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Money & Outlook

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At a recent annual meeting of the National Association of Television Program Executives, there were 20,000 people from the television, advertising and new media industries.

Jim Seguin is a professor of communication at Robert Morris College. He says job opportunities are limited throughout the broadcasting industry. "It's a low-growth market," he says. "There is a struggle going on in television of how to maintain viewership."

Seguin says salaries for programmers at the network level are six figures. "They pay well," he says. "There's a lot of high-powered strategy, a lot of study to figure out where to go next."

Earnings and employment information from the U.S. Department of Labor is not available for this field at this time.

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