Examples of broadcasting in the following topics:
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- Broadcasting media has been regulated since the 1920s to ensure balanced and fair coverage, along with coverage of relevant, local issues.
- The Radio Act of 1927 was the first major broadcasting law in the country.
- This act was another crucial moment in broadcasting law history, because it created the Federal Communications Commission (FCC, ).
- (In this context, the word "radio" covers both broadcast radio and television).
- The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has promised to ensure fairness in broadcasting.
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- Broadcast journalism is journalism published through the radio, the television, or the Internet.
- Radio was the first medium for broadcast journalism.
- Programming can be locally produced, broadcast by a radio network, or aired by syndication.
- In broadcast news, the Internet is a key part of this convergence.
- A newscaster (short for "news broadcaster") is a presenter of news bulletins.
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- The Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau (CGB) develops and implements the FCC's consumer policies, including disability access; The Enforcement Bureau (EB) is responsible for enforcement of provisions of the Communications Act of 1934, along with FCC rules, orders and conditions of station authorizations; The International Bureau (IB) develops international policies in telecommunications like coordination of frequency allocation; The Media Bureau (MB) develops, recommends and administers the policy and licensing programs relating to electronic media, including cable television, broadcast television, and radio in the United States and its territories; The Wireless Telecommunications Service (WCS) deals with Advanced Wireless Services (AWS) and fixed, mobile, and broadcast services on the 700 MHz Band; The Wireline Competition Bureau (WCB) develops policy concerning wireline telecommunications.
- The FCC regulates broadcast stations, amateur radio operators, and repeater stations as well as commercial broadcasting operators.
- Broadcast licenses are to be renewed if the station meets the "public interest, convenience, or necessity. "
- The FCC's enforcement powers include fines and broadcast license revocation.
- The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has promised to ensure fairness in broadcasting.
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- Rolling news channels broadcast news 24 hours a day.
- Live coverage will be broadcast from a relevant location and sent back to the newsroom via fixed cable links, microwave radio, production truck, satellite truck, or online streaming.
- Most news shows are broadcast live.
- From their beginnings until around 1995, evening television news broadcasts continued featuring serious news stories right up to the end of the program, as opposed to later broadcasts with such anchors as Katie Couric, Brian Williams, and Diane Sawyer.
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- Jenkins to broadcast from experimental station W3XK in Wheaton Maryland, a suburb of Washington, D.C.
- CBS 's New York City station W2XAB began broadcasting its first regular seven days a week television schedule on July 21, 1931, with a 60-line electromechanical system.
- The first broadcast included Mayor Jimmy Walker, the Boswell Sisters, Kate Smith, and George Gershwin.
- By October, W6XAO was making daily television broadcasts of films.
- Current events, Newscasting and journalism were distinguished by several broadcasting programs by Edward R.
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- Pairs of fish that are not broadcast spawners may exhibit courtship behavior.
- Broadcast spawning can result in a greater mixture of the genes within a group, leading to higher genetic diversity and a greater chance of species survival in a hostile environment.
- For sessile aquatic organisms such as sponges, broadcast spawning is the only mechanism for fertilization and colonization of new environments.
- The survival rate of eggs produced through broadcast spawning is low.
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- You notice that a news reporter says "uh", on average, 2 times per broadcast.
- What is the probability that the news reporter says "uh" more than 2 times per broadcast.
- This is a Poisson problem because you are interested in knowing the number of times the news reporter says "uh" during a broadcast.
- What is the average number of times the news reporter says "uh" during one broadcast?
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- In television, the vast majority of broadcast and basic cable networks, over a hundred in all, are controlled by nine corporations: News Corporation (the Fox family of channels), The Walt Disney Company (which includes the ABC, ESPN and Disney brands), CBS Corporation, Viacom, Comcast (which includes the NBC brands), Time Warner, Discovery Communications, EW Scripps television, or some combination thereof (including the aforementioned The CW as well as A&E networks, which is a consortium of Comcast and Disney, ).
- However, the radio broadcasting industry in the United States and elsewhere can be regarded as oligopolistic regardless of the existence of such a player.
- The similar market structure exists for television broadcasting, cable systems, and newspaper industries, all of which are characterized by the existence of large-scale owners.
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- Gatekeeping is the process through which information in publications, broadcasting, and the Internet is filtered for dissemination.
- Gatekeeping is the process through which information is filtered for dissemination, be it publication, broadcasting, the Internet, or some other type of communication.
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- These include: radio broadcasting, broadcast television, two-way radio, communications receivers, radar, cell phones, and satellite communications; as well as other devices such as garage door openers, wireless microphones, bluetooth enabled devices, wireless computer networks, baby monitors, and RFID tags on merchandise.