Joseph J. Collins, a central figure in television’s evolution from broadcast dominance to cable and internet, died last Thursday at his home in Weekapaug, RI, according to a family spokesman. He was 81.

The veteran cable chief — whose leadership roles spanned HBO, Time Warner Cable, Comcast and more — emerged as one of the most consequential figures in the media biz, helping reposition cable as more than just a delivery system for TV.

Long before broadband internet took off, Collins was among the industry leaders who saw that the same networks carrying premium programming could one day deliver high-speed data and change how Americans lived, worked and consumed content.

He held top roles at several of the industry’s biggest companies during periods of significant transition.

In 1984, he was named president of HBO, where he helped steady and strengthen the premium network as it established itself as a dominant brand.

Collins later returned to American Television and Communications (ATC), where he had risen through the ranks, ultimately serving as chairman and CEO.

Following ATC’s merger with Time Warner Cable in 1992, Collins led the combined companies as chairman and CEO, overseeing a period of expansion and technological evolution that helped lay the groundwork for broadband’s eventual explosive growth.

He later headed up AOL Time Warner Interactive Video, where he pushed early efforts to merge TV and internet-based services. After his retirement, he was elected as an independent director on the Comcast board in 2004.

“Joe was instrumental in building the first cable systems, upgrading them to deliver hundreds of channels, then video on demand, and finally the broadband streaming and internet apps that we all use every day now,” former Time Warner chairman and CEO Jeff Bewkes said in a statement.

Born July 27, 1944, in Troy, NY, Collins came of age just as TV, telecommunications and computing were beginning to intersect.

He graduated from Brown University in 1966 and earned an MBA from Harvard Business School in 1972.

He also served in the US Navy, reaching the rank of lieutenant and earning the Vietnam Combat Action Ribbon for his service during the Vietnam War.

Collins was widely credited with advancing hybrid fiber-coaxial architecture, the technical backbone that would enable high-speed cable internet across the States.

Media titan John Malone, who earned the nickname “Cable Cowboy,” once told his team, “if I have a heart attack, call Joe Collins.”

Collins also played a role in shaping policy, serving twice as chairman of the National Cable Telecommunications Association and contributing to the development of the landmark Telecommunications Act of 1996.

The longtime exec was also a founder and a chairman of C-SPAN and a board member at TriStar Pictures and TBS, where he played a pivotal role in Turner’s 1996 merger with Time Warner.

He received the cable industry’s Distinguished Vanguard Award for Leadership in 1997 and was inducted into the Cable Hall of Fame in 2001.

In later years, Collins acquired and operated several boatyards and served as chairman of Aegis Holdings, a private investment firm.

He was also an avid tennis player and an accomplished mariner, often spending time aboard his boat along the Rhode Island coast.

He is survived by his wife of 54 years, Maura McManman Collins; his children, Maura Farley Lucke, Elizabeth Dempsey Fitton, Joseph Jameson Collins Jr. and Kathryn “Tryn” Collins; and 11 grandchildren.

A funeral is scheduled for April 13 in Rhode Island.

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