popular radio and the origins of broadcasting chapter 4
TRANSCRIPT
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Popular Radio and the Origins of Broadcasting
Chapter 4
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“We are skirting dangerously close to taking the public interest out of the public airwaves.”
—Michael Copps, FCC commissioner, 2004
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Forerunners
1. Telegraph (1840s) and telephone (1870s)
2. Marconi: – Invented wireless telegraphy (1894)—used
code, not voice– Built upon the work of Hertz– Established British Marconi (1897) and
American Marconi (1899)
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Radio Beginnings
Ham operators use whatever frequencies they wish
Develop their own technology Eavesdrop on private-sector messages Same with government messages
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Congress Acts
Radio Act of 1912– Limits amateur radio operators– Standardizes radio procedures in crisis
WWI: Congress gives radio to Navy– Navy drafts/hires young technicians– Consolidates patents– Controls frequencies– U.S. domination
Formation of RCA monopoly
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The Evolution of Commercial Radio
5 stations in 1921 600 in 1923
– 550,000 sets 1922 WEAF (NYC) operates “toll” station
– An “ad” is the first income-producer Herbert Hoover decries But nobody wants to pay a license fee
In 1923 AT&T broadcasts simultaneously to WEAF and WNAC (Boston).
– Creates first “network” By 1924, AT&T has 22 stations linked and denies rival RCA phone rights.
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“I believe the quickest way to kill broadcasting would be to use it for direct
advertising.”
—Herbert Hoover
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NBC Red and NBC Blue
David Sarnoff First network as we know it (affiliate contracts) Network:
– Moves radio from point-to-point to mass media.– Creates programming cost effectiveness.– Makes news national, not local.
1927: 30 million hear Lindbergh’s triumph on one of 6 million radios.
– Larger budget buys better talent.
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Competition for Sarnoff
First attempt at CBS failed. William S. Paley bought CBS. New concepts and strategies Option time lured affiliates Paley hired PR guru Bernays. By the 1930s, CBS competitive with NBC
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Frequency Chaos
1927 Radio Act defines broadcast regulations.– Too many stations and poor reception– Act created commission to monitor airwaves for “public
interest, convenience, or necessity”
1934 Federal Communications Act– Federal Communications Commission (FCC) monitors
radio, telephone, and telegraph.– Today FCC covers television, cable, and the Internet.
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Radio’s Golden Age
Shapes television’s programming future– Sitcoms– Anthology drama– Quiz shows– Soaps
Radio pioneers single-sponsor programming.
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Orson Welles
War of the Worlds, Welles’s radio broadcast 1938– Radio version of H. G. Wells’s novel– Shows power of radio to compel
Created mass panic along the Northeast coast NJ citizens shot up a water tower thinking it a Martian
weapon.
– Welles forced to recant before Congress
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Radio Reinvents Itself
AM vs. FM Niche marketing
– Programming specialization Talk radio Format music (Top 40)
– Deals with record companies– Better, cheaper technology– Portability– Efficient network alliances
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The Return of Payola
Pay-for-play very similar in effect
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Radio Today
Most programming locally produced– Local deejays are the stars.– Some national personalities
Ex. Howard Stern, Rush Limbaugh
Secondary, or background medium Specialized stations with particular formats
– Ex. News/talk, adult contemporary, country
Heaviest listening hours drive time– Americans tune in more than three hours weekdays and
six hours weekends.
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PBS and NPR
Established by Public Broadcasting Act and Corporation for Public Broadcasting in 1960s
Nonprofit, heavily government subsidized NPR: distinctive niche in radio news PBS: educational and children’s programming Under constant attack from conservatives
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Radio Giant
Telecommunications Act of 1996 eliminated most ownership restrictions in radio.
Clear Channel Communications– By 2006, owned:
More than 1,190 radio stations 40 television stations More than 820,000 billboard displays Interest in 240 stations internationally
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Media Giant
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Radio Goes Digital
Internet radio– Small and nonprofit stations pay smaller royalty
fees. Satellite radio
– XM and Sirius Podcasting
– Anybody can become a deejay.– Free content– Mostly spoken word
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Podcasting
“Just as TiVo ensured that there’d always be something to watch when you get home, [podcasting and]
podcasters fill your computer with interesting music and radio-style talk shows from around the world. Unlike TiVo, though, podcast subscriptions are still free, and anyone with an Internet connection can
create a show.”
—David Battino, Electronic Musician, 2005
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Democracy and Radio
Will consolidation of power restrict the number and kinds of voices permitted to
speak over public airwaves?