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#1 |
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Member
Forum Regular
Join Date: Mar 28, 2005
Posts: 562
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I'm just curious if there are any people on here who had cable in the 1970s or 1980s when it first started to come around? I didn't have cable until the 1990s and by then there were a whole slew of channels coming on board. Nowadays there are hundreds, although most aren't that great. Specifically I'm looking for what channels anybody got? I'd have to assume locals, PEG channels and popular ones like MTV, CNN, TBS Superstation, ESPN etc.
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#2 |
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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,070
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Had cable my whole life, born in 1985. I'm not sure when my parents first got it but I had it as far as I can remember.
I remember that the cable box was a small black box (smaller than the standard VCR) and it had a little black remote. One of my favorite childhood memories was our "wrestling parties". At the time you had to pay a fee to watch the events, mainly Wrestlemania, so parents would rotate by paying the fee and having the party at their house. This was during the 90s. |
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#3 |
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23 Years at Sitcoms Online
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Join Date: Jun 06, 2003
Location: Somewhere you're Not
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I had cable in the 1970's but it wasn't anything like they have now. Most of the stations were local channels that you couldn't get with an antenna or that was just too fuzzy with one. Our first regular cable channels were TBS ( though it wasn't called that then) and HBO. I believe we got them around 1978. I remember I was in 6th grade when we got HBO because all the kids were talking about it because they were all giving us a free preview of it. I remember Rocky and All the Presidents Men were on it. Also we didn't have any box or anything back in the late 70's. HBO came on channel 4 and TBS on channel 10 and before that, they were blank channels.. I believe we got USA Network around that time too. It was originally called Madison Square Garden Network and I remember it had alot of sporting events on it. That was on channel 12. Then in the early 80's cable really expanded. I remember it was big news and we did get a box to get all the different channels. Our cable reception was awful. I don't know about anyone else. Half of our channels were fuzzy....some had ziggly lines in them. We had two rolls of channels on the box.. The first one was pretty good but the higher numbers were the ones that were really bad. Luckily cable has gotten better since then. I remember we had CNN, Espn, MTV WGN, Nickelodeon. TNN and I think we had a few that went out of business. We had one news channel ( I forget what the name was) but it went bankrupt and was replaced by CNN Headline News on that channel.
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Sonny Last edited by Mr. Television; 07-14-2010 at 10:49 AM. |
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#4 |
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anything good on?
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Join Date: Oct 18, 2005
Posts: 879
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My town was wired for cable in 1976. My memory of cable in those days is similar to Clint's. Only the twelve VHF channels were used, which meant 99.999% of TVs in use were cable ready.
There were exactly zero cable networks carried on our system in the beginning, but we did get what were then generically referred to as 'superstations'--WGN 9 and WSNS 44 (11 for us) out of Chicago and WKBD 50 (5) Detroit. We wouldn't get WTBS for another four years, replacing WSNS when the latter became affiliated with a subscription-TV service. Of course we got our three local VHF stations--3 (changed to 2), 8 (changed to 7), and 13, plus UHF stations 35 (10) and 41 (4). CTV 6 was a text display channel with red, blue and green bands (convenient for color TV adjustment) which showed time, date and temperature at the top, weather information scrolling sideways at the bottom, and community interest stuff scrolling through the big blue field in the center. The remaining "public access" channels were virtually never used. Three useless channels gave way to two early in 1979 when our system's first subscription movie service was introduced. It was called Cinevue. It only lasted about a year and a half before being replaced with HBO on the same channel. |
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#5 |
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Join Date: Sep 11, 2000
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i was born in 1981 and we got Cable around 1984 so i've had it most of my life. I've loved watching how cable has grown so much. But i do miss some of the early cable shows that used to be a lot of fun; they were just expiermental trying to see what would work.
