C-SPAN (the Cable-Satellite Public Affairs Network) is an American cable television network dedicated to airing non-stop coverage of government proceedings and public affairs programming.
In addition to C-SPAN Radio and the C-SPAN website, C-SPAN is made up of several television channels:
The bulk of C-SPAN's operations are located on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., but they also maintain archives in West Lafayette, Indiana at the Purdue Research Park.
C-SPAN first went on the air on March 19, 1979, broadcasting a speech by then-congressman Al Gore. C-SPAN2, a spinoff network, covers all live sessions of the U.S. Senate and went on the air on June 2, 1986, with the original channel then focusing on the House. The latest spinoff, C-SPAN3, began broadcasting on January 22, 2001, and shows other government-related live events along with historical programming from C-SPAN's archives.
On October 9, 1997, C-SPAN launched C-SPAN Radio, which broadcasts on WCSP 90.1 FM in Washington, D.C.. The radio station, which is also available on XM and Sirius satellite radio, covers similar events as its sister TV networks, often simulcasting their programming.
All three video channels, plus the radio channel, are globally available through streaming media via the C-SPAN web site. Windows Media Player or a similar media player must be installed to stream videos. Additionally, some programs are archived on the Internet for weeks or for longer times.
On February 12, 2003, C-SPAN launched the Amos B. Hostetter Distance Learning Program with the University of Denver. Steve Scully, Political Editor and Chair of Communication, instructs the course from the C-SPAN center in Washington, D.C. and features prominent guests in politics and journalism who can field questions live to students in Denver over 1,500 miles away. Soon after, the program was also expanded to Pace University in New York.
C-SPAN has submitted requests to air live United States Supreme Court proceedings, but has always been denied camera access. However, the network has aired audio tapes of the Court in session on significant cases and has covered individual Supreme Court Justices' speaking engagements.
C-SPAN is the only cable channel that covers the Republican and Democratic Party quadrennial conventions in their entirety. Also, after the death of Ronald Reagan in 2004 and the death of Rosa Parks in 2005, C-SPAN featured live, uninterrupted coverage of the visitors who came to the Capitol Rotunda to pay their final respects.
Websites that have copied unauthorized C-SPAN clips of government proceedings have received requests to take down the content. For example, Democratic leaning Bloggers received a take down request for clips they had posted. In February of 2006, WRPI's Dennis Karius was fired for airing copyrighted audio from C-SPAN's web stream on his radio program. Stephen Colbert performance at the White House Correspondent's Dinner from YouTube while allowing it to remain on Google Video *," target="_blank" >causing concern from web bloggers. [http://www.boingboing.net/2006/05/04/why_was_colbert_pres.html
In 2005, the liberal media watchdog group Media Matters for America took issue with the fact that L. Brent Bozell, the head of the Media Research Center, was booked by C-SPAN 2 to interview former CBS producer Mary Mapes on "After Words".
In 2004, C-SPAN planned to broadcast a speech by Holocaust historian Deborah Lipstadt paired with a speech by Holocaust denier David Irving. Irving unsuccessfully sued Lipstadt for libel in England in 2000. C-SPAN claimed airing Lipstadt's speech adjacently with Irving's would provide a "balance" of opinions. However, due to the uproar from outraged viewers, liberal groups, and Jewish organizations, C-SPAN canceled the broadcasts of both speeches.
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