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Website Analysis

img Eyesofageneration.com

Last Analyzed : 01.08.2020
Eyesofageneration.com recives any estimated n/a unique visitors and n/a unique page views per day. Revenue gained from these much visits may be n/a per day from various advertising sources. The estimated worth of site is n/a.
  • Website Age n/a
  • Alexa Rank no-data
  • Country imgUnited States
  • IP Address 108.179.242.18
META INFORMATION icon
Title
Eyes Of A Generation…Television's Living History – In essence, this is a Television history book with 5000 stories, 10,000 rare photos and hundreds of one of a kind videos.
Description
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Keywords
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Content Type
utf-8
No Meta Name Value
1 viewport width=device-width, initial-scale=1
GENERAL HTML INFORMATION icon
Type Status
HTML 5 img
Responsive Website img
HTML SIZE INFORMATION icon
Text / Code Ratio 21.41 %
eyesofageneration.com has a website text/code ratio of 21.41 %. Search engine crawlers tend to not pick up pages with inadequate content.
IMPORTANT HTML TAGS AND COUNTS icon
Titles icon
  • H12
  • H20
  • H31
  • H40
  • H50
  • H60
H1
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1 Eyes of a generation…television's living history
2 Welcome to eyes of a generation!
H3
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1 ın essence, this is a television history book with 5000 stories, 10,000 rare photos and hundreds of one of a kind videos.
Text Styling icon
  • STRONG1
  • B0
  • EM22
  • I4
  • U0
  • CITE0
STRONG
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1 This is the home of television’s living history…
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1 Eyes Of A Generation is much, much more than the world’s greatest repository of television’s technological history – it is a lens through which the visitor can relive the emergence of the medium. Through a seemingly endless supply of imagery, stories and multimedia, the site is like a day spent at a wonderful museum, all from the comfort of your browser. An amazing contribution to broadcast history. Each visit reveals more and more.
2 I spent 46 years producing and directing news for NBC. I started in the “gee whiz” days, when we were dealing with the constantly changing technology and thinking “gee whiz, look what we can do now”.  I came to NBC News in 1961 when President Kennedy came to office, and I directed the pool television coverage of his return to Was***ngton from Dallas, the night of November 22, 1963.
3 Other a***ignments put me in the eye of history many times in the ’60, ’70’ and ’80s, from the “I Have A Dream” speech to Watergate and much more, but for over 20 years, I also had the pleasure of directing “Meet The Press”.  All this is a prelude to say how much I appreciate the effort Eyes Of A Generation makes in preserving not only the “gee whiz” parts, but the moving, entertaining and informative parts of television’s history.
4 Here, what television accomplished through the years is being preserved as a “living history”, like no other place or resource that I am aware of. With rare photos, video and long forgotten, but important stories on the industry and its proud accomplishments, those remembrances are called to life with the comments of so many like me, that were there. This is an invaluable window to the past achievements of television, and worth of the attention of all those who value our media, past, present and future.
5 I remember talking to the late John Frankenheimer, one of television’s greatest directors of the live era. He emphasized how important his cameramen and the technology were to his success.
6 Here at the Paley Center in New York and Los Angeles, we have preserved the programming. I am so pleased that Bobby Ellerbee has created the website, The Eyes of a Generation, to preserve and celebrate a missing chapter from television history: the immense contribution of the TV camera to the industry and our culture.
7 With resonant photographs and evocative testimony, Bobby has brought that crucial technology back to glorious life. We understand in image and word why the camera was indeed the eye for many of our country’s most creative individuals. The Eyes of a Generation is a must for anyone interested in history of media and storytelling.
8 In January 1954, I was hired at CBS Television City in Hollywood and worked there for the next 50 years, retiring in July 2004 as Executive Vice President in charge of West Coast Operations and Engineering.
9 I lived through the times most of the photos on this site so well depict, and was fortunate to be in a position to help develop the equipment and the production techniques of that era, many of which are still in use today.
10 Although many of my colleagues from those days are gone, fortunately the accomplishments and innovations from that time live on in these pages. I am most sincere in my appreciation for the effort Mr. Ellerbee has put into creating this historic site, for now, rather than lose this valuable television history, Eyes Of A Generation is a living archive of television’s proud past, and with so much information now available here on line, it can be viewed by students of all ages worldwide and hopefully contribute to an even prouder future.
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1 , Same Time, Same Station: Creating American Television, 1948-1961.
2 , Television’s Guardians: The FCC and the Politics of Programming, 1958-67
3 , Henry R. Luce and the Rise of the Modern American News Media
4 , The Republic of Ma*** Culture: Journalism, Broadcasting, and Filmmaking in America since 1941
WEBSITE SERVER INFORMATION icon
  • Service Provider (ISP)
  • WEBSITEWELCOME.COM
  • Hosted IP Address
  • 108.179.242.18
  • Hosted Country
  • imgUnited States
  • Host Region
  • Texas , Houston
  • Latitude and Longitude
  • 29.8135 : -95.4641
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