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Instant replay - Wikipedia In hindsight, this has been cited as the first known use of slow-motion replay in television history [3] CBS Sports Director Tony Verna invented a system to enable the standard videotape machine to instantly replay on December 7, 1963, for the network's coverage of the US military's Army–Navy Game
Today in TV History: Instant Replay Debuts at Army-Navy Game, December . . . On this day in television history, the world of sports broadcasting was forever changed At Municipal Stadium in Philadelphia, amidst the excitement of the annual Army-Navy football game, a groundbreaking technology made its debut: instant replay
The Human Element - Pacific Standard - psmag. com Delayed replays were obnoxiously out-of-context when they burst on the screen and interrupted action, but instant replay—the broadcast of a clip immediately after its first airing—was untapped when Army and Navy took the field in 1963
THE BIRTH OF INSTANT REPLAY - Albuquerque Journal (2023-12-05) It’s difficult to imagine now, but the Army-Navy game on Dec 7, 1963, was bigger than big The game had originally been scheduled for the week before, but had been postponed after the assassination of John F Kennedy The president, in fact, had been scheduled to attend Leading the Navy team was cadet Roger Staubach, winner of the Heisman
A Game Changer For Sports! Today In STEM History #shorts Today in STEM History - December 7, 1963, Instant replay made its debut in sports telecast Today, instant replay has evolved into a complex system with multiple camera angles, slow-motion