Everything about The Dumont Television Network totally explained
The
DuMont Television Network was the world's first commercial
television network, beginning operation in the United States in 1946. It was owned by
DuMont Laboratories, a television equipment and set manufacturer. The network was hindered by the prohibitive cost of
broadcasting, by
Federal Communications Commission regulations which restricted the company's growth, and even by the company's partner,
Paramount Pictures. Despite several innovations in broadcasting and the creation of one of television's biggest stars of the 1950s, the network never found itself on solid financial ground. Forced to expand on
UHF channels during an era when UHF wasn't profitable, DuMont ceased broadcasting in 1956.
DuMont's latter-day obscurity has prompted at least one notable TV historian to refer to it as the "Forgotten Network". A few popular DuMont programs, such as
Cavalcade of Stars and
Emmy-award winner
Life is Worth Living, appear in TV
retrospectives or are mentioned briefly in books about U.S. television history, but almost all the network's programming was destroyed in the 1970s.
Origins
DuMont Laboratories was founded in 1931 by Dr.
Allen B. DuMont. He and his staff were responsible for many early technical innovations, including the first consumer
all-electronic television set in 1938. The company's television sets soon became the gold standard of the industry.
A few months after selling his first television set, DuMont opened an experimental television station in New York City, W2XWV. Unlike
CBS and
NBC, he continued experimental broadcasts throughout World War II. In 1944, W2XWV became
WABD (after DuMont's initials), the third commercial television station in New York. On
May 19,
1945, DuMont opened experimental W3XWT in
Washington, D.C. A minority shareholder in DuMont Laboratories was
Paramount Pictures, which had advanced $400,000 in 1939 for a 40% share in the company. Paramount had television interests of its own, having launched experimental stations in Los Angeles in 1939 and
Chicago in 1940, but DuMont's association with Paramount ultimately proved to be a mistake.
Soon after his experimental Washington station
signed on, DuMont began experimental
coaxial cable hookups between his laboratories in
Passaic, New Jersey, and his two stations. One of those hookups carried the announcement that the U.S. had dropped an
atomic bomb on
Nagasaki, Japan on
August 9,
1945. This was later considered by both Thomas T. Goldsmith, the network's chief engineer and DuMont's best friend, and Dr. DuMont himself as the official beginning of the DuMont Network. Regular network service began on
August 15,
1946, on WABD and W3XWT. In 1947, W3XWT became
WTTG, named after Goldsmith. The pair were joined in 1949 by
WDTV in
Pittsburgh.
Although NBC was known to have station-to-station links as early as 1941, DuMont received its station licenses before NBC resumed in the postwar era their previous, sporadic network broadcasts.
ABC had just come into existence as a radio network in 1943 and wouldn't enter network television until 1948, when it acquired a station in New York City.
CBS would also wait until 1948 to begin network operations because it was waiting for the Federal Communications Commission to approve its color television system. Other companies — including
Mutual, the
Yankee Network, and Paramount itself — were interested in starting television networks, but would be prevented from doing so by restrictive FCC regulations.
Programming
Despite no history of radio programming to draw on and perennial cash shortages, DuMont was an innovative and creative network. Without the radio revenues that supported mighty NBC and CBS, DuMont programmers had to rely on their wits and on connections in
Broadway to provide original programs still remembered fifty-plus years later.
The network also largely ignored the standard business model of 1950s television, in which one advertiser sponsored an entire show, enabling it to have complete control over its content. Instead, DuMont sold
commercials to many different advertisers, freeing producers of its shows from the veto power held by sole sponsors. This eventually became the standard model for U.S. television.
DuMont also holds another important place in American television history. WDTV's sign-on made it possible for stations in the Midwest to receive live network programming from stations on the East Coast, and vice versa. Before then, the networks relied on separate regional networks in the two time zones for live programming, and the West Coast received network programming from
kinescopes (films shot directly from live television screens) originating from the East Coast. On
January 11,
1949, the coaxial cable linking East and Midwest (known in television circles as "the Golden Spike") was activated. The ceremony, hosted by DuMont and WDTV, was carried on all four networks.
WGN in Chicago and WABD in New York were able to share programs though a live coaxial cable feed when WDTV in Pittsburgh signed on, because the station completed the East Coast-to-Midwest chain, allowing stations in both regions to air the same program at the same time, which is still the standard for U.S. television. It would be another two years before the West Coast could get live programming, but this was the beginning of the modern era of network television.
