Title: Popular Radio and the Origins of Broadcasting
1Popular Radio and the Origins of Broadcasting
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3The Demise of Local Radio
- The consolidation of stations into massive radio
groups like Cumulus and Clear Channel in the
1990s and 2000s resulted in budget-cutting
demands from the corporate offices and,
ultimately, stations with less connection to
their local audience.
4Maxwell and Hertz Discover Radio Waves
- James Maxwell
- Theorized the existence of electromagnetic waves
(1860s) - Believed a portion of these waves, later known as
radio waves, could be harnessed to transmit
signals - Heinrich Hertz
- Proved Maxwells theories (1880s)
- Advanced the development of wireless communication
5Figure 5.1 The Electromagnetic Spectrum
6Marconi and the Inventors of Wireless Telegraphy
- Guglielmo Marconi
- Received a patent on wireless telegraphy in
England in 1896 - Alexander Popov
- Made parallel discoveries in Russia
- Nikola Tesla
- Invented a wireless system in 1892
- Marconi used much of Teslas work.
- Deemed inventor of radio in 1943
7Wireless Telephony De Forest and Fessenden
- Lee De Forest
- Wrote the first Ph.D. thesis on wireless
technology in 1899 - Primary interest was wireless telephony
- Biggest breakthrough was the development of the
Audion - Reginald Fessenden
- First voice broadcast
8Regulating a New Medium
- Radio Act of 1912
- Required licensing
- Adopted the SOS distress signal
- World War I
- Navy took control of radio.
- Corporate heads and government leaders conspired
to make sure radio served American interests.
9Regulating a New Medium (cont.)
- The formation of RCA
- GE broke off negotiations to sell radio
technologies to European companies, then took the
lead in founding the Radio Corporation of America
(RCA). - RCA became a monopoly and gave the United States
almost total control over the emerging mass
medium of broadcasting.
10The Evolution of Radio
- Frank Conrad
- Established the first commercial broadcast
station, KDKA, in 1920 - Charles Doc Herrold
- Began a station in 1909 that later became KCBS
- U.S. Commerce Dept.
- Licensed five radio stations for operation in
1921
11The RCA Partnership Unravels
- ATT
- Broke its RCA agreements in 1922 in an attempt to
monopolize radio - Began making and selling its own radio receivers
- Started WEAF in New York, the first station to
sell advertising - Created the first radio network
- GE, Westinghouse, and RCA created their own radio
group in response
12Sarnoff and NBC Building the Blue and Red
Networks
- David Sarnoff
- RCAs first general manager
- Created NBC, which was shared by RCA, GE, and
Westinghouse - The original telephone group became known as the
NBC-Red network, and the radio group became known
as the NBC-Blue network.
13Sarnoff and NBC Building the Blue and Red
Networks (cont.)
- NBC affiliates
- Paid NBC to carry its programs
- NBC sold national advertising.
- Emphasized national programming
- Sarnoff also
- Cut a deal with GM to manufacture car radios
- Merged RCA with the Victor Talking Machine
Company
14Government Scrutiny Ends RCA-NBC Monopoly
- FTC charged RCA with violations of antitrust laws
as early as 1923. - RCA bought out GE and Westinghouses shares in
RCAs manufacturing business. - Government accepted RCAs breakup proposal before
trial.
15CBS and Paley Challenging NBC
- First attempt at CBS failed
- William S. Paley
- Bought a controlling share in the company, and
launched new concepts and strategies - Hired PR guru Edward Bernays
- Used option time to lure affiliates
- Raided NBC for top talent
- Became the top network in 1949
16Bringing Order to Chaos with the Radio Act of 1927
- 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 - Created the Federal Radio Commission (FRC), which
became the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) with the Communications Act of 1934
17Bringing Order to Chaos with the Radio Act of
1927(cont.)
- 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).
18The Golden Age of Radio
- Early radio programming
- Only a handful of stations
- Live music daily
- 15-minute evening programs
- Variety shows
- Quiz shows
- Dramatic programs
- Most shows had a single sponsor.
