Big Three Television Networks
The
Big Three Television Networks are the three traditional broadcast (over the air) TV networks in the
United States:
ABC,
CBS and
NBC.
NBC and CBS were founded as radio networks in the 1920's. They gradually began experimental
television stations in the 1940's. ABC was spun off from NBC in
1943 when the U.S government found evidence indicating NBC was operating a monopoly.
All three networks began regular television broadcasts in the 1940s. NBC began operations in
1946, followed by CBS and ABC in
1948. The three networks originally only controlled a few local television stations, but swiftly expanded their networks of stations to cover the entire United States.
For most of U.S. television history, the Big Three dominated U.S. television, controlling up to 99% of television broadcasting. During the 1950s and lasting until the early 1990s, every hit series appearing in the top 20
Nielsen Ratings was aired by one of the Big Three Networks. There were attempts by
other companies to enter the television medium, but few of these start-ups lasted very long. The prohibitive cost of starting a broadcast network, coupled with active sabotage by the Big Three Networks (particularly NBC and CBS), led to the downfall of almost all new companies. A viable "fourth network" would not become competitive with the Big Three until the
Fox Network was founded in
1986.
Today, the "Big Three" control only a (relatively) small portion of the market. With broadcast competitors such as
Fox,
The WB, and
UPN, satellite and cable companies, the Big Three's market share has dwindled considerably.
*
List of United States broadcast television networks