- Paramount Television Network
Infobox Network
name = Paramount Television Network
country =United States
network_type = Broadcasttelevision network
available = defunct
owner =Paramount Pictures
key_people =
launch_date = January 1949
closure_date = 1953
past_names =
website = |The Paramount Television Network was an ill-fated attempt by American
film corporationParamount Pictures to launch a successfultelevision network in 1949.White, Timothy R. (1992). [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0009-7101(199221)31%3A3%3C19%3AHO(TAB%3E2.0.CO%3B2-8 "Hollywood on (Re)Trial: The American Broadcasting-United Paramount Merger Hearing"] "Cinema Journal", Vol. 31, No. 3. (Spring, 1992), pp. 19-36.] The company had built television stationsKTLA in Los Angeles and WBKB in Chicago. It had also invested $400,000 in theDuMont Television Network , which operated stations in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Pittsburgh.The network launched in January 1949 with a full-page advertisement in "Television". Jajkowski, Steve (2001). [http://www.chicagotelevision.com/Minutemen.htm "Advertising on Chicago Television"] . Chicago Television History. Retrieved
January 10 ,2007 .] However, a few years earlier, theFederal Communications Commission had placed a five-station cap on all television networks, and later ruled DuMont and Paramount were branches of the same company. Since DuMont owned three stations and Paramount two, the federal agency ruled both networks could not launch additional television stations. Paramount refused to relinquish its stake in DuMont, and both networks suffered as a result, with neither company experiencing growth in the number of its owned-and-operated stations. Meanwhile, ABC andNBC each owned the maximum of five stations.CBS , the other American television network, owned only one station outright but had a joint-ownership stake in one other. [In 1949, CBS ownedWCBS-TV in New York City outright, and owned a 49 percent share ofKTTV in Los Angeles (the "Los Angeles Times " owned the remainder).]At its peak in late 1950, the Paramount Television Network was distributing five television series a week to over 40 affiliated stations. Stations which carried the Paramount programming included KTLA in Los Angeles, WBKB in Chicago,
KPIX inSan Francisco ,cite book| last =King| first =G.H.| authorlink =| coauthors =King, Vance (eds.)| title =Production Encyclopedia| publisher =Hollywood Reporter| date =1952| location =Hollywood, CA| pages =716-717| url =| doi =| id = | isbn = ]KOTV inTulsa, Oklahoma .Corarito, Gregory (1967). [http://tulsatvmemories.com/tvthesi3.html The History and Development of Television in Tulsa, Oklahoma: Chapter 3 KCEB 1] . Tulsa TV Memories. Last accessed 2007-03-16.] and KMJ-TV in Fresno.Citation| last = | first = | title = | newspaper = Fresno Bee Republican| pages = 19| year = 1953| date = 1953-06-10| url = ]The
1953 merger of Paramount's former movie theatre chain,United Paramount Theatres , and ABC lead to the divestiture of the Chicago station, which was sold toCBS (it is nowWBBM-TV ). Paramount held onto KTLA, but the programming service never gelled into a true television network. In 1956, with much prompting from Paramount, the DuMont Network folded, ending Paramount's first, early ventures into television.However, executives at Paramount continued to toy with the idea of entering the television medium once more. The company produced series seen on the "big three" television networks (after acquiring
Desilu Productions ), and in 1978 planned to launch theParamount Television Service , a new "fourth" television network; its programming would have consisted of only one night a week. Thirty "Movies of the Week" would have followed ' on Saturday nights. This plan was aborted when the decision was made to transform "Phase II" into '. OnJanuary 16 , 1995, Paramount launchedUPN , which lasted untilSeptember 18 , 2006, when it merged with theWB Television Network to form theCW Television Network . [ [http://www.centredaily.com/mld/centredaily/living/15061562.htm?source=rss&channel=centerdaily_living] ]ee also
Paramount Television Network programs:
* "Time for Beany "
* "Dixie Showboat "
* "Spade Cooley "
* "Hollywood Reel "
* WrestlingFootnotes
References
* White, Timothy R. (1992). [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0009-7101(199221)31%3A3%3C19%3AHO(TAB%3E2.0.CO%3B2-8 "Hollywood on (Re)Trial: The American Broadcasting-United Paramount Merger Hearing"] "Cinema Journal", Vol. 31, No. 3. (Spring, 1992), pp. 19-36.
* Jajkowski, Steve (2001). [http://www.chicagotelevision.com/Minutemen.htm "Advertising on Chicago Television"] . Chicago Television History. Retrieved
January 10 ,2007 .
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