadcast
of Charles Davis Tillman which spread the
appeal of Southern Gospel to NBC listeners network
wide.
- Includes WNBT card mailed to set owners announcing the impending
coverage of V-E Day.
- The nine new shows of 1983-84 were Bay City Blues,
Boone, For Love and Honor, Jennifer Slept
Here, Manimal, The Rousters, Mr.
Smith, We Got it Made, and The Yellow
Rose.
- Schneider, Michael. " NBC unveils primetime plans" Variety,
4 May 2009.
- Poniewozik, James. " Jay Leno: New Show a Gamble for NBC"
Time, 3 September 2009.
- " NBC
Fall Preview", NBC.
- " 'Heroes' Back in a Big Way This Fall",
Zap2it.
External links