The first broadcasts came from DuMont's
Madison Avenue headquarters, but it soon found additional space, including a fully functioning theater, in the New York branch of
Wanamaker's department store at Ninth Street and Broadway. Still later, a lease on the
Adelphi Theater on
54th Street gave the network a site for variety shows, and in 1954, the lavish DuMont Tele-Center opened in the former New York Opera House at 205 East 67th Street.
DuMont aired the first television
situation comedy,
Mary Kay and Johnny, as well as the first network-televised
soap opera,
Faraway Hill.
Cavalcade of Stars, a
variety show hosted by
Jackie Gleason, was the birthplace of
The Honeymooners (Gleason left for CBS in 1952 just as his star began to rise). Bishop
Fulton J. Sheen's
devotional program Life Is Worth Living went up against
Milton Berle in many cities, and was the first show to successfully compete in the ratings against "Mr. Television". In 1952, Sheen won an
Emmy for "Most Outstanding Personality". The network's other notable programs include:
- Ted Mack's Original Amateur Hour, which began on radio in the 1930s under original host Major Bowes
- The Morey Amsterdam Show, a comedy/variety show hosted by Morey Amsterdam, which started on CBS before moving to DuMont in 1949
- Captain Video and His Video Rangers, a hugely popular kids' science fiction series
- The Arthur Murray Party, a dance program
- With This Ring, a panel show on marriage
- Rocky King, Inside Detective, a private eye series starring Roscoe Karns
- The Plainclothesman, a camera's-eye-view detective series
- Live coverage of boxing and professional wrestling, the latter featuring matches staged by the Capitol Wrestling Corporation, the predecessor to World Wrestling Entertainment
Although DuMont's programming pre-dated
videotape, many DuMont offerings were caught on kinescopes. These kinescopes were said to be stored in a warehouse until the 1970s. Actress
Edie Adams, the wife of comedian
Ernie Kovacs (both regular performers on early television) testified in 1996 before a panel of the
Library of Congress on the preservation of television and video. Adams claimed that so little value was given to these films that the stored kinescopes were loaded into three trucks and dumped into
Upper New York Bay. Nevertheless, a number of DuMont programs survive at the
Museum of Television and Radio in New York City, the
UCLA Film and Television Archive in Los Angeles, in the
Peabody Awards Collection at the
University of Georgia, and the
Museum of Broadcast Communications in Chicago.
Although nearly the entire DuMont film archive was destroyed, several surviving DuMont shows have been released on
DVD. These include a few episodes of
Rocky King, Inside Detective;
Captain Video;
The Morey Amsterdam Show; and
Cavalcade of Stars.
Awards
DuMont programs were by necessity low-budget affairs, and the network received relatively few awards from the television industry. Most awards during the 1950s went to NBC and CBS, who were able to out-spend other companies and draw on their extensive history of radio broadcasting in the relatively new television medium. DuMont, however, won a number of awards during its years of operation.
During the 1952–1953 television season, Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, host of
Life is Worth Living, won an
Emmy Award for
Most Outstanding Personality. Sheen beat out CBS's
Arthur Godfrey,
Edward R. Murrow, and
Lucille Ball who were also nominated for the same award. Sheen was also nominated for— but didn't win— consecutive Public Service Emmys in 1952, 1953, and 1954.
DuMont received an Emmy nomination for
Down You Go, a popular game show during the 1952–1953 television season (in the category Best Audience Participation, Quiz, or Panel Program). The network was nominated twice for its coverage of professional football during the 1953–1954 and 1954–1955 television seasons.
The Johns Hopkins Science Review, a DuMont public affairs program, was awarded a
Peabody Award in 1952 in the Education category. Sheen's Emmy and the
Science Review Peabody were the only national awards the DuMont Network received. Though DuMont series and performers would continue to win local television awards, by the mid-1950s the DuMont Network no longer had a national presence.
Ratings
The earliest measurements of television audiences were performed by the
C. E. Hooper company of New York. DuMont performed well in the Hooper ratings; DuMont's
The Original Amateur Hour was the most popular series of the 1947-1948 television season.
In February of 1950, Hooper's competitor
A.C. Nielsen bought out the Hooperatings system. Few DuMont series ever performed well in the Nielsen Ratings; no DuMont series ever appeared in Nielsen's annual lists of the top 20 most popular series.
