Dictionary Definition
broadcast
Noun
1 message that is transmitted by radio or
television
Verb
1 broadcast over the airwaves, as in radio or
television; "We cannot air this X-rated song" [syn: air, send, beam, transmit]
2 sow over a wide area, especially by hand;
"broadcast seeds"
3 cause to become widely known; "spread
information"; "circulate a rumor"; "broadcast the news" [syn:
circulate, circularize, circularise, distribute, disseminate, propagate, spread, diffuse, disperse, pass
around]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- UK: /ˈbrɔːdkɑːst/
- US: /ˈbɹʌdkæst/
- /"brAdk
Extensive Definition
Broadcasting is the distribution
of audio
and/or video
signals which transmit programs to an audience. The audience
may be the general public or a relatively large sub-audience, such
as children or young adults.
There are wide variety of
broadcasting systems, all of which have different capabilities. The
largest broadcasting systems are institutional public
address systems, which transmit nonverbal messages and music
within a school or hospital, and low-powered broadcasting systems
which transmit radio stations or television stations to a small
area. National radio and television broadcasters have nationwide
coverage, using retransmitter towers, satellite systems, and cable
distribution. Satellite radio and television broadcasters can cover
even wider areas, such as entire continents, and Internet channels
can distribute text or streamed music worldwide. Any person can
also broadcast sound or video through podcasting or live through
internet mobile broadcasting services such as Bambuser or
Qik.
The sequencing of content in a
broadcast is called a schedule.
As with all technological endeavors, a number of technical terms
and slang have developed. A list of these terms can be found at
list of broadcasting terms. Television and
radio programs are
distributed through radio broadcasting or cable,
often both simultaneously. By coding signals and having decoding equipment in homes, the latter also enables
subscription-based
channels and pay-per-view
services.
The term "broadcast"
originally referred to the sowing of seeds by scattering them over
a wide field. It was adopted to refer to the analagous
dissemenation of signals by early radio engineers from the
midwestern United States. Broadcasting forms a very large segment
of the mass media.
Broadcasting to a very narrow range of audience is called narrowcasting.
Economically there are a few
ways in which stations are able to continually broadcast. Each
differs in the method by which stations are funded:
- in-kind donations of time and skills by volunteers (common with community broadcasters)
- direct government payments or operation of public broadcasters
- indirect government payments, such as radio and television licenses
- grants from foundations or business entities
- selling advertising or sponsorships
- public subscription or membership
Broadcasters may rely on a
combination of these business
models. For example, National
Public Radio, a non-commercial network within the United
States, receives grants from the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting (which in turn receives
funding from the U.S. government), by public membership, and by
selling "extended credits" to corporations.
Recorded broadcasts and live broadcasts
One can record and produce live broadcasts. The former allows correcting errors, and removing superfluous or undesired material, rearranging it, applying slow-motion and repetitions, and other techniques to enhance the program. However some live events like sports telecasts can include some of the aspects including slow motion clips of important goals/hits etc in between the live telecast.American radio network
broadcasters habitually forbade prerecorded broadcasts in the 1930s
and 1940s requiring radio programs played for the Eastern and
Central time zones to
be repeated three hours later for the Pacific time zone. This
restriction was dropped for special occasions, as in the case of
the German
dirigible airship
Hindenburg
at Lakehurst,
New Jersey in 1937. During World War
II, prerecorded broadcasts from war correspondents were allowed
on U.S. radio. In addition, American radio programs were recorded
for playback by Armed
Forces Radio stations around the world.
A disadvantage of recording
first is that the public may know the outcome of an event from
another source, which may be a spoiler.
In addition, prerecording prevents live announcers from deviating from
an officially-approved script, as occurred with
propaganda broadcasts
from Germany in the 1940s and with Radio
Moscow in the 1980s.
Many events are advertised as
being live, although they are often "recorded live" (sometimes this
is referred to as "live-to-tape"). This is particularly true of
performances of musical artists on radio when they visit for an
in-studio concert
performance. This intentional blurring of the distinction between
live and recorded media is viewed with chagrin among many music
lovers. Similar situations have sometimes appeared in television
("The Cosby
Show is recorded in front of a live studio
audience").
A broadcast may be distributed
through several physical means. If coming directly from the
studio at a single
radio or
tv
station, it is simply sent through the air chain to the transmitter and thence from
the antenna
on the tower
out to the world. Programming may also come through a communications
satellite, played either live or recorded for later
transmission. Networks of stations may simulcast the same programming
at the same time, originally via microwave link, and now mostly
by satellite.
Distribution to stations or
networks may also be through physical media, such as analogue or
digital videotape,
CD, DVD, and sometimes
other formats. Usually these are included in another broadcast,
such as when electronic
news gathering returns a story to the station for inclusion on
a news
programme.
