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Revision as of 03:14, 27 December 2004

C-SPAN, which originally stood for Cable-Satellite Public Affairs Network, was the first United States cable television network dedicated to 24-hour coverage of government and public affairs. C-SPAN often shows live sessions of all the U.S. House of Representatives while in progress; this coverage is referred to as "gavel to gavel".

The bulk of C-SPAN's operations are located on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., but they also maintain an archives on the campus of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana.

History

Brian Lamb, C-SPAN's chairman and CEO, conceived of C-SPAN while working at the Cablevision company. It was created as a cable-industry financed, non-profit network for televising sessions of the US Congress. It receives no funding from any government source and does not sell sponsorships or advertising. The neutrality and lack of bias in its public affairs coverage is widely recognized.

C-SPAN first went on the air on March 19, 1979. C-SPAN 2, a spinoff network, covers all live sessions of the U.S. Senate and went on the air on June 2, 1986, with the original channel then focusing on the House. The latest spinoff, C-SPAN 3, began broadcasting on January 22, 2001, and shows other government-related live events along with historical programming from C-SPAN's archives. Since 1979, the cable industry has spent US $230 million to operate the networks.

On October 9, 1997, C-SPAN launched C-SPAN Radio which broadcasts on WCSP 90.1 FM in Washington, DC. The radio station, which also broadcasts on the XM and Sirius satellite radio systems, covers similar events as its sister TV networks, often simulcasting their programming.

On September 13, 2004, C-SPAN received an Emmy Award in special recognition of "their outstanding coverage of the American electoral process."

On September 24, 2004, C-SPAN also become famous for another outstanding community coverage:

http://www.c-span.org/community/index.asp?Code=Community


COMMUNITY HOMEPAGE Welcome to the C-SPAN Community! Use this site to direct your participation in Community forum discussions and other viewer interactivity. Share thoughts, exchange views, and get educated on a range of public policy issues.

C-SPAN's Community is Temporarily Closing As of Friday, Sept. 24, C-SPAN's Community will go off line while we make changes to the software supporting C-SPAN Alert and the Community. When the Community returns, it will have a new look and feel that should make your participation even better than before. To participate in the new Community, you will need to register as a new user with a new password and screen name.

Also, if you want to receive the daily C-SPAN Alert, you'll need to re-register on the Alert page. As before, we will ask community members to review the discussion etiquette guidelines.


Keep your eye on C-SPAN.org for the return of the C-SPAN Community!

CONTACT COMMUNITY MANAGER Do you have questions, comments or concerns about community? Do you want to report a community disruption? Email the community manager at manager@c-span.org or use the COMMUNITY FEEDBACK FORM

Coverage

The three channels also air government hearings, press conferences and meetings of various political, media, and non-profit organizations, book discussions, Q&A sessions, and occasionally show proceedings of the Canadian Parliament, British Parliament, and other governments while they are discussing matters relevant to the U.S.

All of C-SPAN's feeds are available live free of charge on its world wide web site.

Past chairmen include:

mentioned in http://www.c-span.org/search/basic.asp?ResultStart=1&ResultCount=10&BasicQueryText=fourth+estate

Shows

See also

External links

Categories: