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Chapter 5

The document discusses the evolution of radio, highlighting its origins from telegraph technology to the establishment of broadcasting as a mass medium. It details key figures and milestones in radio development, including the introduction of FM radio and the impact of regulatory changes on the industry. The contemporary radio landscape is characterized by specialized formats, internet radio, and the challenges of advertising and ownership consolidation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views34 pages

Chapter 5

The document discusses the evolution of radio, highlighting its origins from telegraph technology to the establishment of broadcasting as a mass medium. It details key figures and milestones in radio development, including the introduction of FM radio and the impact of regulatory changes on the industry. The contemporary radio landscape is characterized by specialized formats, internet radio, and the challenges of advertising and ownership consolidation.

Uploaded by

mominsaleh28
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHAPTER 5

Popular Radio and the Origins of


Broadcasting
Radio Today
• Radio is constantly evolving

• Expansion and migration to wireless environment

• Radio reaches 92% of Americans eighteen and


older each week
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (1 of 7)
• Telegraph: precursor of radio technology
• Invented in 1840s
• First developed by American inventor Samuel Morse
• Morse code: series of dots and dashes that stand for letters
of the alphabet
• Ran coast to coast by 1861

• Although it was revolutionary, the telegraph had


limitations
• Unable to transmit the human voice
• Ships at sea could not use it to communicate with the rest of
the world
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (2 of 7)
• James Maxwell
• Theorizes the existence of electromagnetic waves—invisible
electronic impulses similar to visible light (1860s)
• Proved that electricity, magnetism, light, and heat are part of the
same electromagnetic spectrum and radiate in space at the
speed of light
• Believed that a portion of these, later known as radio waves, could
be harnessed to transmit signals

• Heinrich Hertz
• Proved Maxwell’s theories (1880s)
• Advanced the development of wireless communication
Figure 5.1: The Electromagnetic Spectrum
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (3 of 7)
• Guglielmo Marconi
• Received a patent for wireless telegraphy—a form of voiceless point-
to-point communication—in England in 1896

• Alexander Popov
• Made parallel discoveries in Russia; sent and received wireless
messages in May 1895

• Nikola Tesla
• Invented a wireless system in 1892
• Marconi used much of Tesla’s work, and for years Tesla was not
associated with the invention of radio
• In 1943, Supreme Court overturned Marconi’s wireless patent and
deemed Tesla the inventor of radio
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (4 of 7)
• Lee De Forest
• Wrote the first Ph.D. dissertation on wireless technology in 1899
• Wireless telephony: wireless voice and music transmission
• Biggest breakthrough was the development of the Audion
vacuum tube, which detected radio signals and amplified them

• Reginald Fessenden
• Engineer who worked for General Electric, improving wireless
signals
• First voice broadcast in 1906

• Broadcasting: transmission of radio waves to a broad public


audience
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (5 of 7)
• Charles “Doc” Herrold
• Began a station in 1909 that later became KCBS

• Radio waves as a safety measure and natural resource


• Wireless Ship Act of 1910 required wireless equipment
on seagoing ships
• Radio Act of 1912 required stations to be licensed

• World War I
• Navy took control of radio
• Corporate heads and government leaders conspired to
make sure radio served American interests
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (6 of 7)
• Radio Corporation of America (RCA): acquired
American Marconi and radio patents of other U.S.
companies
• With its patent-pool arrangement, RCA took the lead
in expanding American communication technology
throughout the world

• RCA became a monopoly


• Gave United States almost total control over
broadcasting
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (7 of 7)
• Great Britain develops British Broadcasting Corporation
in 1922

• BBC funded by household licensing fees


The Evolution of U.S. Radio (1 of 11)
• Frank Conrad
• Westinghouse engineer who set up a crude radio station
above his Pittsburgh garage; unofficially one of the
medium’s first disc jockeys
• Westinghouse executive intrigued by Conrad’s hobby
realized potential of radio as a mass medium;
Westinghouse established the first commercial broadcast
station, KDKA, in 1920

