Write a 350- to 700-word pitch to either a movie or television producer. Include an analysis discussing how current popular entertainment trends do or do not reflect American cultural values and their influence on social behavior as well. - Business Finance
Imagine you have the opportunity to pitch an idea for a new TV or movie program that is based on current market trends. You will need to research what the popular genres are in either movies or television and write your pitch with the intention of selling a story that falls in line with what is currently profitable.Write a 350- to 700-word pitch to either a movie or television producer. Include an analysis discussing how current popular entertainment trends do or do not reflect American cultural values and their influence on social behavior as well.Submit your assignment.Refer to the following required learning activities:Introduction to Mass Communication, Ch. 7Introduction to Mass Communication, Ch. 6Introduction to Mass Communication, Ch. 8Introduction to Mass Communication, Ch. 9Week 3 Electronic Reserve ReadingsWeek 3 Electronic Reserve Readings VideosTEDTalks: Mark RonsonTEDTalks: The Worlds Most Boring Television
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In this chapter we study the technical and social beginnings of both radio and sound recording.
We revisit the coming of broadcasting and see how the growth of regulatory, economic, and
organizational structures led to the medium’s golden age.
The heart of the chapter covers how television changed radio and produced the medium with
which we are now familiar. We review the scope and nature of contemporary radio, especially its
rebirth as a local, fragmented, specialized, personal, and mobile medium. We examine how these
characteristics serve advertisers and listeners. The chapter then explores the relationship between
radio, the modern recording industry, popular music, and the way new and converging
technologies serve and challenge all three. The popularity of shock jocks inspires our discussion
of media literacy.
A Short History of Radio and Sound Recording
The particular stations you disagree about may be different, but almost all of us have been through
a conversation similar to the one in the opening vignette. Radio, the seemingly ubiquitous medium,
matters to us. Because we often listen to it alone, it is personal. Radio is also mobile. It travels with
us in Page 149 the car, and we take it along in our iPods and smartphones. Radio is specific as well.
Stations aim their content at very narrowly defined audiences. But these are characteristics of
contemporary radio. Radio once occupied a very different place in our culture. Let’s see how it all
began.
Early Radio
Because both applied for patents within months of one another in the late 1890s, there remains
disagreement over who “invented” radio, Eastern European immigrant Nikola Tesla, or Guglielmo
Marconi, son of a wealthy Italian businessman and his Irish wife. Marconi, however, is considered
the “Father of Radio” because not only was he among the first to send signals through the air, he
was adroit at gaining maximum publicity for his every success. His improvements over earlier
experimental designs allowed him to send and receive telegraph code over distances as great as
two miles by 1896. His native Italy was not interested in his invention, so he used his mother’s
contacts in Great Britain to find support and financing there. England, with a global empire and
the world’s largest navy and merchant fleets, was naturally interested in longdistance wireless
communication. With the financial and technical help of the British, Marconi successfully
transmitted wireless signals across the English Channel in 1899 and across the Atlantic in 1901.
Wireless was now a reality. Marconi was satisfied with his advance, but other scientists saw the
transmission of voices by wireless as the next hurdle, a challenge that was soon surmounted.
In 1903 Reginald Fessenden, a Canadian, invented the liquid barretter, the first audio device
permitting the reception of wireless voice transmissions. His 1906 Christmas Eve broadcast
from Brant Rock, a small New England coastal village, was the first public broadcast of voices
and music. His listeners were ships at sea and a few newspaper offices equipped to receive the
transmission.
Later that same year American Lee DeForest invented the audion tube, a vacuum tube
that improved and amplified wireless signals. Now the reliable transmission of clear
voices and music was a reality. But DeForest’s second important contribution was that he
saw radio as a means of broadcasting. The early pioneers, Marconi included, had viewed
radio as a device for point-to-point communication—for example, from ship to ship or
ship to shore. But in the 1907 prospectus for his radio company DeForest wrote, “It will
soon be possible to distribute grand opera music from transmitters placed on the stage of
the Metropolitan Opera House by a Radio Telephone station on the roof to almost any
dwelling in Greater New York and vicinity. . . . The same applies to large cities. Church
music, lectures, etc., can be spread abroad by the Radio Telephone” (as quoted in Adams,
1996, pp. 104–106). Soon, countless “broadcasters” went on the air. Some broadcasters
were giant corporations, looking to dominate the medium for profit; some were hobbyists
and hams, playing with the medium for the sheer joy of it. There were so many “stations”
that havoc reigned. Yet the promise of radio was such that the medium continued to
mature until World War I, when the U.S. government ordered “the immediate closing of
all stations for radio communications, both transmitting and receiving.”
