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7/10/20161 Radio History MIT2000
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Early Radio: Main Themes 1. Wired/Wireless 2. Bi-directional: one to one 3. Uni-directional 1. Central transmitter to passive receivers 2. “broadcasting” 4. Public interest/commercial interest 7/10/20162
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3 Radio/Technology 1. Radio waves 1. electro-magnetic energy, radiating in waves 2. Heinrich Hertz (1888) 1. lab experiments 2. ‘telegraph without wires’ (Hertzian waves)
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7/10/20164 Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937) 1. Land-Ship 2. Trans-Atlantic signal (1901) 3. Marconi Wireless Telegraph & Signal Co 1. trans-Atlantic 2. first commercial service
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7/10/20165 Reginald Fessenden (1866-1932) 1. First voice transmission 1. “radiotelephone”(1900) 2. Shore-to-ship “broadcast,” 1906
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7/10/20166 Early “Radio-Telegraph” 1. Morse Code 2. Shipping/distress calls 3. Titanic (1912) 4. Simultaneity of Experience 5. Worldwide Network
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7/10/20167 Amateur Radio 1. Technical expertise 1. home-made radio sets 2. Exploratory listening- distance 3. Middle-class boys/men 4. Unregulated frequencies 5. Bi-directional
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7/10/20168 Amateur Radio 1. Pranks 1. “All Titanic Passengers Safe” 2. Obscene/false messages 3. Lots of radio traffic 4. Radio Act of 1912 (US)
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7/10/20169 World War I (1914-18) 1. Military control 1. Naval/ Shell- spotting 2. Ban citizen use 2. Post-1918, oppose: 1. amateur uses 2. foreign ownership
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7/10/201610 Early Broadcast Radio 1. One-to-One: 1. DXing, 1920-1924 2. Voice/sound 2. One-to-Many: Broadcasting 1. (Telephone “Broadcasters”) 3. Frank Conrad/KDKA, 1920 4. XWA, Montreal, 1920 5. RCA, 1921
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7/10/201611 Early Radio 1. 1921: 2 radio stations 2. 1925: 100s in US/CDA 1. Dept stores; churches newspapers; universities 2. Non-commercial origins 3. Public Interest 4. “Limited Spectrum”
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7/10/201612 Network Radio: AT&T (1925) 1. 25-station network 1. long distance lines 2. sell time on transmitters, “air time,” to advertisers 3. purchase blocks/ provide own programming
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7/10/201613 Content/Culture: Commercial Radio NBC (1926-) public service high-brow non-sponsored programming Symphony theatre, etc. CBS (1928-) more advertising ad agencies produce shows soaps; crime dramas “lowest common denominator”
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7/10/201614 Programming 1. Music: classical & dance bands (Tommy Dorsey) 2. Variety Shows: (Bob Hope) 3. Drama 1. daytime serial –”Guiding Light” 2. evening anthology: “Mercury Theater on the Air” 4. Children’s Shows 5. Comedy: “Li'l Abner”; “Amos ‘n’ Andy”
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7/10/201615 Radio as Mass Medium, ca. 1935 US Private ownership (NBC, CBS) Advertising- supported Popular fare UK BBC: government- run monopoly Taxes, license fees High-brow/cultural uplift
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7/10/201616 Radio in Canada 1. Radio-Telegraph Act, 1913 2. Dept. Marine & Fisheries 3. XWA, first license (1919) 4. $1 licence fee per set
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7/10/201617 CDN Radio 1. 1928: 60 stations 2. Low power; intermittent service 3. Roy Thomson, CFCH 4. Minimal regulations 5. Diverse ownership 6. Selling radio sets 1. Edward S. Rogers 7. Entertainment/Commercial
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7/10/201618 Networking: CNR Radio Dept 1. first network, mid- 1920s 2. concerts, operas, plays, health talks, grain price reports 3. 3 hours weekly, 1929
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7/10/201619 US Radio in CDA 1. Radio-wave interference 2. US listening (80%) 1. NBC w/Montreal affiliate 3. Can CDN radio compete?
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Aird Commission 1. Royal Commission on Broadcasting, 1928-29 1. John Aird 2. State broadcasting organization, (BBC model) 3. Foster national spirit/citizenship 4. Nationalize private radio stations 5. “Defensive expansionism” 7/10/201620
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7/10/201621 Road to Public Ownership 1. Canadian Radio League, 1930 2. Graham Spry 3. “The State or the United States”
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Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission, 1932 1. State monopoly on network broadcasting 2. Extend radio coverage 3. Produce/transmit programs 4. Purchase/construct stations/transmitters 5. CRBC stations/private stations 6. Partisanship 7/10/201622
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Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1936 1. More autonomy 2. Assured funding 1. License fees 3. Dual function 1. Broadcast/programs 2. Regulate Private radio 7/10/201623
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7/10/201624 CBC: Carrier/Content 1. 8 stations; 16 private affiliates 2. Strong transmitters 3. US/UK shows (entertainment, talk) 4. Canadian Content 1. “The Happy Gang”; NHL;
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7/10/201625 “Peculiar Hybrid” of CDN Radio Commercial Interest Corporate power NBC/CBS Low-Brow Culture Entertainment Advertising- supported Public Interest “The State” BBC/CBC High-Brow Culture Educational Tax/license fee supported
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7/10/201626 Midterm Exam: Oct 28 2:30- 4:30 pm Section 1 (5X5 =25 points) Identify/Significance of 5 of 8 terms, concepts Section 2 (15 points) Matching 10 items in columns 5-10 multiple choice questions Duration: 1 hour and 50 minutes Closed Book Covers Lectures and Readings
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7/10/201627 Sample Question: “The State or the United States” Graham Spry; chairman Canadian Radio League early 1930s lobby for Aird Commission recommendations re: public broadcasting McChesney article culminate in 1932; est. of Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission
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7/10/201628 “ The State or the United States” State: government as bulwark against US broadcasting which predated broadcasting in Canada high culture/ low culture Canadian sovereignty /US cultural/economic imperialism
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