Halted at the start
DuMont began with one basic disadvantage: unlike NBC and CBS, it didn't have a radio network from which to draw revenue and big names. Also, most early television licenses were granted to established radio broadcasters, and many long-time relationships with radio networks carried over to the new medium. As CBS and NBC gained their footing, they began to offer programming that drew on their radio backgrounds, bringing over the most popular radio stars. Early television stations, when asked to choose between an affiliation with CBS offering
Lucille Ball,
Jack Benny, and
Ed Sullivan, or DuMont with a then-unknown
Jackie Gleason and
Bishop Sheen, chose the well-travelled route. In smaller markets, with a limited number of stations, DuMont and ABC were often relegated to secondary status, so their programs got clearance only if the primary network was off the air or on a delayed basis via a
kinescope recording (or "teletranscriptions" as they were referred to by DuMont).
DuMont aspired to grow beyond its three stations, applying for licenses in
Boston (or
Cincinnati, depending on the source) and
Cleveland. This would have given the network five stations, the maximum allowed by the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) at the time. However, DuMont was hampered by minority owner Paramount's two stations,
KTLA in Los Angeles and WBKB-TV (now
WBBM-TV) in Chicago. Although these stations never carried DuMont programming (with the exception of one year on KTLA in 1947–48), and in fact competed with the DuMont affiliates in those cities, the FCC ruled that Paramount's two licenses were in theory DuMont
owned and operated stations, which effectively placed DuMont at the five-station cap.
Adding to DuMont's troubles was the FCC's 1948 "freeze" on television-license applications. This was done to sort out the thousands of applications that had come streaming in, but also to rethink the allocation and technical standards laid down prior to World War II. It became clear soon after the war that 12 channels ("
channel 1" had been removed from television broadcasting use) were not nearly enough for national television service. What was to be a six-month freeze lasted until 1952, when the FCC opened the
UHF spectrum. The FCC, however, didn't require television manufacturers to include UHF capability. In order to see UHF stations, most people had to buy an expensive converter. Even then, the picture quality was marginal at best. Tied to this was a decision to restrict VHF allocations in medium- and smaller-sized markets. Television sets were not required to have all-channel tuning until 1964.
Forced to rely on UHF to expand, DuMont saw one station after another go dark due to dismal ratings. DuMont bought a small, distressed UHF station in
Kansas City in 1954, but ran it for just three months before shutting it down at a considerable loss, after attempting to compete with three established VHF stations.
The FCC's Dr. Hyman Goldin said in 1960, "If there had been four VHF outlets in the top markets, there's no question DuMont would have lived and would have eventually turned the corner in terms of profitability. I've no doubt in my mind of that at all."
The end
DuMont survived the early 1950s only because of WDTV in Pittsburgh, the lone commercial VHF station in what was then the sixth-largest market. WDTV's only competition came from UHF stations and distant stations from
Johnstown, Pennsylvania;
Youngstown, Ohio; and
Wheeling, West Virginia. No other commercial VHF station signed on in Pittsburgh until 1957, giving WDTV a de facto monopoly on television in the city. Since WDTV carried secondary affiliations with the other three networks, DuMont used this as a bargaining chip to get its programs cleared in other large markets.
Despite its severe financial straits, by 1953 DuMont appeared to be on its way to establishing itself as the third national network. DuMont programs aired live on 16 stations, but it could only count on six primary stations (its three
owned-and-operated stations ["O&Os"] plus
WGN-TV in Chicago,
KTTV in Los Angeles and WTVN-TV [now
WSYX] in
Columbus, Ohio). In contrast, ABC had a full complement of five O&Os augmented by nine primary affiliates. ABC also had a radio network (it was descended from NBC's
Blue Network) on which to draw revenue and affiliate loyalty.
However, DuMont had by this time turned its biggest liability—its lack of live clearances—into an asset. Claiming CBS and NBC were too expensive, DuMont sought to offer a medium for advertisers to pick and choose where their programs aired, potentially saving them millions of dollars. In contrast, ABC operated in a similar manner to CBS and NBC, slapping advertisers with a large "must-buy" list of stations. However, ABC had only 14 primary stations, compared to CBS and NBC, which had over 40 primary stations each. By 1953, ABC was badly overextended and on the verge of bankruptcy.
The picture was dramatically altered in February of 1953, when ABC was bought by
United Paramount Theaters (recently spun off from Paramount Pictures). The merger provided ABC with a badly-needed cash infusion, which gave it the resources to provide a national television service on the scale of CBS and NBC. Also, through UPT president
Leonard Goldenson, it gained ties with the Hollywood studios that more than matched the ties DuMont's producers had with Broadway.
