When the FCC added Color Television to the Industry Standards, they went with the system developed in the 1940s by Peter Goldman for CBS. Question 15 options: True False Part of the reason that many critics disliked 1950s gameshows was the fact that gameshows offered one of the few opportunities to see unscripted interactions with "real" (average/non-famous) people on television. Question 16 options: True False The Andy Griffith Show is an example of the "rural revival" shows that become enormously popular on 1960s American television. Question 19 options: True False During the Network Era, the hours before primetime each day were exclusively devoted to locally-produced programming, not programming dictated by an affiliate station's parent network. Question 20 options: True False
When the FCC added Color Television to the Industry Standards, they went with the system developed in the 1940s by Peter Goldman for CBS.
Question 15 options:
True | |
False |
Part of the reason that many critics disliked 1950s gameshows was the fact that gameshows offered one of the few opportunities to see unscripted interactions with "real" (average/non-famous) people on television.
Question 16 options:
True | |
False |
The Andy Griffith Show is an example of the "rural revival" shows that become enormously popular on 1960s American television.
Question 19 options:
True | |
False |
During the Network Era, the hours before primetime each day were exclusively devoted to locally-produced
Question 20 options:
True | |
False |

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