Inside Prime Time
383 pages, 6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches,
January 2000, Only available in Not available in the British Commonwealth, except Canada
Categories: American Studies; Media Studies; Television & Radio; Print Media; Sociology; Gender Studies; United States History; Popular Culture
January 2000, Only available in Not available in the British Commonwealth, except Canada
Categories: American Studies; Media Studies; Television & Radio; Print Media; Sociology; Gender Studies; United States History; Popular Culture
"Perhaps the best book ever written about the thinking of the insulated men and women in the executive suites of Century City, Burbank and Television City."—David Crook, Los Angeles Times Book Review
"This is very likely the most concentratedly intelligent book yet written about television. Gitlin immersed himself in the industry and yet somehow managed to preserve an independent, thoughtful viewpoint. The result is a delightfully concrete account of recent production from the inside which does not become captive of the usual trade assumptions."—Ernest Callenbach, Film Quarterly
"This is very likely the most concentratedly intelligent book yet written about television. Gitlin immersed himself in the industry and yet somehow managed to preserve an independent, thoughtful viewpoint. The result is a delightfully concrete account of recent production from the inside which does not become captive of the usual trade assumptions."—Ernest Callenbach, Film Quarterly
With a New Introduction
Unsurpassed since its first publication, Inside Prime Time is the only book to take us behind the scenes to reveal how prime-time shows get on the air, stay on the air, and are shaped by the political and cultural climate of their times. Using more than 200 interviews with network executives, producers, writers, agents, and actors, as well as months of on-set investigation during the networks' more prosperous years, sociologist and critic Todd Gitlin takes us into a frantic world searching for hit shows. The result is both a lucid picture of the mechanics of prime time and a series of vivid stories of what succeeded or failed, and why. His analysis includes a blow-by-blow account of how the exceptional police series Hill Street Blues succeeded against all odds before eventually succumbing to formula itself.
Unsurpassed since its first publication, Inside Prime Time is the only book to take us behind the scenes to reveal how prime-time shows get on the air, stay on the air, and are shaped by the political and cultural climate of their times. Using more than 200 interviews with network executives, producers, writers, agents, and actors, as well as months of on-set investigation during the networks' more prosperous years, sociologist and critic Todd Gitlin takes us into a frantic world searching for hit shows. The result is both a lucid picture of the mechanics of prime time and a series of vivid stories of what succeeded or failed, and why. His analysis includes a blow-by-blow account of how the exceptional police series Hill Street Blues succeeded against all odds before eventually succumbing to formula itself.
No one else has analyzed, as Gitlin has, the inside track that links executives and producers, or the efforts of worried advertisers, hopeful writers, and the lobbyists of the fundamentalist right to shape America's waking hours. In a new introduction, Gitlin describes the elements of the new television order, and argues that the proliferation of cable channels and the decline of the old networks have not fundamentally changed the business mentality that guides decisions about the entertainment that will fill Americans' leisure time.
The Whole World Is Watching: Mass Media in the Making and Unmaking of the New Left, With a New Preface , by Todd Gitlin
NBC: America's Network, edited by Michele Hilmes
Prime-Time Families: Television Culture in Post-War America, by Ella Taylor
NBC: America's Network, edited by Michele Hilmes
Prime-Time Families: Television Culture in Post-War America, by Ella Taylor














