Juan Monroy
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  1. Home
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  3. Introduction to Electronic Media
  4. Outline: Week 4, Golden Age of Radio

Outline: Week 4, Golden Age of Radio

  • AT&T
    • establishes WEAF radio station
    • establishes revenue system based on toll broadcasting
    • interconnects stations over own telephone wires
    • creates radio network to
      • spread coverage for national advertisers
      • reduce programming production costs
  • National Broadcasting Company
    • AT&T sells broadcasting radio stations to RCA
    • RCA establishes two networks
      • NBC Red: WEAF and old AT&T stations
      • NBC Blue: WJZ and stations RCA “radio group” interconnected prior to 1926
      • connected via AT&T telephone lines
    • national radio networks would foster national mass culture
  • RCA expanded into recording (transcription, as it was known)
    • merged with Victor Company
    • formed RCA-Victor
    • managed talent
      • performed on NBC radio stations
      • recorded on RCA-Victor
  • Columbia Broadcasting System
    • Arthur Judson, talent agent who could not get his performers booked on NBC stations
    • Columbia Phonograph Company, resented dominance of RCA-Victor
    • Columbia Phonograph Broadcast Company (1927)
    • Since AT&T would not lease telephone wires
      • interconnected stations over Western Union telegraph wires
    • William Paley took helm in 1928
    • signed stations unaffiliated
      • often second or third most powerful
    • paid local stations to carry network programs
    • lured talent to CBS
  • NBC and CBS Compared
    • NBC
      • AT&T Telephone Network
      • charged affiliate stations for programming
      • local stations sold advertising against network programming
      • local affiliates could opt-out of airing programming
    • CBS
      • Western Union Telegraph Network
      • paid affiliate stations to carry programming
      • national advertising packaged with network programming
      • local affiliates had to carry network programming
  • Golden Age of Radio
    • features
      • not necessarily the best radio programming ever
      • dominance of national radio networks
      • national culture
    • Amos and Andy
      • originated as a local program in Chicago
      • two white performers speaking in minstrel style dialog
      • became a television show in the 1950s
      • “Amos Reads a Law Book” (1929)
    • FDR and Radio
      • Great Depression
      • World War II
      • Fireside Chats
      • “Bank Holiday of 1933”
    • Royal Gelatin Hour
      • variety program
      • Rudy Vallee
      • singer and band
    • Edward R. Murrow
      • CBS correspondent during the war
      • reports from London
      • “London After Dark” (August 1940)
    • Burns and Allen
      • started as a variety show
      • became a situation comedy
      • “George Goes to College” (1945)

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