• In 1921, the U.S. Commerce Dept. licensed 5 radio


stations for operation; by 1923, more than 600
commercial and noncommercial stations were operating
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (2 of 11)
• AT&T broke RCA agreements in 1922 in attempt to
monopolize radio
• Began making and selling its own radio receivers
• Started WEAF, the first radio station to regularly sell
commercial time to advertisers
• Created the first radio network
• GE, Westinghouse, and RCA created their own radio
group in response
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (3 of 11)
• David Sarnoff
• RCA’s first general manager
• Created NBC, which was shared by RCA, GE, and
Westinghouse
• Original telephone group became known as the NBC-
Red network
• Radio group became known as the NBC-Blue network
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (4 of 11)
• NBC affiliates
• Paid NBC to carry their programs; in exchange, NBC
reserved time slots in programming, which it sold to
national advertisers
• Emphasized national programming as opposed to
local and regional
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (5 of 11)
• Government scrutiny ends RCA monopoly
• FTC charges RCA with violations of antitrust laws in 1923
• RCA proposes buying out GE’s and Westinghouse’s
shares in RCA’s manufacturing business
• Government accepts RCA’s breakup proposal days before
trial (1932)

• Meanwhile, Sarnoff works to extend RCA-NBC’s position


• Cuts a deal with GM to manufacture car radios
• Merges RCA with the Victor Talking Machine Company
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (6 of 11)
• Among the NBC networks’ competitors in the late 1920s,
CBS stands out
• First attempt at CBS fails, but it becomes the top network in
1949

• William Paley
• Buys a controlling share in the fledgling company and launches
new concepts and strategies
• Hires PR guru Edward Bernays to polish company image
• Introduces option time, in which the network pays affiliate stations
$50/hr for an option on a portion of their time
• Raids NBC for top talent
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (7 of 11)
• With no restrictions on operation, hundreds of stations
clog the airwaves in 1926, causing poor reception

• Radio Act of 1927: stated that stations could only


license their channels as long as they operated to serve
the “public interest, convenience, or necessity”

• Federal Radio Commission (FRC): created to oversee


licenses and negotiate channel problems

• Communications Act of 1934: established the Federal


Communications Commission in place of the FRC
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (8 of 11)
• Federal Communications Commission (FCC):
jurisdiction covered radio, telephone, telegraph, and
later television, cable, and the Internet

• Activist FCC went after the networks in 1941


• Outlawed the practice of option time
• Demanded that RCA sell one of its two NBC networks
• NBC-Blue was sold and became the American
Broadcasting Company (ABC)
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (9 of 11)
• Early on, there were only a handful of stations
operating in most large radio markets

• Early programming included live music daily and 15-


minute evening programs
• Variety shows
• Quiz shows
• Dramatic programs

• Most programs had a single sponsor


The Evolution of U.S. Radio (10 of 11)
• Radio programming acts as a cultural mirror
• The most popular comedy by the 1930s was Amos ’n’ Andy
• Featured stereotypes of Black characters and was clearly racist
• Launched idea of the serial show
• Moved to TV and was first show with an entirely Black cast
• Canceled in 1953 amid strengthening Civil Rights movement

• Pioneers of Black radio pushed the boundaries of mostly white


radio broadcasts
• WSBC in Chicago began The All-Negro Hour in 1929
• In 1947, WJJD aired Here Comes Tomorrow, the first-ever soap
opera with an all-Black cast, featuring stories about a typical Black
Chicago family
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (11 of 11)
• War of the Worlds
• Broadcast by Orson Welles on Halloween eve in 1938
in style of a radio news program
• Supposedly created a panic in New York and New
Jersey
• Contemporary studies suggest that newspapers
exaggerated the extent of the panic
• Prompted the FCC to call for stricter warnings before
and during programs imitating the style of radio news
Radio Reinvents Itself (1 of 4)
• Radio adapted and survived the arrival of television with
adaptive innovations in technology and program content
• Transistors: small electrical devices that receive and
amplify radio signals
• More durable and less expensive than vacuum tubes, they
used less power and produced less heat
• Led to the creation of small pocket radios
• Made radio portable
Radio Reinvents Itself (2 of 4)
• FM (frequency modulation) radio
• Discovered and developed by Edwin Armstrong in the
1920s and 1930s
• Greater fidelity and clarity than AM radio
• Lost RCA’s support to TV
• Accentuated the pitch, or distance, between radio waves
• FCC opened up spectrum space for FM in the 1960s
• Surpassed AM radio by the 1980s

