Play-by-Play : Radio, Television, and Big-Time College Sport.
Annotation
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Baltimore : Boulder :
Johns Hopkins University Press, NetLibrary, Inc. [distributor]
May 2003 ;
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1
- The Media and Early College Sport
- Chapter 2
- Marconi, the Wireless, and Early Sports Broadcasting
- Chapter 3
- The Broadcasters
- Chapter 4
- Graham McNamee and Ted Husing Dominate the Airwaves
- Chapter 5
- The Radio Threat to College Football Attendance
- Chapter 6
- In the Image of Rockne: Notre Dame and Radio Policy
- Chapter 7
- Radio Goes “Bowling�: The Rose Bowl Leads the Way
- Chapter 8
- Sport and the New Medium of Television
- Chapter 9
- Networks, Coaxial Cable, Commercialism, and ConcernChapter 10
- Notre Dame Chooses Commercial TV
- Chapter 11
- Penn Challenges the NCAA and the Ivy League
- Chapter 12
- The NCAA Experimental Year
- Chapter 13
- Networks: The Du Mont Challenge
- Chapter 14
- Regional Conferences Challenge a National Policy
- Chapter 15
- TV and the Threat of Professional Football
- Chapter 16
- Roone Arledge and the Influence of ABC-TV
- Chapter 17
- Advertising, Image versus Money, and the Beer Hall Incident
- Chapter 18
- The Television Announcer�s Role in Football PromotionChapter 19
- The Cable Television Dilemma: More May Be Less
- Chapter 20
- TV Money, Robin Hood, and the Birth of the CFA
- Chapter 21
- TV Property Rights and a CFA Challenge to the NCAA
- Chapter 22
- Oklahoma and Georgia Carry the TV Ball for the CFA Team
- Chapter 23
- TV, Home Rule Anarchy, and Conference Realignments
- Chapter 24
- Basketball: From Madison Square Garden to a Televised Final Four
- Chapter 25
- TV�s Unfinished Business: The Division I-A Football Championship 25
- APPENDIX
- Radio, TV, and Big-Time College Sport: A TimelineNotes
- Bibliographical Essay
- Index