[quote name=\'chris319\' date=\'Jul 9 2004, 02:57 PM\'] ... That's a longwinded way of saying that in times past, when a show was sold to a network station group, that network's S&P department was in charge. The theory was that the network was protecting the licenses of its owned stations...
... I don't know where the phrase "network of record" comes from. It doesn't mean anything. You go by the network which runs, or whose owned stations run, a given show. [/quote]
And that's what was referred to as the "Network of Record". When syndie shows aired on more than one network's O&Os the S&P task was not duplicated by two sets of reps and rules. One of the two networks became the "network of record" insofar as being responsible for S&P, and their equivalent of the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval was relied upon by BOTH networks in protecting their O&Os, and by the hundred+ indidvidual indie stations and network affiliates airing the show. I gotta back Zach on this one; "network of record" was the phrase used.
But as indicated before, that is all but a memory. It's now almost all farmed-out to independent firms. If anyone can provide ANY reasonable evidence that ANY of the 4 networks has/had ANY S&P person at ANY set for ANY of the following shows, I will gladly award that person a genuine box of actual Lee Press-On Nails: WOF, J!, FF, Pyramid, HSquares, Street Smarts, Press My Pants, Earn Your Vacation, Celebrity Poker, In the Dark, Extreme Dodgeball, High School Hopscotch, Family Challenge, Wild Animal Games, Supermarket Sweep, Combination Lock, Boggle, Couch Potatoes, Double Dare, Debt, Win Ben Stein's Money, Dance Fever, Guess My Sandwich...
Randy
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