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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 14 page (13 pp. + 1 pg. outline) paper which examines the medium of radio during the 1930s, and among other issues provides an historical background, discusses its pioneers, considers types of programming, and explores the emergence of broadcast journalism. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Page Count:
14 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGradio.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
by technology still appeared to be unlimited. When the decade began only about two of every five American households had a radio, but this would dramatically increase throughout the
1930s despite the fact that approximately a quarter of the population was unemployed (1930s Radio Captivates a Nation, 2005; Lewis, 1992). Families soon began regarding "as the most prized
of possessions" because this innocuous looking wooden box with knobs brought the world into the average home and provide a welcome respite from the harsh realities of The Great Depression.
Radio was responsible for making the unimaginable somehow bearable. It is recommended that the student who is writing about this subject first consider the various stages of global development
that enabled the medium of broadcast radio to evolve. First, there was the pioneering phase, which began with James C. Maxwells theory of electromagnetism, which discovered the existence of
electric waves in 1864 (Chester et al, 1971). Two decades later, American inventor Thomas Edison devised a communications system between trains and railway stations that did not involve any
type of connecting wires (Chester et al, 1971). Then, in 1887, German-born Heinrich Hertz revealed how by varying electric current, radio waves, like light waves, could be projected into
space (Chester et al, 1971). This set the audio stage for Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconis wireless telegraph machine (Sharp, 1978). The radio had officially been invented and transmissions
could be carried either through strong amplitude modulation (AM) or frequency modulation (FM) (Winston, 1998). AM radio quickly took the lead, and experiments conducted by Dr. Frank Conrad were
responsible for what is believed to be the first station to deliver a radio broadcast, KDKA in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Whitaker, 2003). Although most early radio distribution was dominated by Marconi
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