CBS… now with even more BS
It is true that anyone with a half-decent cellphone can produce content, there still needs to be experts and technicians (not just one guy in a basement with a laptop hardwired to the affiliates) to produce and transmit broadcast television. Live TV is doubly precarious. Some buffering is expected on YouTube, but not at the network level.
More and more, I’m noticing huge variations in volume between stations (and between shows), and although modern cameras and switchers automatically color-correct… they still need to be fine tuned, and it isn’t happening.
Test patterns and color bars (with tone) exist for a reason, specifically as a uniform standard to calibrate color and volume and signal. But nobody knows how to use a waveform or vector-scope anymore, so things will just keep spiraling downward.
Live TV requires an assortment of engineers in NYC and LA, in coordination with engineers at wherever the signal originates. To save money, networks have bought into plug-and-play technology, and though it isn’t deeply flawed, when it goes wrong, there is nobody there to troubleshoot. Frankly, on NYE, it’s kind of a miracle there was someone in the head-end at CBS capable of cueing up an old Matlock.