Early Sound Recording
The late 1800s have long been considered the beginning of sound recording. However,
the 2008 discovery in a Paris archive of a 10-second recording by an obscure French
tinkerer, Page 150 Edouard-Leon Scott de Martinville, has some audio historians
rethinking recording’s roots. Scott recorded a folk song on a device he called a
phonautograph in 1860, and he always thought that Thomas Edison had stolen credit that
should have been his (“Edison Not,” 2008). Nonetheless, in 1877 prolific inventor Edison
patented his “talking machine,” a device for replicating sound that used a hand-cranked
grooved cylinder and a needle. The mechanical movement caused by the needle passing
along the groove of the rotating cylinder and hitting bumps was converted into electrical
energy that activated a diaphragm in a loudspeaker and produced sound. The drawback
was that only one “recording” could be made of any given sound; the cylinder could not
be duplicated. In 1887 that problem was solved by German immigrant Emile Berliner,
whose gramophone used a flat, rotating, wax-coated disc that could easily be copied or
pressed from a metal master. Two equally important Berliner contributions were the
development of a sophisticated microphone and later (through his company, RCA Victor
Records) the import from Europe of recordings by famous opera stars. Now people had
not only a reasonably priced record player but records to play on it. The next advance was
introduction of the two-sided disc by the Columbia Phonograph Company in 1905. Soon
there were hundreds of phonograph or gramophone companies, and the device, by either
name, was a standard feature in U.S. homes by 1920. More than 2 million machines and
107 million recordings were sold in 1919 alone. Public acceptance of the new medium was
enhanced even more by development of electromagnetic recording in 1924 by Joseph P.
Maxwell at Bell Laboratory.
The parallel development and diffusion of radio and sound recording is significant. For
the first time in history, radio allowed people to hear the words and music of others who
were not in their presence. On recordings they could hear words and music that may have
been created days, months, or even years before.
The Coming of Broadcasting
The idea of broadcasting—that is, transmitting voices and music at great distances to a
large number of people—predated the development of radio. Alexander Graham Bell’s
telephone company had a subscription music service in major cities in the late 1800s,
delivering music to homes and businesses by telephone wires. A front-page story in an
1877 edition of the New York Daily Graphic suggested the possibilities of broadcasting to
its readers. The public anticipated and, after DeForest’s much publicized successes, was
eager for music and voices at home. Russian immigrant David Sarnoff, then an employee
of the company Page 151 American Marconi, recognized this desire and in 1916 sent his
superiors what has become famous as the “Radio Music Box Memo.” In this memo Sarnoff
wrote of
a plan of development which would make radio a “household utility” in the same sense as the piano or
phonograph. The idea is to bring music into the house by wireless. . . . The receiver can be designed in the
form of a simple “Radio Music Box” and arranged for several different wavelengths, which should be
changeable with the throwing of a single switch or pressing of a single button. (Sterling & Kitross, 1990,
p. 43)
The introduction of broadcasting to a mass audience was delayed in the first two
decades of the 20th century by patent fights and lawsuits. DeForest and Fessenden were
both destroyed financially by the conflict. Yet when World War I ended, an enthusiastic
audience awaited what had become a much-improved medium. In a series of
developments that would be duplicated for television at the time of World War II, radio
was transformed from an exciting technological idea into an entertainment and
commercial giant. To aid the war effort, the government took over the patents relating to
radio and continued to improve radio for military use. Thus, refinement and development
of the technical aspects of radio continued throughout the war. Then, when the war ended
in 1919, the patents were returned to their owners—and the bickering was renewed.
Concerned that the medium would be wasted and fearful that a foreign company
(British Marconi) would control this vital resource, the U.S. government forced the
combatants to merge. American Marconi, General Electric, American Telephone &
Telegraph, and Westinghouse (in 1921)—each in control of a vital piece of technology—
joined to create the Radio Corporation of America (RCA). RCA was a governmentsanctioned monopoly, but its creation avoided direct government control of the new
medium. Twenty-eight-year-old David Sarnoff, author of the Radio Music Box Memo, was
made RCA’s commercial manager. The way for the medium’s popular growth was paved;
its success was guaranteed by a public that, because of the phonograph, was already
attuned to music in the home and, thanks to the just-concluded war, was awakening to
the need for instant, wide-ranging news and information.
