The First Lady (the president's wife), the ruler of Montevideo (intendente) and many people from Uruguayan TV.
The Civil Rights movement was an important time in history. Four events that make it to national television were Alabama and Fanny Lou Hamer's speech at the 1964 Democratic Convention, Angry white mobs against black students in Mississippi, The march on Selma and bus boycotts.
All NFL games are nationally broadcasted, so they don't have hometown TV announcers like some other sports do. Since the Bengals are an AFC team, most of their games are carried on CBS. If they're playing at home against an NFC team, the game would be carried by Fox. Sunday night games are on NBC, and Monday night games are on ESPN.
It depends on which time period you are asking about. The first president of the United States was George Washington, so he would have been the first to talk with the American people, in the late 1700s. But how a president met the voters changed over the decades. Washington would have mainly talked to the people in person, giving speeches or holding events (such as parties). Back in the late 1700s, there were only newspapers and magazines, and it took days for them to reach people. There was no radio, no TV, no internet, no telegraph, no telephone, not even a transcontinental railroad to make travel easier. Usually, candidates, including those running for president, rode in horse-drawn carriages to events, and met the voters who came out to see them. In the mid-1800s, new inventions made communication easier, and in fact, by the late 1800s, newspapers and magazines arrived much more quickly; the telegraph and the telephone made it easier and faster for journalists to report the latest information. You could now read about what the president was saying the same day he said it. Then, in 1920, radio came along; the first president to talk to the American people by radio was Warren G. Harding. Calvin Coolidge used radio to campaign, and so did Herbert Hoover, but the most famous "radio president" was Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the 1930s. And of course, once television came along and became popular (beginning in the late 1940s), presidents could use TV to reach out and talk to millions of Americans.
The BBC made its first scheduled radio broadcast on November 14th 1922. It took another three years to offer coverage across most of the UK. It is interesting that the BBC was formed only one month before the broadcast by Marconi and other radio manufacturers. They wasted no time in getting on with their task. 14 years later, it began the first regular television broadcasts, on 2nd November 1936. Two rival systems were employed but within a very short space of time, John Logi Baid's system was dropped in favour of an all electronic "high definition" system. The television service was short lived as only two years later, war broke out across Europe. The BBC stopped television broadcasts during the war and offered only radio. The BBC website carries a more complete history on its website. Take a look at http://www.bbc.co.UK/heritage/story/index.shtml.
Harry Truman was the first president to have his inauguration broadcast on television, on January 20, 1949.
NBC is a major broadcasting television station. It has in the past broadcasted the entire Inauguration program in the past; it is unclear if they plan to do it again.
The first televised Presidential Inauguration took place on 20 January 1949 for US President Harry S Truman.
The Television Ghost broadcasted on W2XABY in 1931-1933
Harry Truman in 1949 was the first to have his inauguration televised.
Yes, the whole inauguration for President Obama in 2009 was shown on television.
President Lincoln's Inauguration Re-enactment - 2011 TV was released on: USA: 5 March 2011
Yes, the inauguration of the new United States president will be on TV.
Television technology was invented during WW2 (Roosevelt) and developed after the war (Truman). The first President to make an appearance on TV that was broadcasted to the public was Eisenhower. Regarding presidential elections, the first televised presidential debate was between John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon.
harry truman
Broadcast Journalism Television and Radio News originated in Pittsburg. The first radio news broadcasted on November of 1920 showcasing the presidential election which resulted in President Harding.
The School of Silence is a childrens TV Show first broadcasted on CBBC In 2009