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EventAndrew Lack, CEO Multimedia Group, Bloomberg LP
Roundtable Breakfast Andrew Lack, CEO Multimedia Group, Bloomberg LP Apr 29, 2009 8:00 – 9:00 AM New York An award-winning news executive, Andrew Lack is CEO of Bloomberg’s multimedia group, where he is responsible for the company’s expanding television, interactive, and radio operations. Prior to joining Bloomberg in October 2008, Lack was chairman and CEO of Sony Music Entertainment, where he managed the company’s roster of major international artists and its vast catalog of recorded music from around the world. More -
History
1975 An organization is founded by William S. Paley to collect, preserve, and interpret television and radio programming and to make these programs available to the public. Mr. Paley serves as its first chairman. November 9, 1976 The Museum of Broadcasting opens to the public on three floors of a converted office building at 1 East 53 Street in New York City, with 718 publicly available broadcasts in the collection. It is the first public institution to offer this history of broadcasting to the general public. More -
Red Scare: The Cold War & Television
< PALEYEDUCATION : Onsite/Online ClassesGrades 10–12Class DescriptionDuring the 1950s television emerged as the most powerful mass medium since the invention of the printing press. At this time, America was gripped with fear and anxiety about the possibilities of war and nuclear threat, and television reflected this paranoia. Through close examination of 1950s television, including news, public service announcements, documentaries, and science fiction programming, this class investigates the ways that television reflected and perpetuated fear and hysteria during the Cold War period, a pivotal moment in modern history. More -
The Living Room War: Television & Vietnam
< PALEYEDUCATION : Onsite ClassesGrades 10–12Class DescriptionFrom 1965 to 1975, television played an unprecedented role in shaping American perceptions of the Vietnam War. New technology and unlimited access to the battlefields of Southeast Asia invested field reporters with the ability to broadcast what became known as "bang-bang" coverage. The carnage of the war and the consequences for American morale, both on the battlefield and at home, led to deep divisions in how Americans viewed the role of government, the military, social change, and war itself. More