Hall of Fame Inductee Profile: Charlie Steinberg

By Ken Kerschbaumer

For more than 35 years, Charles A. Steinberg played an integral role behind the scenes at Ampex and at Sony Broadcast, turning the technical visions of industry leaders like Roone Arledge, Jules Barnathan, Don Ohlmeyer, and Ken Aagaard into sports-television realities.

Born June 7, 1934, in South Brooklyn, Steinberg had a passion for engineering that led to a master’s of science degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1955, he headed to California to join Ampex, a relatively new company that would quickly dominate the broadcast-television-equipment market.

“I was drawn to Ampex because much of the innovation at that time was in television and many of the first applications of a new technology were in sports,” he says. “The people involved in sports production often were the first to suggest a new innovation.”

Steinberg began his career as an engineer at Ampex, where he was involved in designing the first system that allowed TV programs to be recorded in color on one reel of videotape.

During the next 35 years, he would be involved in a wide variety of videotape innovations. Two-inch tape, 1-inch helical tape, and Sony’s Digital Betacam and HDCAM formats were just some of the tape formats that Steinberg helped launch.

In terms of sports innovations, he says the 1968 Mexico City Olympics are a favorite memory. The coverage marked the Olympics debut for two technologies: handheld color cameras and the HS-100 color video magnetic-disk recorder that allowed slow-motion instant replay.

“Roone Arledge and Jules Barnathan wanted to have instant replay that would allow for slow motion and stop motion,” says Steinberg. “The first development of putting video onto a disk system was no small feat.”

The Olympics once again drove technology forward in 1980 at the Lake Placid Games. Steinberg and Ampex turned another of Barnathan’s visions into reality: bringing digital video effects to the electronic still store. ABC Sports and Ampex together developed a system that allowed ABC Sports to take a single frame of video and apply digital video effects.

“Charlie Steinberg, in a lot of ways, is really the founder of the videotape replay that we all take for granted today,” says Ken Aagaard, CBS Sports executive vice president, operations and production services. “The technologies used at the Olympics by Barnathan, Marvin Bader, and later at NBC Sports were due in large part to Charlie.”

In 1988, after rising to president and CEO and chairman of the board, Steinberg left Ampex after it was sold in a leveraged buyout and joined Sony, where he was named president of the Sony Electronics Broadcast and Professional Co.

As president, Steinberg oversaw a decade-long product-development and marketing effort that would make Sony the leader in a new age of broadcasting: digital and high-definition TV.

In 1992, Sony launched the Digital Betacam format and, in 1996, built an all-digital production unit used by Fox Sports for the National League Championship Series and World Series.

Two years later. Sony Broadcast supplied HD equipment to CBS Sports that enabled the first-ever HD broadcast of a professional football game when the New York Giants and Buffalo Bills squared off on Nov. 8, 1998.

“To be successful, you need to surround yourself with people that are capable and strong, whether it is technology or marketing,” says Steinberg. “And you need to treat them the way you would like to be treated.”

Steinberg retired from Sony in 1999 and today lives in Woodside, CA, with his wife, Helen.

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