History of HBO:
Home Box Office (HBO) was founded by Time Inc. in 1972 and offered
cable television service. HBO bought the rights to recent films and
transmitted them to local systems via satellite and microwave relays.
Its service was distributed by the local cable operators, typically
costing subscribers $6 a month, of which HBO received $3.50.
HBO grew slowly in its first years, as the nascent cable industry
struggled to get off the ground. Cable was hampered by market
fragmentation, lack of infrastructure, and tough federal regulations,
some of them sponsored by the major television networks, which feared
that cable could eventually steal much of their audience and revenue.
During the mid-1970s the cable industry laid the groundwork for rapid
growth: it expanded its infrastructure through such populous areas as
New York City and the suburbs of Boston, won a series of court
victories that removed many federal restrictions, and won rate
increases from local governments. Pay-TV customers, those buying
additional cable services such as HBO, grew from 50,000 in 1974 to
approximately l.5 million in 1978. HBO quickly became one of the
primary engines driving the growth of the cable industry.
HBO made its first profit in 1977. It lost tens of thousands of
customers in 1978, however, as a result of a move by its chief rival,
Showtime, which was challenging HBO head-on for the cable film
audience. During this time, Showtime's parent, Viacom, had struck a
deal with Teleprompter, the largest cable systems operator in the
United States, which resulted in Teleprompter's customers receiving
Showtime instead of HBO.