- published: 24 Jan 2013
- views: 32261
Pay television, subscription television, premium television, or premium channels refer to subscription-based television services, usually provided by both analog and digital cable and satellite television, but also increasingly via digital terrestrial and internet television. Subscription television began in the multi-channel transition and transitioned into the post-network era. Some parts of the world, notably in France and the United States, have also offered encrypted analog terrestrial signals available for subscription.
Subscription-based or pay television has resulted in a change in what type of content is broadcast by these networks. This model has led to networks creating much more specialized types of shows to influence viewers to subscribe. Subscription networks are most concerned with providing content that will make people want to subscribe as well as renew subscriptions rather than who is watching and when this viewing is taking place.
Oddity Archive: Episode 11 - Pay TV (but not Cable or Satellite)
Creepy Anti-Cable (Pay TV) PSA from the 70's
British Relay Television By Wire - Early Pay TV and Cable Television in the UK 1960s
Vintage ON-TV Pay TV & Cable Descramblers
SPECTRUM pay TV promo Mpls St Paul, ?/?/1985
Galaxy Pay-TV service ID
Crown City Four - Watch World War Three (on Pay Tv)
Stop Cable TV - 1969 ad against pay television
Star TV pay television 1981 commercial
Why I don't pay TV licence Update! | Theres nothing in the back of those vans!
An "Anti-cable" television ad from the 70's (then known as Pay-TV) to discourage viewers to support cable television. Ironically, they encouraged people to support the movie theaters. Just some ploy by Network television companies to eliminate the competition from cable TV.
Visit http://www.findaclip.co.uk for more information about this footage. Shot list: Gloucester Cathedral, home of first television relay in the world in 1951. Television aerials for both VHF Bands I and III. Shots of Gas, Electric, Telephone. Microwave transmitter, post office lines. Shots of London, central control room. BBC Lime Grove studios, ATV Hackney Empire, Dials and meters, radio receiving station on the east coast brings in radio from Luxembourg and the rest of Europe. Relays in Sheffield, Ipswich, Leeds, Cambridge, Whitehaven, Crawley and Hemel Hempstead. Shots of place signs, Welcome to Scotland, Gretna, Lockerbie, Ayr, Prestwick, Kilmarnock, Ardrosson, Irvine, Hawick, Galashiels, Selkirk, Dundee. British Relay Cable Stores, Planning Office, repairs and Maintenance, ...
This video contains an overview of vintage pay TV and cable descramblers. ON-TV was an over-the-air pay TV service in the early 1980's which went out of business after cable TV became available (as cable offered dozens of channels for the same price). The Scientific Atlanta and Zenith cable boxes in this video have test chips installed, which trick them into descrambling all channels. Today, everything is digital, and these have no useful life other than for electronic nostalgia.
An ID for Australia's first Pay-TV service, Galaxy. Galaxy was a microwave transmission service, which eventually lost out to cable, in the form of Foxtel (which has several of the old Galaxy channels - TV1, Arena, Comedy, etc). Although long since defunct, it's still remembered fondly by many of those who subscribed...
Watch World War Three (On Pay TV): The Crown City Four [1960] Watch World War III on pay TV Television can be such a thrill Sitting home in your chair Watch the boys over there Charging across your TV screen Getting blowen to smithereens Watch World War III on pay TV If you want to keep the kids at home They'll be glued to their sets Watching rockets and jets Blowing up schools and factories Putting an end to the birds and bees It's worth every penny to tune in and see Who wins the Emmy At the ruins of the Academy Watch World War III on pay TV Before your television melts away Think of the close-ups on the screen Find a face you know Isn't this better than Bishop Sheen? Better than the Late, Late Show? Watching the boys from your home town Fighting whoev...
My love of television was no doubt fueled by the fact that I grew up in one of the first communities in the USA to have cable TV. The Triad area of North Carolina was chosen because the concept was a no-brainer for a city like New York of Chicago but would people in the fly-over states actually pay for something they were essentially getting for free? An aggressive campaign against cable TV was waged, there was even an ad that ran with the previews before the movies that warned of the slippery slope that would come with the dreaded wire.
A 1981 television commercial for pay TV channel Super Time's revamp to Star TV.
Part 2. of my original TV licence video, I discuss the repercussions of the video and it may not be what you had expected. TVL is literally on its last legs, more and more people are not paying it and they cant afford the amount of staff they used to have! I also discuss the pending ban of the sale on a ten pack of cigarets, yet again the government is finding more ways to medal and leave us out of pocket. We don't need a nanny state, we need the government to address the real social issues and not interfere in our personal lives. http://www.tvlicenceresistance.info My Original TVL Video: https://youtu.be/hULk49M2ONs LIKE MY FACEBOOK Page original content all day long! https://www.facebook.com/brixtonfatty/?ref=aymt_homepage_panel Twitter: Brixton Fatty Instagram: @brixtonfatty If yo...