re: #146 ipsos
As a result, there was a freeze on new TV licenses that went into effect in late 1948 (though it took until 1950 to build out all 108 stations that had already been authorized) and wasnât lifted until 1952, delayed in part by the Korean War and materials shortages.
When it lifted, there was a boom in new VHF stations and a very brief boom in new UHF stations, too, though most of those early UHF stations failed quickly because nobody had receivers. It took until the early 1960s for the FCC and Congress to figure out there needed to be an all-channel receiver act to mandate inclusion of UHF tuners.
Betty Whiteâs has been on TV since before the first TV broadcast license was ever issued.
slashfilm.com
In April 1939, RCA introduced television broadcasting as we know it at the New York Worldâs Fair. Two months earlier, a young Betty White stood in front of TV cameras for one of the first broadcasts ever transmitted on the West coast. According to Jennifer Kelshin Armstrongâs book âWhen Women Invented Television,â the broadcast took place at the Packard Motor Car Company in Downtown Los Angeles, where Packard distributor Earle C. Anthony had invented KFI radio station in 1922 to transmit between buildings. Now, Packard was putting on a test broadcast that would go down in history, and White was there to star.
When Betty White was awarded with the Guinness World Record for the longest TV career as an entertainer, she spoke with the publication about that first moment in the spotlight. âI wore my high school graduation dress and our Beverly Hills High student body president, Harry Bennett, and I danced the Merry Widow Waltz,â she told Guinness. According to Kelshin Armstrong, White was chosen for the project after performing a song called âSpirit Flowerâ at her high school graduation. An audience member was an investor in TV, and asked her to be a part of the signal test.