• AM (amplitude modulation) radio


• Stressed the volume, or height, of radio waves
Radio Reinvents Itself (3 of 4)
• When TV came along and took radio’s program ideas
and sponsors, radio’s dependence on music helped it
survive the 1950s

• Format radio: formula-driven radio


• Developed by Todd Storz in 1949
• Management controls programming
• Rotation: playing top songs many times during the day
• Top 40 format: practice of playing the 40 most popular hits
in a given week as measured by record sales
• Creation of the program log and day parts
Radio Reinvents Itself (4 of 4)
• Expansion of FM in the mid-1960s created room for
experimentation
• Progressive rock: alternative to conventional formats
• Experimental stations offered hard-edged political folk
music and protest rock
• Album-oriented rock (AOR): tamed variation of
progressive rock
The Sounds of the Contemporary Radio
Environment (1 of 4)
• Listeners today are unlike radio’s first audiences
• Radio has become a secondary, or background,
medium
• Peak listening time is now drive time rather than prime
time
• Drive time: between 6 and 9 A.M. and between 4 and 7
P.M.
• Stations today are more specialized
The Sounds of the Contemporary Radio
Environment (2 of 4)
• Variety of formats
• News/talk: radio stations dominated by news
programs or talk shows; appeals to adults over age
thirty-five
• Several music formats for different tastes
Figure 5.3:The Most Popular Radio
Formats in the United States among
Persons Age Six and Older
The Sounds of the Contemporary Radio
Environment (3 of 4)
• Early years of nonprofit radio
• In 1948, the government begins authorizing noncommercial
licenses and approves 10-watt FM stations
• Pacifica Foundation: formed to run experimental public
stations that often challenge the status quo
• Started by radio reporter and pacifist Lewis Kimball Hill

• First noncommercial networks


• Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 and the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting (CPB)
• National Public Radio (NPR) and the Public Broadcasting Service
(PBS) are created to provide alternatives to commercial broadcasting
The Sounds of the Contemporary Radio
Environment (4 of 4)
• Internet radio
• AM or FM stations “stream” versions of on-air signal
• New stations are created exclusively for the Internet

• Satellite radio: a subscription-based national service


originating with the launch of a series of satellites to cover the
continental United States
• XM and Sirius merged to become SiriusXM in 2008
• Requires a special radio tuner, though access is available on
mobile devices via an app

• Podcasting: making audio files available on the Internet for


downloading or streaming
• More than one-third of Americans listen to podcasts monthly
The Economics of Radio (1 of 3)
• Radio advertising
• Constitutes 10% of media advertising
• Industry revenue has dropped, but number of stations
remains stable
• Only 20% of budget goes toward programming costs
• National networks provide programming for local
stations in exchange for time slots for national ads
The Economics of Radio (2 of 3)
• Payola: record promoters paying deejays to play
particular records
• Rampant during 1950s
• Management took control of programming, but payola
persisted
• Resurfaced due to streaming radio services

• In 2010, Univision Radio paid $1 million to settle a


payola investigation by the FCC
The Economics of Radio (3 of 3)
• Consolidation of broadcast radio ownership
decreases diversity

• Telecommunications Act of 1996: eliminated most


ownership restrictions on radio
• iHeartMedia owns 856 radio stations
Radio and the Democracy of the Airwaves
• Influence of radio in the formation of American culture cannot
be overestimated; it was the first national electronic mass
medium
• Early debates over radio produced one of the most important
ideas in communication policy: the requirement to operate in
the “public interest, convenience, or necessity”
• Trend of radio moving away from localism and the concept of
“live” radio
• Voice-tracking: deejays digitally record their “breaks” between
songs in advance

• Low-power FM (LPFM): a class of 100-watt stations that give


voice to local groups lacking access to the public airwaves

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