Although there are different opinions about where cable television actually began, a great deal of the ingenuity that developed cable into today's multibillion dollar industry came from Pennsylvania. In this state, with its mountainous geography, the need for an unusual means of obtaining a television signal gave birth to the community antenna television system that was the forerunner of the cable we know today.
This volume traces the history of cable television through biographical sketches of those who were instrumental in bringing this technology to rural Pennsylvania. Enumerating technical as well as financial obstacles, each chapter focuses on the life of a cable pioneer. The contributions of such men as John Walson, Bob Tarleton, George Gardner and Ralph Roberts are discussed and their relationships to each other examined. Information drawn from interviews with these men or people who knew them brings history to life. Topics include the roots of cable television, problems of early cable systems and the advent of HBO and its consequences. An appendix offers a commemorative history of the Pennsylvania Cable Network, a joint project of several men discussed herein.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Pennsylvania Legacy
1. Head of the Class: John Walson
2. Hometown Hero: Bob Tarlton
3. Today Pottsville, Tomorrow the World: Martin Malarkey
4. The Great Salesman: Milton Shapp
5. Cable's Mom and Pop: Joe and Irene Gans
6. The Man Who Worked Too Hard: George Gardner
7. The Right Man at the Right Time: George Barco
8. Shattered Icon: John Rigas
9. Ordinary Joes
10. The Ultimate Entrepreneur: Ralph Roberts
Appendix Only on Cable: The Pennsylvania Cable Network, by Don Sarvey
Notes
Bibliography
Index