707 Page 4-E--Thursday, September 10, 1981-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Thursday, Septemb4 s 3 AN' a o WWI -fir m r^ 14 x. z r 23 " 4 T to / V V n ARRE ; Mq\ f r h a, M' } ja G .. , as " RO N x Y N Y L D, o ,.s tyicwYJt m J GA R ,f, 3 p 4, YEif t'wt" . 1tta T hrq a IE i. L)t 1 . T.BA TON 11 I :Rf) ti r PRa()%N:vo x vE Z iq z i' a s s Lt b i A" w- f 3 Qr t1. S' ! kV. ,.)!1., ORSI 'PC} a wt .l,.. > r.. , " Of w a 4 S Y 2 w 14 E r B \ r., rf S i G 14R C7 r z r N Y 1. ' w.. 1 T r o LRf S11 LO r.; 00 f bq O, R i 1 ywa+ °n' s ) it °° 0 nyi SUC it f all PAf y wr. OE caE.. CN r G HE Fl3FRT a 1UV G li;k,.f° .il L QR N CAMPUS BlV a Z ^t 11'v UEh R e s" r Y o SO L .. W +., GLACIER A ..t o- , aar + c . C"1fR 9 '. ,.c tGW NCE w Nos r I o _ '( z UN r i R n t c i 1 r .." f L%'AND $ 9f MIO' _ 2 Z" fhl r r5 la(w m a w H a o f' , ' a $ END Z v u VLPP},} .,A t }r r x ; ° f0 < tl Q tIl wM" k :.,t _ S "M 01 0 w 1 fCA r s Jr 4 "' 7rF, 't s z P N TON S ZCi E AP fWATO 4r) it i F -" z i Y .. P. 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CABL pl T4-E FR$TE7A J snheals Y ' f - ; TEi E F 12R5T wY By CHRISTOPHER POTTER Have we escaped the cultural sinkhole at last? For three decades Ann Arbor existed in a kind of twilight-zone air pocket hazily orbiting the wonders of American television. Capricious geography had landed our city in a frustrating video no-man's-land, which forever hovered on the snowy edges of station signals from Detroit to the east, Toledo to the south, and Jackson and Lansing to the west. Success in channel reception was painfully arbitrary, depending totally on one's terrestrial locale - often block by block, and even house by house. I spent one summer walking from my apartment to the adjoining apartment building to watch the Tigers on Detroit's unattainable (for me) Chan- nel 4, while my neighbors returned the salutations by traversing the requisite 15 feet to my place to watch Mary Har- tman reruns on Toledo's unreachable (for them) Channel 13. SUCH UNITY under a common duress made for an ongoing pageant of camaraderie throughout the city. Perhaps regrettably, this rite of homogeneity has been on the wane for the past half-decade - ever since the entertainment Oz known as cable television. Cable TV continues to revolutionize show business. Its interlocking satellite-telephone circuitry can tran- smit the wonders of the world - instan- tly - to Small Town, U.S.A. Its science has proved an entertainment godsend to isolated regions, bringing crystal- clear channel rieception to citizens previously forced to watch their TV heroes either through a snowstorm or underwater. The cable phenomenon has by no means been restricted to rural America; most major cities across the country now possess at least one cable hookup, and some urbanites find themselves with as many as half a dozen companies competing for their time and money. Subscribers are now graced with 30-, 40-, and even 50- channel services - entertainment from across the country for a monthly pit- tance. Theoretically, hundreds of dif- ferent channels may soon be adapted to a single TV set. YET NOWHERE has cable's impact been felt more acutely than in Hollywood. Cable audiences TaoliGNT'S tM101rg : ATTACK OF -- 15EE 61 RLS at9 oA N oo P0LLOA FJD BY ALL- STA TABLE TENNIS FROM OPZA' TWO WEE LATER presumably crave something more than conventional entertainment: Cable fills the need with movies - scores of them. Recent, uncut, grade-A. The ever-spiraling cost of filmmaking compounded by the recent fickleness of the moviegoing public has triggered panic among many film studios; most are only too happy to sign their produc- ts over to cable for quick, fancy reven- ue. Thus we witness the pageant of movies only a few years or sometimes, only a few months old, from Disney to porn, parading in the privacy of one's living room. True, Star Wars has yet to make a video appearance - On the other hand Close Encounters, Alien, Superman, The Deer Hunter and Apocalypse Now - not to mention Deep Throat - have all made it to cable within the past year. The entertainment implications of this sudden availability are enormous; some social prognosticators already forsee the day when theatrical movies will fade into obsolescence, with the ancient art of cinema confined exclusively to giant wall screens in private homes. THE CABLE REVOLUTION hit Ann Arbor about eight years ago; today three rival companies compete for con- sumer favor, though only one of the three qualifies as a full-service cable hookup. The other two - the Los Angeles- based On and It cable companies - operate a limited-hour service over Detroit's Channel 20 and Ann Arbor's new Channel 31, respectively. For $99.95 installation plus $22.50 to $26.95 per month, the viewer receives some 50 hours of programming each week - mostly movies, interspersed with oc- casional sports events and variety shows. Yet such formats cannot compare with the omnipotent variety - at a smaller cost - of the now-venerable Ann Arbor Cablevision, launched in late 1973 with a basic 12-channel outlet, in- cluding UHF. The company slowly ex- panded through the rigors of half a dozen different ownerships into its present format of 30 channels - in- cluding two movie stations, four PBS stations, two sports stations, Chicago and Atlanta "superstations," plus Ted Turner's ballyhooed 24-hour Cable News Network. If you crave such ear- thly delights as the Chicago Cubs, Canadian curling championships or Billy the Kidvs. Dracula on Channel 62, then the world is your oyster. QUANTITY, ALAS, doesn't always improve quality. Cablevision's two movie channels - one mainstream, one "adult" - cc best: For ever viewer is assa Motel Hell, He Up the Academ Cablevision outlets in An movies-they but were often company's ne Phil Daniels format about a spruce up C image." Unfortunate wholesome en lacing up his ' likes of Street Cold Dead, Bi House - vio cheaper to sho tual diversity film fare, on Cablevision, h The trend tc the ultimate ir universe at science may tellectual cree vated cable's network tele seems, will al the sinkhole fluorishing. Read any goi Read any go For the best musical selection in Ann Arbor.. . y IIAkRKS PUB FRIENDLY A TMOSPHERE FINE SPIRITS Ann Arbor- 1 4 .V 100 s. fourth ave. at the ann arbor inn 769-9500 -,f 'rf'