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The RCA Indian-head test pattern. The Indian-head test pattern is a test card that gained widespread adoption during the black-and-white television broadcasting era as an aid in the calibration of television equipment. It features a drawing of a Native American wearing a headdress surrounded by numerous graphic elements designed to test ...
Color television (American English) or colour television (Commonwealth English) is a television transmission technology that includes color information for the picture, so the video image can be displayed in color on the television set. It improves on the monochrome or black-and-white television technology, which displays the image in shades of ...
The Big Beat (TV program) The Big Idea (American TV series) The Big Payoff; The Big Picture (American TV series) The Big Record; The Big Story (radio and TV series) The Big Surprise; Big Town; The Bigelow Theatre; The Bill Dana Show; The Billy Rose Show; The Bing Crosby Show (1964 TV series) The Black Robe (TV series) Black Saddle; Blind Date ...
Family watching TV, 1958. The concept of television is the work of many individuals in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The first practical transmissions of moving images over a radio system used mechanical rotating perforated disks to scan a scene into a time-varying signal that could be reconstructed at a receiver back into an approximation of the original image.
Clip art. Clip art (also clipart, clip-art) is a type of graphic art. Pieces are pre-made images used to illustrate any medium. Today, clip art is used extensively and comes in many forms, both electronic and printed. However, most clip art today is created, distributed, and used in a digital form. Since its inception, clip art has evolved to ...
NBC. Release. October 15, 1960. (1960-10-15) –. September 28, 1963. (1963-09-28) King Leonardo and His Short Subjects (also known as The King and Odie Show) is a 1960–63 American Saturday-morning animated television series that aired on NBC, sponsored by General Mills. It was created by Total Television (which would later rename itself ...
Clyde Crashcup. Clyde Crashcup is a fictional character from the early 1960s animated television series The Alvin Show. He is a scientist in a white coat who tends to "invent" things that had already been invented; his experiments invariably fail. [1] He usually invented by penciling the concept in air, with the picture becoming the actual object.
The transition to color started in earnest when NBC announced in May 1963 that a large majority of its 1964–65 TV season would be in color. [2] By late September 1964, the move to potential all-color programming was being seen as successful [3] and, on March 8, 1965, NBC confirmed that its 1965–66 season will be almost entirely in color. [4]