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"and to the fans. I was only supposed to be on every other Tuesday. But, thanks to you, I'm here, and I promise! I will try my best never to let you down. I am going back into that studio on Monday, and I'm going to play Erica Kane for all she's worth!"-- Susan Lucci, May 1999 Daytime Emmy Speech. |
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#6 | |
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Join Date: Feb 07, 2002
Posts: 179
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Quote:
HBO in the 70's on our system required a converter and our cable system wouldn't install it in your home if you had children..later that rule changed to require locks on the HBO converter box in households with children. Also I am pretty sure that back in the 70's most cable systems didn't offer BOTH HBO and Showtime..just one though being owned by HBO, many systems did offer Cinemax alongside HBO. However that would change for many people in 1982 when Showtime merged with The Movie Channel and in the process had made an exclusive deal with Paramount Pictures while HBO/Cinemax did the same with Columbia Pictures. In short such popular movies like Paramount 's Flashdance wasn't seen on HBO while Columbia's On Golden Pond with Henry Fonda..Showtime couldn't show it. Needless to say that "deal" would play a part in making VCRs so popular in the 80's. Looking back now, while there wern't any cable nets like MTV, Nick, CNN and the like, those "distant" stations more than made up for it. Back in 1975 I can remember visiting my aunt in southwestern Virginia watching TV from Indianapolis, Charlotte, Nashville and Huntington, West Virginia on her cable. I still remember that "Mr. Cartoon" show from Huntington plus I believe the Indy station had a 2 hour local kids block too. Back then by watching those stations you would get so much local flavor that one felt they really were in that city, not in a state hundreds of miles away. Meanwhile in Northern Virginia ALL the cable systems offered stations from Washington and Baltimore, some even offered local TV from Richmond, Pittsburgh and even Philadelphia ( I still can remember wathcing that city's dance show called "Dancing On Air"..on cable in Virginia !! ). By the 1980's with more and more cable networks popping up, many of those "regional superstations" ( like Indianapolis' WTTV, Washington's DC 20 and Virginia Beach's WYAH ) well they became less "super" and were dropped |
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Last edited by joan davis fan; 07-14-2010 at 02:08 PM. |
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#7 | |
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23 Years at Sitcoms Online
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Quote:
![]() It's hard to remember all the channels we had back then. We actually might have gotten WGN before the big cable explosion. I believe that was on channel 8 originally and after awhile when we got the other channels, it was moved. The one think I do remember in the middle 80's was how I was screwed with N@N. I wanted to watch it so bad because they aired all the classic shows, many of whom I had never seen. Well our cable company would air Nickelodeon in the daytime and then at 8:00 the channel would switch over to A&E. We didn't get A&E in the daytime then. It took quite a few years before A&E was given their own channel. |
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#8 |
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my family got cable way back in 1979 i still remember the first movie that i saw on cable the one and only with henry winkler
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#9 | |
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#10 |
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Freakshow
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Yeah, I'm way too young to know cable's "early days", my viewing as a kid was strictly Nickelodeon. I didn't need or want anything else at the time.
90s kids know how good Nick was at that time. |
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#11 |
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Cheers!
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Join Date: Dec 14, 2005
Location: Sunny California
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I got cable around 1982 and had it since then, until 2009. January 2010 I bought a house and switched to Dish Net, since cable became way too expensive to keep.
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#12 |
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Join Date: Jul 10, 2010
Location: texas
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We first got cable in 1977 for a brief while. All it constituted was the addition of two far-off independent channels and PBS. The stations were really great then, as they exuded such a strong sense of locality.
Then, we moved and didn't get cable again until 1980, and it was pretty exciting, seeing the growth of all the satellite channels as they were gradually added... WTBS, CBN, CNN, USA, The Arts Channel, The Nashville Network, etc. All these channels had their own really, really distinct identities back then. Unlike nowadays, where it seems we have a zillion stations all trying to emulate one another, turning the tv-landscape into the weird, unwieldy blob of blandness that we have now. |
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#13 |
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Omaha & Fritz
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Join Date: Mar 06, 2004
Location: Oregon
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We got cable in the 80's. I can remember watching MTV around when it first premiered with my sisters.
Cable television has been around since the 40's and 50's- http://www.ncta.com/About/About/Hist...elevision.aspx |
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"I'm going to go do something productive. I'm gonna go watch television." - Ray Peterson, The 'burbs "I am the literary equivalent of a Big Mac and Fries." - Stephen King "There's nothing wrong with G-rated movies, as long as there's lots of sex and violence." - Elvira |
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#14 |
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Join Date: Apr 01, 2008
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I was born in 1985 and two years before my parents and siblings moved from the house my dad built to another house in town that was owned my grandfather that was near his bed and breakfast business so my dad could help run the business. We had cable while lived there. I remember at one time the Disney Channel was an exclusive channel you had to pay extra for and you got a magazine that would come in the mail. HBO was the only movie channel we had and back then.
In 1996 we moved back to the house my father built but it was just outside of town so cable wasn't available. We had to get satellite and the provider we went with was Primestar which was bought by DirecTV in late 90's. During late the 90's and early 2000's more people in town switched to satellite because the cable service in the area had become pretty awful. The local cable satellites were only checked once a week and my friends and relatives said often some channels wouldn't have audio and sometimes the pictures was bad and service techs rarely responded to calls. I think there are more people right now in that town that have satellite than cable. |
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#15 | |
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