The final leg of broadcast
distribution is how the signal gets to the listener or viewer. It
may come over the air as with a radio
station or TV station to
an antenna
and receiver,
or may come through cable TV
http://www.diwaxx.ru/ or
cable
radio (or "wireless
cable") via the station or directly from a network. The
Internet
may also bring either radio or TV to the recipient, especially with
multicasting allowing
the signal and bandwidth to be
shared.
The term "broadcast network"
is often used to distinguish networks that broadcast an
over-the-air television signal that can be received using a
television antenna from so-called networks that are broadcast only
via cable or satellite television. The term "broadcast television"
can refer to the programming of such networks.
Legal status
UK
Since 1956, sound and television broadcasts were included as copyright works. Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 defines a broadcast as a transmission by wireless telegraphy of visual images, sounds, or other information which is capable of lawful reception by the public or which is made for presentation to the public. It thus covers radio, television, teletext et al.See also
wikibooks Marketing- Broadcast safe
- Broadcast license
- Broadcasting network
- Cablecast
- Dead air
- European Broadcasting Union (EBU)
- History of broadcasting
- Internet radio
- Internet television
- List of broadcast satellites
- NaSTA
- Nonbroadcast Multiple Access Network (NBMA)
- Outside broadcast
- Radio Act of 1927
- Streaming media
- Television studio
- Local broadcast system
- Broadcast safe
References
- Kahn Frank J., ed. Documents of American Broadcasting, fourth edition (Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1984).
- Lichty Lawrence W., and Topping Malachi C., eds. American Broadcasting: A Source Book on the History of Radio and Television (Hastings House, 1975).
- http://www.bambuser.com
- http://qik.com
External links
- Radio Locator, for American radio station with format, power, and coverage information.
- Arbitron Offers studies on American radio listening habits and basic station information.
- Answers to several questions about radio and television
- Webcaster Portal Promotions, news and listing
- TVNewsday, Current news about the U.S. TV broadcasting industry
- Waveguide Broadcasting News
- SWDXER ¨The SWDXER¨ - with general SWL information and radio antenna tips.
- Broadcasting Timeline
- Stories about the inventions of Radio and television
- Middle East Broadcast News — ArabianBusiness.com
- C21 Media - daily news about TV broadcasting and production
broadcast in Old English (ca.
450-1100): Ūtwyrp
broadcast in Catalan:
Radiodifusió
broadcast in Czech:
Broadcastové vysílání
broadcast in German:
Rundfunk
broadcast in Spanish:
Radiodifusión
broadcast in French:
Broadcasting
broadcast in Korean:
방송
broadcast in Italian:
Broadcasting
broadcast in Dutch:
Uitzending
broadcast in Japanese:
放送
broadcast in Norwegian:
Kringkasting
broadcast in Norwegian
Nynorsk: Kringkasting
broadcast in Portuguese:
Radiodifusão
broadcast in Simple English:
Broadcasting
broadcast in Sundanese:
Siaran
broadcast in Vietnamese:
Truyền thông
broadcast in Ukrainian:
Трансляція (телебачення і радіо)
broadcast in Chinese:
广播
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accessible, advertise, advertisement, affirmed, air, airing, announce, announced, announcement, annunciate, attenuation, bandying, beam, bed, bestrew, blazon, book, broadcasting, brought to
notice, bruit about, bruiting, bruiting about,
canned show, circulated, circulation, circumfuse, circumfusion, commercial, commercial
program, common knowledge, common property, communicate, convey, current, deal out, declared, dibble, diffract, diffraction, diffuse, diffused, diffusion, dilution, discrete, dispensation, dispense, dispersal, disperse, dispersed, dispersion, display, dispread, disseminate, disseminated, dissemination, dissipated, dissipation, distribute, distributed, distribution, diverge, divergence, drill, electrical transcription,
evaporation,
evulgation, expansion, fan out, forest, fragmentation, get across,
get over, give, give word,
hand on, impart, implant, in circulation, in
print, inseminate,
insemination,
issuance, issue, leave word, made public,
make known, network show, newscast, open, overscatter, oversow, overspread, pass, pass along, pass on, peppering, periodical, plant, planting, pot, printing, proclaim, proclaimed, proclamation, promulgate, promulgation, pronouncement, pronunciamento, propagate, propagated, propagation, public, publication, publish, published, publishing, put in, radiate, radiation, radio, radio fare, radiobroadcast, rebroadcast, reforest, reforestation, relay, render, report, reported, rerun, reset, resetting, retail, retimber, retimbering, scatter, scatter seed, scattered, scattering, scatterment, seed, seed down, seeding, seminate, semination, send, send word, serial, set, setting, share, share with, shortwave, shotgun pattern,
show, sign off, sign on,
signal, soap opera, sound
effects, sow, sow broadcast,
sowing, sparse, spattering, splay, sporadic, sportscast, spread, spread out, spreading, spreading abroad,
sprinkling, stated, straggling, straggly, straw, strew, strewing, strewn, strown, sustainer, taped program,
telecast, telecasting, televise, televised, tell, transfer, transmission, transmit, transplant, transplantation,
utter, ventilation, volatilization, widespread, wireless