Realizing that the ABC-UPT deal put the company on life support, the staff at DuMont was receptive to a merger offer from ABC. Goldenson quickly brokered a deal with Ted Bergmann, DuMont's managing director, under which the merged network would have been called "ABC-DuMont" until at least 1958 and would honor all of DuMont's network commitments. In return, DuMont would get $5 million in cash, guaranteed advertising time for DuMont sets, and a secure future for its staff. A merged ABC-DuMont would have had to sell a New York station —- either DuMont's WABD or ABC's WJZ-TV (now
WABC-TV) —- as well as two other stations. It still would have been a colossus rivaling CBS and NBC, because it would have owned stations in five of the six largest markets (except Philadelphia). It also would have inherited DuMont's de facto monopoly in Pittsburgh, and would have been one of two networks to wholly own a station in the nation's capital (the other being NBC).
However, Paramount
vetoed the plan almost out of hand due to
antitrust concerns. A few months earlier, the FCC had ruled that Paramount controlled DuMont, and there were still some questions about whether UPT had really separated from Paramount.
With no other way to readily obtain cash, DuMont sold WDTV to
Westinghouse Electric Corporation for $9.75 million in late 1954. While this gave DuMont a short-term cash infusion, it eliminated the leverage DuMont had to get clearances in other markets. Without its de facto monopoly in Pittsburgh, the company's advertising revenue shrank to less than half that of 1953. By
February 1955, DuMont executives realized the company couldn't continue as a television network. It was decided to shut down network operations and operate WABD and WTTG as independents. On April 1, 1955, most of DuMont's entertainment programs were dropped. Bishop Sheen aired his last program on DuMont on April 26 and later moved to ABC. By May, just eight programs were left on the network, with only inexpensive shows and sporting events keeping what was left of the network going through the summer. The network also abandoned the use of the intercity network coaxial cable, on which it had spent $3 million in 1954 to transmit shows that mostly lacked station clearance.
In August, Paramount, with the help of other stockholders, seized full control of DuMont Laboratories. The last non-sports program on DuMont aired on
September 23,
1955. After that, DuMont's network feed was used only for occasional sporting events. DuMont's last broadcast, a boxing match, occurred on
August 6,
1956.
DuMont spun off WABD and WTTG as the "DuMont Broadcasting Corporation". The name was later changed to "Metropolitan Broadcasting Company" to distance the company from what was seen as a complete all-around failure.
John Kluge bought Paramount's shares for $4 million in 1958, changing the company's name to
Metromedia in 1960. WABD became WNEW-TV and later
WNYW; WTTG still broadcasts under its original
call letters.
For 50 years, DuMont was the only major broadcast television network to go off the air, until
UPN and the
WB networks shut down in 2006 to merge and form the
CW network.
Fate of the DuMont stations
All three DuMont-owned stations are still operating, though they're now affiliated with other networks. Coincidentally, all three are
owned-and-operated stations of their respective networks, just as when they were part of DuMont. Of the three, only Washington's WTTG still has its original call letters. WTTG and New York's WABD (later WNEW-TV, and now WNYW) survived as Metromedia-owned independents until they were purchased by the
News Corporation for its
Fox Broadcasting Company, in 1986.
Clarke Ingram, who maintains a DuMont memorial site, has suggested that Fox is a revival or at least a linear descendant, of DuMont. Indeed, WNYW is still headquartered in the former DuMont Tele-Centre, now known as the Fox Broadcasting Center.
Westinghouse changed WDTV's calls to
KDKA-TV after the
pioneering radio station of the same name, and switched its primary affiliation to
CBS immediately after the sale. Westinghouse's acquisition of CBS in 1995 made KDKA-TV a CBS owned-and-operated station.
DuMont affiliates
At its peak in 1954, DuMont was affiliated with around 200 TV stations. In those days, TV stations were free to "cherry-pick" which programs they'd air, and many stations affiliated with multiple networks. Many of DuMont's "affiliates" carried very little DuMont programming, choosing to air one or two more popular programs (such as
Life is Worth Living) and/or sports programming on the weekends. Few stations carried the full DuMont program line-up.
In its later years, DuMont was carried mostly on poorly-watched UHF channels or had only secondary affiliations on VHF stations. DuMont ended most operations on
April 1,
1955, but honored network commitments until August 1956.
Further Information
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