New broadcast networks emerged such as
Fox in 1986,
The WB in 1995 and the
UPN in 1995 and all added great competition to the original networks,
NBC,
ABC, and
CBS. The percentage of people who watched network television dropped from 90% to 64% in the 1980s. During the 1990s, in spite of the new broadcast competitors, viewers carried on to switch from prime time viewing to cable, even though the rate wasn't as high as before. Still, broadcast networks (ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, The WB, and UPN) gathered an average of only 58 percent of those watching television at the end of the 1999–2000 season, and only 46 percent in the final of the 2004–2005 season. The remote control became standard on most
television sets in the 1980s and that helped the viewers break away from the
network era. The
VCR further helped viewers to break away from the network era by enabling them to record a program and view it when they wanted to. The VCR also allowed people to build personal libraries. All of these new technologies allowed the viewer greater choice and control over specific media. The emergence of so many new networks and channels changed the type of programming produced in order to gain more
ratings points. Producers and advertisers were now able to target specific people and appeal to a narrower group. The
variety show genre, in particular, was made obsolete by the change; none has lasted more than a single season since 1991, and the genre remains one of the least frequently seen in reruns. The ability for
cable channels to succeed with smaller audiences made broadcasters' mission more difficult, because viewers now had the option to choose which program would satisfy their needs. Even though cable was readily available, that didn't mean that the viewer would receive every channel they wanted. Cable was then broken down into separate tiers and cable companies offered different packages for different geographic areas. In practice, a single cable provider held an exclusive franchise over any given territory; it was not until the debut of direct broadcast satellites and their much larger channel capacities that they faced any substantial competition. Cable allowed viewers to have special interest in certain programs. The viewers found what channels or shows they liked best once cable was introduced. The introduction of cable networks allowed for a channel to carry a uniform lineup nationwide without individual stations preempting them. In practice, most cable stations operated with the intent of a nationwide audience to ensure the broadest possible reach.
Regional sports networks were the most commercially successful exceptions. These networks built their program lineups around the schedules of their
Major League Baseball,
National Hockey League and
National Basketball Association franchises, which regularly played multiple nights a week, along with whatever major college sports rights could be had in the era (since such broadcasts were decentralized in 1984 with
NCAA v. Oklahoma striking down the NCAA's collective sports contracts as unlawful). With regional sports networks, sports telecasts no longer had to pre-empt a broadcast station's regularly scheduled prime time lineup to be seen on television. During the network era there were only three networks
NBC,
ABC, and
CBS. With the multi-channel transition production companies now had the upper hand with more networks to buy their shows. Where once the networks had control the production companies now held control. In order to maintain their own viability, the major networks lobbied the FCC to repeal the
Financial Interest and Syndication Rules, which had separated syndicators from networks in 1971; the FCC obliged in 1991, allowing more
vertical integration.
Must-carry and
retransmission consent were introduced in the United States with the
Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992. Must-carry guaranteed full-powered broadcast stations a place on cable lineups in their designated market area if they agreed to offer it for free; retransmission consent gave those same stations the option to instead charge a per-subscriber fee to cable providers (passed on to the subscribers' cable bills), with the inverse being that said stations
would not be carried on said systems if the cable provider refused the fee. Retransmission consent has not been universally accepted outside the United States; in neighboring Canada, the introduction of an equivalent
fee-for-carriage system was preemptively struck down by that country's Supreme Court in 2012. ==New distribution during the multi-channel transition==