Broadcast media isn't singled out in the fair use section of the law; it's measured by the same vague standards any other material would be.
FDR made a broadcast to the World's Fair in 1939 in New York City. But no one had TV's at the time, so only people at the fair saw it. The first President to use TV was Harry Truman.
Various disciplines have developed their own specific fair use guidelines and codes of best practices, covering their specific needs. The Center for Intellectual Property (link below) has collected many of these in one place.
As far as i know, federal law requires you to be 21 in all states. I could be wrong, but this is a fair guideline to use.
He used his experience with the old way as a guideline to the way to test the new system.
Though writers use the plot mountain as guideline, they sometimes stray from it as they write.
Example sentence - We listened to the radio broadcast as we painted the fence.
A broadcast network use to advertise the subnetmask of a particuler network
If you're asking is this correct, it is. It's called "fair use" and permits certain uses even if the copyright owner does not approve of them. The Betamax Case (Sony v. Universal Pictures) held that people noncommercially recording broadcast shows so they could watch them later was not infringement and represented "fair use".
Broadcast and cable television operators use long-haul applications
The guidelines on the wall will help you remember the rules
You didn't say if you wanted to use it as a noun or a verb. Here are some sentences for both.Broadcast our radio show tonight, please.The broadcast went smoothly.I will broadcast the news throughout the neighborhood.
To broadcast pictures, television stations use the methods of progressive and interleaf scanning. Make that interlace scanning.