On September 30, 1920, a Westinghouse executive, impressed with press accounts of
the number of listeners who were picking up broadcasts from the garage radio station of
company engineer Frank Conrad, asked him to move his operation to the Westinghouse
factory and expand its power. Conrad did so, and on October 27, 1920, experimental
station 8XK in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, received a license from the Department of
Commerce to broadcast. On November 2 this station, KDKA, made the first commercial
radio broadcast, announcing the results of the presidential election that sent Warren G.
Harding to the White House. By mid-1922, there were nearly 1 million radios in American
homes, up from 50,000 just a year before (Tillinghast, 2000, p. 41).
The Coming of Regulation
As the RCA agreements demonstrated, the government had a keen interest in the
development, operation, and diffusion of radio. At first government interest focused on
point-to-point communication. In 1910 Congress passed the Wireless Ship Act, requiring
that all ships using U.S. ports and carrying more than 50 passengers have a working
wireless and operator. Of course, the wireless industry did not object, as the legislation
boosted sales. But after the Titanic struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic in 1912 and it
was learned that hundreds of lives were lost needlessly because other ships in the area
had left their radios unattended, Congress passed the Radio Act of 1912, which not only
strengthened rules regarding shipboard wireless but Page 152 also required that wireless
operators be licensed by the Secretary of Commerce and Labor.
The Radio Act of 1912 established spheres of authority for both federal and state
governments, provided for distributing and revoking licenses, fined violators, and
assigned frequencies for station operation. The government was in the business of
regulating what was to become broadcasting, a development that angered many
operators. They successfully challenged the 1912 act in court, and eventually President
Calvin Coolidge ordered the cessation of government regulation of radio despite his belief
that chaos would descend on the medium.
He proved prophetic. The industry’s years of flouting the 1912 act had led it to the brink
of disaster. Radio sales and profits dropped dramatically. Listeners were tired of the
chaos. Stations arbitrarily changed frequencies, power, and hours of operation, and there
was constant interference between stations, often intentional. Radio industry leaders
petitioned Commerce Commissioner Herbert Hoover and, according to historian Erik
Barnouw (1966)—who titled his book on radio’s early days A Tower in Babel—“encouraged
firmness” in government efforts to regulate and control the competitors. The
government’s response was a series of four National Radio Conferences involving
industry experts, public officials, and government regulators. These conferences led to the
Radio Act of 1927. Order was restored, and the industry prospered. But the broadcasters
had made an important concession to secure this saving intervention. The 1927 act
authorized them to use the channels, which belonged to the public, but not to own them.
Broadcasters were thus simply the caretakers of the airwaves, a national resource.
The act further stated that when a license was awarded, the standard of evaluation
would be the public interest, convenience, or necessity. The Federal Radio Commission
(FRC) was established to administer the provisions of the act. This trustee model of
regulation is based on two premises (Bittner, 1994). The first is the philosophy
of spectrum scarcity. Because broadcast spectrum space is limited and not everyone who
wants to broadcast can, those who are granted licenses to serve a local area must accept
regulation. The second reason for regulation revolves around the issue of influence.
Broadcasting reaches virtually everyone in society. By definition, this ensures its power.
The Communications Act of 1934 replaced the 1927 legislation, substituting the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) for the FRC and cementing its regulatory authority,
which continues today.
Advertising and the Networks
While the regulatory structure of the medium was evolving, so were its financial bases.
The formation of RCA had ensured that radio would be a commercial, profit-based
system. The industry supported itself through the sale of receivers; that is, it operated
radio stations in order to sell radios. The problem was that once everybody had a radio,
people would stop buying them. The solution was advertising. On August 22, 1922, New
York station WEAF accepted the first radio commercial, a 10-minute spot for Long Island
brownstone apartments. The cost of the ad was $50.
