Publicly owned TV Channel:
A TV channel that is funded by the government & license fees for the public. BBC
Commercial TV channel:
A TV channel owned by privately owned corporate media funded by advertising
Convergence:
When new technology makes old technology obsolete, joining lots of technologies into one.
Watershed:
The time after which programmes that are regarded as unsuitable for children are broadcast on television. 9PM - 5:30AM in the UKSegmented market:
Dividing a market of potential customers into groups so you can target the audience appropriately
Mainstream:
What is regarded as normal, mass audience
Self-regulating:
Able to broadcast anything without the use of third party bodies or industries
Franchise:License from company if a product to use ideas
Channel-surfing:
Switching to different channels frequently
license to broadcast
TV license:
A payment required to watch TV. Funds the BBC
Scheduling:
Organising the broadcast of TV programmes on a channel
Conglomerate:gc
A company that owns several smaller businesses whose products are very similar
When was TV introduced to the UK?
1936
In 1965 how many channels were there and what were they?
3, BBC, ITV and BBC 2
When did ITV start, why was it different?
22nd September 1955, it was the first commercial TV channel
Which UK channels have to follow PSB remits?
BBC, ITV, STV, UTV, Channel 4, Channel 5 and S4C
Who regulates TV now?
Ofcom
Who regulated TV channels in the 1960s?
ITV - Regulated by ITA BBC - Self regulatedList the differences between TV in the 60s and now Colour, More TV shows, Amount of households with TVs

31/1/20 the tv history
there are 80 channels to watch for free in the uk
the different way to watch tv is through your phone iPad computer ect
the thing to make you want to watch a new series is trailers and advertisements
what elements did the producers choose to include and why?
how have they represented police life?
editing and camerawork
Good notes
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