The
Descriptive Video Service (
DVS) is a major
United States producer of audio description.
DVS often is used to describe the product itself. In 1985,
PBS member television station WGBH-TV in
Boston, Massachusetts, began investigating uses for the new technology of
stereophonic television broadcasting, particularly
multichannel television sound (MTS), which allowed for a third audio channel, called the
Secondary Audio Program (
SAP). With a history of developing
closed captioning of programs for
hearing-impaired viewers, WGBH considered the viability of using the new audio channel for narrated descriptions of key visual elements, much like those being done for live theatre in
Washington, D.C., by Margaret Pfanstiehl, who had been experimenting with television description as part of her Washington Ear radio reading service. After reviewing and conducting various studies, which found that blind and visually impaired people were consuming more television than ever but finding the activity problematic (often relying on sighted family and friends to describe for them), WGBH consulted more closely with Pfanstiehl and her husband, Cody, and then conducted its first tests of DVS in Boston in 1986. These tests (broadcasting to local groups of people of various ages and visual impairments) and further study were successful enough to merit a grant from the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting to complete plans to establish the DVS organization permanently in 1988. After national testing, more feedback, more development of description technique, and additional grants, DVS became a regular feature of selected PBS programming in 1990. Later, DVS became an available feature in some films and home videos, including DVDs.
Technique DVS describers watch a program and write a script describing visual elements which are important in understanding what is occurring at the time and the plot as a whole. For example, in the opening credit sequence of the children's series
Arthur on PBS, the description has been performed as follows: The length of descriptions and their placement by a producer into the program are largely dictated by what can fit in natural pauses in dialogue (other producers of description may have other priorities, such as synchronization with the timing of a described element's appearance, which differ from DVS's priority for detail). Once recorded, placed and mixed with a copy of the original soundtrack, the DVS track is then "laid back" to the master tape on a separate audio track (for broadcast on the SAP) or to its own DVS master (for home video). For feature films, the descriptions are not mixed with the soundtrack, but kept separate as part of a
DTS soundtrack.
FCC involvement When the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) started establishing various requirements for broadcasters in larger
markets to improve their accessibility to audiences with hearing and vision impairments, DVS branched out to non-PBS programming, and soon description could be heard on the SAP for shows such as
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and
The Simpsons. However, a federal court ruled in 2002 that the Federal Communications Commission had exceeded its jurisdiction by requiring broadcasters in the top 25 markets to carry video description. Since that time, the amount of new DVS television programming in the United States declined, as did access to information regarding upcoming described programming, while broadcasters like ABC and Fox instead decided to devote their SAP channels to
Spanish language dubbing tracks of their shows rather than DVS due to the technical limitations of the analog NTSC standard. Description by DVS and other producers was still available in a limited form on television (the greatest percentage of DVS programming is still on PBS). WGBH's Media Access Group continues supporting description of feature films (known as DVS Theatrical) and DVS home videos/
DVDs are available from WGBH as well as other vendors and libraries. Commercial caption providers the
National Captioning Institute and
CaptionMax have also begun to describe programs. Benefit Media, Inc., a subsidiary of DuArt Film and Video in New York City provides DVS services to
USA Network. For the
2016 Summer Olympics,
NBC provided description of events during the network's primetime block. The 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 reinstates the FCC's involvement in providing rules for video description. Under the rules, affiliates in the top 25 markets and the top five-rated cable networks will have to provide at least 50 hours of video described programming per quarter; the rules took effect on July 1, 2012. However, this provision currently does not apply to
syndicated programming; notably, many programs which have audio description in their network runs, such as those produced by
20th Television, remove the DVS track for syndication, substituting in the Spanish dubbing track on SAP to reach more viewers, though as many stations affiliated with "netlets" like
The CW and
MyNetworkTV are not under the video description provision, do not have SAP channels and thus, neither an audio description or Spanish dub track can be heard. In some markets where SAP is activated on affiliate stations though, The CW had provided a Spanish SAP dub for
Jane the Virgin through the series' entire run, and audio description is available and passed through for their Saturday morning
One Magnificent Morning E/I block, which is done for all of the blocks produced for the major broadcast networks by
Hearst Media Production Group. In 2019, the first primetime series with DVS for the network,
In the Dark (which has a blind protagonist), was launched (the series' description propagated to its Netflix run several weeks after it was placed on that service after the first-season finale). MyNetworkTV has no provisions for audio description or language dub tracks, despite many of its scripted series having DVS tracks. Online streaming services such as
Hulu and the services of television networks themselves such as
CBS All Access have yet to carry descriptive video service audio in most cases as they instead are currently focused on adding closed captioning to their libraries (the network app for ABC began to carry existing audio described shows in the fall of 2017).
Netflix committed in April 2015 to begin audio description of their original series, starting with
Daredevil (which features a
blind protagonist with other heightened senses) and the remainder of their original programming in the next few months, making their goal in that timeframe, along with providing the DVS tracks of existing series in their library; however some platforms (mainly older versions for devices that are now unsupported) do not provide the alternate audio. ABC, along with sister network
Disney Channel has since added audio description to some of their programming (with a commensurate decline in Spanish-dubbed programming, though the
ATSC standard allows more audio channels), but does not contract any of their shows to be described by the Media Access Group, instead going with commercial providers
CaptionMax (now a part of
3Play Media), Audio Eyes, and
Deluxe. Some special programming such as
Toy Story of Terror! and
Toy Story That Time Forgot is described by the Media Access Group under existing contracts with
Walt Disney Pictures and
Pixar Animation Studios (which would conclude with
Incredibles 2 in 2018, with future releases being described by
Deluxe). NBC and their associated cable networks, along with outside productions by
Universal Television such as
Brooklyn Nine-Nine and
The Mindy Project, solely use 3Play Media for description services; Netflix currently uses Deluxe primarily for their original series, while going per studio for acquired programming. Hulu's original series are currently described by Point.360. Most scripted programming on Fox, except for the shows of
Gordon Ramsay (''
Hell's Kitchen, Hotel Hell and Kitchen Nightmares) The Simpsons (starting with season 33), and American Dad!'' (starting with season 22) is described by the Media Access Group; Ramsay's programs are contracted by his
producing studio to have audio description done by Scottish-born voiceover artist Mhairi Morrison with Descriptive Video Works; The Simpsons switched to Deluxe starting with season 33, and American Dad!'s descriptions are done by
Verbit. Unique to most described shows, Fox's
Empire uses actress
Adrienne Barbeau for their description. CBS's described shows all use the Media Access Group. Described shows on Viacom networks (such as Nickelodeon, Nick Jr and Comedy Central) typically have descriptions handled by the studio that provided closed captioning. For example,
ChalkZone and
Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide use the
National Captioning Institute (under NCI Described Media),
Rugrats (including it's spin-off series
All Grown Up!) and
The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius use the Media Access Group, and
South Park,
Wow! Wow! Wubbzy! and
Pinky Dinky Doo use CaptionMax. Some shows have lost their DVS during their original network runs due to outside factors or complications. For instance,
American Dad! had a two-season interregnum in part of season 12 and all of season 13 without any DVS service during its move from Fox to
TBS in late 2014, before it returned in November 2016 for its fourteenth season.
The Mindy Project lost DVS at the start of their fourth season upon the move to Hulu, which did not yet provide DVS service.
Cartoon Network and their time-share partner
Adult Swim began to pass-through DVS for their syndicated content in the last quarter of 2018. == See also ==