Developer | CBS |
---|---|
Type | Teletext |
Launch date | 1983 |
Discontinued | 1988 |
Platform(s) | NABTS |
Status | Discontinued |
ExtraVision was a teletext service created and operated by the American television network CBS in the early to mid-1980s. [1] [2] [3] [4] It was carried in the vertical blanking interval of the video from local affiliate stations of the CBS network. It featured CBS program information, news, sports, weather, even subtitling [5] for CBS programming (much like page 888 in British-based World System Teletext, and American line 21 closed-captioning). ExtraVision could also have its pages customized by the local affiliate station carrying it, for such things as program schedules, local community announcements, and station promotions. WGBH Boston, a pioneer in assisting the deaf and hard-of-hearing with closed captioning, also provided content for those audiences to ExtraVision and assisted in providing captioning for CBS programming via ExtraVision. [6]
CBS had begun tests in 1979 at their St. Louis station KMOX-TV (currently KMOV) using the French Antiope system, [7] and again in 1981 in the Los Angeles area on KNXT (currently KCBS), in a joint test with PBS station KCET. [5] [8] [9] [10] The full ExtraVision service began in April 1983 [5] [11] [12] on CBS affiliate WBTV in Charlotte, NC, [2] [13] and went nationwide in 1984.
One issue was that, due to CBS' heavy emphasis on the ExtraVision service, it did not offer line 21 closed-captioning for the hearing impaired, unlike ABC, NBC or PBS (ABC never offered teletext services, while only certain PBS stations, including the aforementioned KCET and WGBH, experimented with teletext). Some believed that CBS' opposition to line-21 services was so large, they even wanted to strip captioning from commercials to be run during programming. The result was nationwide protests against CBS by the National Association of the Deaf, with people picketing the studios of CBS and affiliate stations; one child protested in Grand Rapids, MI with a sign reading "Please caption for my Mom and Dad". [14] [15]
The situation was further compounded in August 1982, when NBC ceased to offer closed-captioning on account of decreased demand. While the NAD's Phil Bravin, chairman of the NAD's newly-formed TV Access Committee, was able to persuade NBC to resume captioning, he continued to meet with resistance by CBS; after an unproductive meeting with then-head of CBS affiliate relations, Tony Malara, Bravin promised to "see you on the streets of America". CBS ultimately relented in March 1984, promising three hours of closed-captioned programming starting that fall. [16] [17] [18]
Due to the service using the NABTS protocol, which required a quite expensive decoder to receive the service, and the FCC not choosing to require TV manufacturers to integrate teletext into their sets or choose between either NABTS or the BBC and IBA's World System Teletext (used by Electra and several other services), [19] ExtraVision eventually began to experience cutbacks, with several staffers laid off in May 1986; the production of news content was outsourced to AP/TMS Media Services (a joint venture between the Associated Press and the Tribune Company). [20] Also, most of the local CBS affiliates carrying the ExtraVision service did not bother to invest in the computer equipment required to customize pages to carry locally oriented information on the service; only WBTV, WIVB-TV in Buffalo, and then-CBS affiliate KSL-TV in Salt Lake City (which had been independently testing and using teletext beginning in 1978, and continued into the early 1990s [21] ) provided localized information. [22]
ExtraVision was discontinued in 1988, [7] [23] [24] three years after NBC Teletext had also been abandoned by NBC.
Closed captioning (CC) and subtitling are both processes of displaying text on a television, video screen, or other visual display to provide additional or interpretive information. Both are typically used as a transcription of the audio portion of a program as it occurs, sometimes including descriptions of non-speech elements. Other uses have included providing a textual alternative language translation of a presentation's primary audio language that is usually burned-in to the video and unselectable.
Telidon was a videotex/teletext service developed by the Canadian Communications Research Centre (CRC) during the late 1970s and supported by commercial enterprises led by Infomart in the early 1980s. Most work on the system ended after 1985, having failed to build critical mass.
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Audio description, (AD) also referred to as a video description, described video, or more precisely visual description, is a form of narration used to provide information surrounding key visual elements in a media work for the benefit of blind and visually impaired consumers. These narrations are typically placed during natural pauses in the audio, and sometimes overlap dialogue if deemed necessary. Occasionally when a film briefly has subtitled dialogue in a different language, such as Greedo's confrontation with Han Solo in the 1977 film Star Wars: A New Hope, the narrator will read out the dialogue in character.
Antiope was a French teletext standard in the 1980s. It also formed the basis for the display standard used in the French videotex service Minitel. The term allegedly stood for Acquisition Numérique et Télévisualisation d’Images Organisées en Pages d’Écriture, which could be loosely translated as Digital Acquisition and Remote Visualization of Images Organized into Written Pages.
Austext is the former Australian teletext service based in Brisbane, Queensland. The service was carried and operated by the Seven Network and its affiliates over most of Australia. It carried news, financial information, weather, lottery results, a TV guide and other information, as well as closed captioning for programs. The service was freely available for viewing on any television, computer or other device with teletext functionality and the ability to access and view Channel Seven, or one of Seven's regional affiliates Prime, GWN or Southern Cross. Seven first began testing the Teletext services in 1977 with useful information being transmitted in 1982 in Brisbane and Sydney. Austext was shut down in September 2009.
KCBS-TV, branded CBS Los Angeles, is a television station in Los Angeles, California, United States, serving as the West Coast flagship of the CBS network. It is owned and operated by the network's CBS News and Stations division alongside independent outlet KCAL-TV. The two stations share studios at the Radford Studio Center on Radford Avenue in the Studio City section of Los Angeles; KCBS-TV's transmitter is located on the western side of Mount Wilson near Occidental Peak.
NABTS, the North American Broadcast Teletext Specification, is a protocol used for encoding NAPLPS-encoded teletext pages, as well as other types of digital data, within the vertical blanking interval (VBI) of an analog video signal. It is standardized under standard EIA-516, and has a rate of 15.6 kbit/s per line of video. It was adopted into the international standard CCIR 653 of 1986 as CCIR Teletext System C.
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Electra was a teletext service in the United States that was in operation from 1982 up until 1993, when it was shut down due to a lack of funding, and discontinuation of teletext-capable television sets by the only US television manufacturer offering teletext capability at the time, Zenith. It was owned, operated and maintained by Cincinnati-based Taft Broadcasting and Tulsa, Oklahoma-based Satellite Syndicated Systems (SSS), later known as Tempo Enterprises, in cooperation with cable/satellite TV station Superstation WTBS, who carried Electra's data on their vertical blanking interval. SSS's own TV network, the Satellite Program Network, carried the service before it was shut down in 1989. The service was also available to C-band satellite dish users via the Galaxy 1 and Satcom 3R satellites.
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