19Radio Programming as a Cultural Mirror
- The most popular comedy by the 1930s was Amos n
Andy - Stereotyped black characters as shiftless and
stupid - Created the idea of the serial show
- Moved to TV and was the first show with an
entirely black cast - Canceled in 1953 amid the strengthening Civil
Rights movement
20The Authority of Radio
- War of the Worlds
- Broadcast by Orson Welles on Halloween eve in
1938 in the style of a radio news program - Created a panic in New York and New Jersey
- Prompted the FCC to call for stricter warnings
before and during programs imitating the style of
radio news
21Transistors Make Radio Portable
- Transistors
- Small electrical devices that could receive and
amplify radio signals - More durable and less expensive than vacuum
tubes, used less power, and produced less heat - Led to the creation of small pocket radios
- Made radio portable
22The FM Revolution and Edwin Armstrong
- FM (frequency modulation) radio
- Discovered and developed by Edwin Armstrong in
the 1920s and 1930s - Greater fidelity and clarity than AM (amplitude
modulation) radio - Lost RCAs support to TV
- FCC opened up spectrum space for FM in the 1960s
- Surpassed AM radio by the 1980s
23The Rise of Format and Top 40 Radio
- Format radio
- Formula-driven radio
- Management controls programming
- Developed by Todd Storz in 1949
- Used rotation
- Led to the development of the Top 40 format
- Creation of the program log and day parts
24Resisting the Top 40
- Expansion of FM in the mid-1960s created room for
experimenting. - Progressive rock
- Experimental stations playing hard-edged
political folk music - Album-oriented rock (AOR)
- General classic rock
25The Sounds of Commercial Radio
- Listeners today are unlike radios first
audiences in several ways. - Radio has become a secondary or background
medium. - Peak listening time is during drive time rather
than prime time. - Stations are more specialized.
26Format Specialization
- Variety of formats
- News, talk, and information
- Music formats
- Adult contemporary (AC)
- Contemporary hit radio (CHR)
- Country
- Urban contemporary
- Spanish language
- Classic rock
- Oldies
27Figure 5.4 Most Popular U.S. Radio Formats, Ages
12
28Nonprofit Radio and NPR
- Early years of nonprofit radio
- In 1948, the government began authorizing
noncommercial licenses and approved 10-watt FM
stations. - First noncommercial networks
- Public Broadcasting Act of 1967
- National Public Radio (NPR) and the Public
Broadcasting Service (PBS) mandated to provide
alternatives to commercial broadcasting
29New Radio Technologies Offer More Stations
- Satellite radio
- XM and Sirius merged to become Sirius XM Radio in
2008. - Accessible through satellite radios, mobile
devices, and cars with a satellite band - HD Radio
- Enables multicasting by AM and FM broadcasters
and provides program data
30Radio and Convergence
- Internet radio
- Broadcast radio stations now have an online
presence. - Online-only radio stations like Pandora growing
in popularity - Podcasting and portable listening
- A popular way to listen to radio-style programs
on a computer or portable music device
31Local and National Advertising
- Radio advertising
- Comprises 8 of media advertising
- Industry revenue has dropped, but the number of
stations keeps growing. - Only 20 of budget goes toward programming costs.
- National networks provide programming in exchange
for time slots for national ads.
32Manipulating Playlists with Payola
- Payola
- Record promoters paying deejays to play
particular records - Rampant in 1950s
- In 2007, four of the largest broadcasting
companies agreed to pay 12.5 million to settle a
payola investigation by the FCC.
33Radio Ownership From Diversity to Consolidation
- Telecommunications Act of 1996
- Eliminated most ownership restrictions in radio
- Combined, Clear Channel, Cumulus, and CBS
- Own roughly 1,500 radio stations (more than 10
of all radio stations) - Dominate the fifty largest markets
- Control about one-half of the entire radio
industrys 17.4 billion revenue
34Alternative Voices
- In the 1990s, activists set up pirate stations
to protest large corporations control over
radio. - In 2000, the FCC approved noncommercial low-power
FM (LPFM) stations to give voice to local groups
lacking access. - Prometheus Radio Project
- Educates about low-power radio
35Radio and the Democracy of the Airwaves
- Influence of radio in the formation of American
culture cannot be overestimated. - Early radio debates
- Requirement to operate in the public interest,
convenience, or necessity - Trend of radio moving away from its localism