"While much of the focus of present-day media praise and damnation seems focused on video sources (including those online), radio "was there first." Many complaints about present-day television and cable were first directed at radio, such as a fear that violent or suspenseful programs would overly excite children's imaginations with untold effects over time. Radio also established many elements of present-day electronic media industry structure. Much of what we both enjoy and bemoan today, in other words, was accomplished (or inflicted) by radio long before television or more recent digital options became a reality. For example, that American broadcasting would depend on advertising was pretty much decided by the late 1920s, despite several concerted efforts (before and after passage of the benchmark 1934 Communications Act) to open up greater opportunities for other funding options. In turn, advertising support meant that American radio would be primarily a medium of entertainment (to attract the largest possible audience for that advertising) rather than the public or cultural service that developed in nations with other approaches to financial support. That national networks would dominate radio news and entertainment in the years before the coming of television (which would later and very quickly adopt the same patterns) was a fact by the early 1930s with only minor modifications at the margins over the years. The government would have to selectively license broadcaster access to limited spectrum space was obvious by the early 1920s; such a process only became fully effective in 1927. And that government would have little to do with American radio program content, though this has again varied over time, was made clear in the laws of 1927 and 1934, reinforced by numerous court decisions in the years that followed."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Christopher H. Sterling; Cary O'Dell, "The Concise Encyclopedia of American Radio", (9 February 2011), Routledge, p. vi.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Mass_media
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Mass media
25 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Mass media →
Related Quotes
"Americans remain largely mistrustful of the mass media as 41% currently have "a great deal" or "fair amount" of trust…"
"Gallup first measured trust in the mass media in a 1972 survey when 68% of Americans said they trusted it. Similar le…"
"Republicans became increasingly mistrustful of the media in 2016 when Trump was campaigning for president and was sha…"
"The democratic postulate is that the media are independent and committed to discovering and reporting the truth, and …"
"The media have long operated as agents of moral indignation in their own right : even if they are not self-consciousl…"
"The advertising industry almost exclusively underwrites mass media in the United States. Newspapers obtain 75 to 80 p…"
"Research on the effect that the media has on the public revolves around two interconnected issues. Does coverage of s…"
"Presentations of police are often over-dramatized and romanticized by fictional television crime dramas while the new…"
"A primary issue with the media’s inaccurate depiction of crime and the criminal justice system is that it socially co…"
"Most progressive developments in the media, of course, are driven by market considerations rather than social conscie…"