The sale of advertising led to establishment of the national radio networks. Groups of
stations, or affiliates, could deliver larger audiences, realizing greater advertising
revenues, which would allow them to hire bigger stars and produce better programming,
which would attract larger audiences, which could be sold for even greater fees to
advertisers. RCA set up a 24-station network, the National Broadcasting Company (NBC),
in 1926. A year later it bought AT&T’s stations and launched a second network, NBC Blue
(the original NBC was renamed NBC Red). The Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) was
also founded in 1927, but it struggled until 26-year-old millionaire cigar maker William
S. Paley bought it in 1928, making it a worthy competitor to NBC. The fourth network,
Mutual, was established in 1934 largely on the strength of its Page 153 hit Western The
Lone Ranger. Four midwestern and eastern stations came together to sell advertising on it
and other shows; soon Mutual had 60 affiliates. Mutual differed from the other major
national networks in that it did not own and operate its own flagship stations
(called O&Os, for owned and operated). By 1938 the four national networks had affiliated
virtually all the large U.S. stations and the majority of smaller operations as well. These
corporations grew so powerful that in 1943 the government forced NBC to divest itself of
one of its networks. It sold NBC Blue to Life Saver candy maker Edward Noble, who
renamed it the American Broadcasting Company (ABC).
The fundamental basis of broadcasting in the United States was set:
•
•
•
•
•
Radio broadcasters were private, commercially owned enterprises, rather than government
operations.
Governmental regulation was based on the public interest.
Stations were licensed to serve specific localities, but national networks programmed the most
lucrative hours with the largest audiences.
Entertainment and information were the basic broadcast content.
Advertising formed the basis of financial support for broadcasting.
The Golden Age
The networks ushered in radio’s golden age. Although the 1929–1939 Great Depression
damaged the phonograph industry, with sales dipping to as few as 6 million records in
1932, it helped boost radio. Phonographs and records cost money, but once a family
bought a radio, a whole world of entertainment and information was at its disposal, free
of charge. The number of homes with radios grew from 12 million in 1930 to 30 million
in 1940, and half of them had not one but two receivers. Ad revenues rose from $40
million to $155 million over the same period. Between them, the four national networks
broadcast 156 hours of network-originated programming a week. New genres became
fixtures during this period: comedy (The Jack Benny Show, Fibber McGee and
Molly), audience participation (Professor Quiz, Truth or Consequences, Kay Kyser’s Kollege of
Musical Knowledge), children’s shows (Little Orphan Annie, The Lone Ranger), soap
operas (Oxydol’s Own Ma Perkins, The Guiding Light), and drama (Orson Welles’s Mercury
Theater of the Air). News, too, became a radio staple.
RADIO AND SOUND RECORDING IN WORLD WAR II The golden age of radio shone
even more brightly after Pearl Harbor was bombed by the Japanese in 1941, propelling
the United States into World War II. Radio was used to sell war bonds, and much content
was aimed at boosting the nation’s morale. The war increased the desire for news,
especially from abroad. The war also caused a paper shortage, reducing advertising space
in newspapers. No new stations were licensed during the war years, and the 950 existing
broadcasters reaped all the broadcast advertising revenues, as well as additional ad
revenues that otherwise would have gone to newspapers. Ad revenues were up to $310
million by the end of World War II in 1945.
Sound recording benefited from the war as well. Prior to World War II, recording in the
United States was done either directly to master metal disc or on wire recorders, literally
magnetic recording on metal wire. But GIs brought a new technology back from occupied
Germany, a tape recorder that used an easily handled paper tape on a reel. Then, in 1947,
Columbia Records introduced a new 3⅓ rpm (rotations-per-minute) long-playing plastic
record perfected by Peter Goldmark. A big advance over the previous standard of 78 rpm,
it was more durable than the older shellac discs and played for 23 rather than 3⅓ minutes.
Columbia offered the technology free to all other record companies. RCA refused the offer,
introducing its own 45 rpm disc in 1948. It played for only 3⅓ minutes and had a huge
center hole requiring a special adapter. Still, RCA persisted in its marketing, causing a
speed war that was settled in 1950 when the two giants compromised on 33⅓ as the
standard for classical music and 45 as the standard for pop. And it was the 45, the single,
that sustained the music business until the mid-1960s, when the Beatles not only ushered
in the “British invasion” of rock ‘n’ roll but also transformed popular music into a 33⅓
album-dominant cultural force, shaping today’s popular music and helping reinvent
radio.
TELEVISION ARRIVES When the war ended and radio licenses were granted again, the
number of stations grew rapidly to 2,000. Annual ad revenues reached $454 million in
1950. Then came television. Network affiliation dropped from 97 ...
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