I was watching a live boxing fight from 1962, How did they add graphics or text to the screen on sports events, news, etc?

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I was watching a live boxing fight from 1962, How did they add graphics or text to the screen on sports events, news, etc?

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19 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

The earliest, simplest BW television titling was done by simply adding a synchronized camera output to the signal before broadcast. The camera would be pointed at a black board with white lettering. Since “black” is 0 volts you just see the fight and white is 1 volt adding it to the fight is more than 1 volt but gets clipped to 1 volt, which is “white”.

The complex part was having the camera’s output synchronized to the cameras recording the event. NTSC signal has timing and calibration pulses mixed with the actual image. Getting all of the cameras’ to generate the pulses at exactly the same time is required to stop the picture “glitching” when switching cameras, and to have the title text show up where you want it to over the image.

This synchronization is done by Phase Lock Loop, a topic for another ELI5.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’d like to request an ELI5 on how you’re watching a live boxing match that took place in 1962…

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’d like to request an ELI5 on how you’re watching a live boxing match that took place in 1962…

Anonymous 0 Comments

[removed]

Anonymous 0 Comments

The machine to do the onscreen text and graphics was called a Chyron, made by the Chyron Corp.

See Chyron.com

Anonymous 0 Comments

The machine to do the onscreen text and graphics was called a Chyron, made by the Chyron Corp.

See Chyron.com

Anonymous 0 Comments

[removed]

Anonymous 0 Comments

When the background is black the process is referred to as matte keying. Source: old timey video editor in television productions.

Edit: was meant as a reply for the comment about chroma keying sorry

Anonymous 0 Comments

When the background is black the process is referred to as matte keying. Source: old timey video editor in television productions.

Edit: was meant as a reply for the comment about chroma keying sorry